Gear & Tech Tips / 19 August 2020

Guitarology 101: Single Coils vs Humbuckers

If you’ve been on the hunt for an electric guitar, chances are you’ve heard many people talk about their pickups. One of the biggest contributors in producing the sound and tone of a guitar, pickups are also one of the most misunderstood components found on the instrument.

To clear the air around these magnetic wonders, we’ll talk about what pickups really do and the differences between the two most common formats: the single coil and the humbucker. 

What does a pickup do really?

To put it simply, pickups are magnets wrapped with coils of wire that react to vibrations from the guitar’s (metal) strings. The pickup captures these vibrations and converts these kinetic movements to an amplified musical sound.

Single coil pickups

The first iteration of the pickup no doubt took the form of a single-coil pickup. The single coil pickup was a game changer in the 1930s. It allowed the guitar to finally be able to take centre stage and be heard over the large bands of the day. But amplification is only half the story – single coil pickups have helped shape the sounds of music history since the rise in popularity of the electric guitar.

Single-coil pickups are best associated with the iconic guitars of Fender and they are popular choices for a myriad of genres. Single coils sound twangy, bell-like, glassy, with less emphasis on the midrange frequencies. And in out of phase positions (position 2 and 4 on a Stratocaster) have a distinct “quack” that’s the stuff of legends. Sultans of Swing, anyone?

You’d be hard pressed to argue with the pickup that has been behind the sounds of guitar gods like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimi Hendrix and Eric Johnson.

You’ll also notice that single coils produce an audible hum. This is the notorious 60-cycle hum, which traditional single coils suffer from. They are usually caused by the pickups quite literally “picking up” electromagnetic frequency interference and radio frequency interference around you. And when you dial up the gain, it becomes even more “noisier”. In the 50s and 60s when most guitarists played with a clean tone, it was a problem players just accepted. But when music became louder and more aggressive, it still never stopped people like Jimi Hendrix, Pete Townshend and Richie Blackmore from turning it up to eleven!

Ritchie Blackmore’s Fender Strat – he famously removed the middle pickup on his guitar

Thankfully, advancements in modern single coils have effectively removed most of these issues. There will always be players that accept no compromise – they want the classic single coil tone, and won’t put up with any hum.

Fishman’s answer to the noiseless single coil, The Fluence Strat Single Coil pickups

Today, noiseless single coils are readily available – you find them on guitars like Fender’s latest Ultra series.

American Ultra Stratocaster® | Electric Guitars
Fender’s American Ultra Series

Humbucking pickups

Humbuckers were designed with the shortcomings out of the single coil pickup in mind. The solution? Humbuckers are built with two coils instead of one, and by connecting the coils together out of phase, they “buck” that annoying hum that you get with single coils. Compared to traditional vintage-style single coils, humbuckers also send a more powerful signal to the amp.

The Gibson Custom 1957 Les Paul Standard Historic sports a pair of Custombuckers, their take on the sought after PAF pickup

The famous PAF pickup designed by Seth Lover for the Gibson Les Pauls in the late 50s were great examples of a classic humbucker sound – fill of right lows and mids delivering a warm but clear tone that are favoured by jazz, rock and when distorted, metal players.

With a few wiring modifications, you can even modify the sound of the humbucker pickup. A split humbucker modification is a wiring job that gives it the ability to isolate or split one of its two coils, giving you a more single-coil type sound. This just adds to its already impressive array of sounds.

Fender’s Double Tap Humbucker gives you the option of a single coil sound without a loss in volume

It’s no surprise they have a huge following, with legends like Slash, B.B. King and Marty Friedman championing humbuckers on their many guitars.

Active EMG pickups on this Jackson Signature Marty Friedman MF-1

So what’s the best pickup?

We think you already know the answer – there is no one best pickup, but there’ll always be a best pickup for you. Everyone has their own personal musical preferences, their favourite tones and playing styles, and there will always be a specific pickup which best suits your needs.

Gibson Angus Young Signature Humbucker – Angus sure knows what he wants

A good start to figuring out what pickups work best for you is to look at your guitar heroes. If you’re in love with that tone from John Mayer’s Gravity, chances are you’re going to enjoy chasing that tone with single coils best. If you crave the silky and fat singing lead tones of Slash, your best bet will definitely be a guitar with a humbucker pickup.

Jackson X Series Soloist sporting a SSH configuration

Of course, you’ll see Super Strats like those from Jackson with a mixture of both single coils and humbucker pickups. These can give you the best of both worlds – bright and clear cleans on the neck single coil, to heavy, aggressive tones on the bridge humbucker.

To upgrade or stay stock?

Pickups are also relatively inexpensive compared to buying a brand new guitar. That’s why upgrading stock pickups to another set is such a common procedure for many guitarists, both seasoned and just starting out.

Maybe you’re in need of more output to get a more aggressive and compressed tone for lead playing, or your stock pickups are producing sterile cleans. There are plenty of reasons you might want to swap your pickups but as a rule of thumb, you know your personal preferences best – so match your choices to your needs.

Shop the full range of electric guitar pickups on our online store here. If you’re looking to have your pickups changed on your guitar, you can always drop us a message here.


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