Blackbird said:Just wondering.
Yes, I did a search.![]()
dlloyd said:The SUB Stingray and regular Stingray have the same pickup (alnico).
The SUB Stingray 5 has an alnico pickup without the phantom coil, whereas the regular Stingray 5 has a ceramic pickup (some early SR5s had alnico pickups I believe).
The SUB Sterling has (IIRC) the same pickup as the Stingray whereas the regular Sterling is ceramic with a phantom coil.
Urwordsbreakmed said:whats a phantomcoil?
Urwordsbreakmed said:I know what it does. I just dont know what IT is, like i dont understand it. Like how does it do what it does? lol
Just wanted to add my 2 cents that even in the single coil position, it does not add ANY hint of precision like elements to my tone. It sounds more like a jazz pickup being solo'd.,Bluesbob said:Here I am, early Sunday morning, well rested and bored. So I was reading this and I saw Gav's excellent picture and explanation of the Single-Coil, Phantom-Pup position on the Sterling and I got to wondering. When the Sterling is in the S-C, P-P position, which of the coils in the Humbucker is active? And to get even more geeky, how does that relate to Single-Coil Pup placement on the early Precision and Telecaster basses. I know a lot of people on this board disdain anything other than EBMM (it is their board), but I'm just askin', not lookin' fer trouble. I'd just like to know. I'm also one of the few who admit to using this position on my Sterling. I like the S-C sound for a certain vibe.
Rod Trussbroken said:Underneath a Sterling pickup showing phantom coil.
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Blackbird said:So the Stingray 5 is identical to this, except it's a fiver?