The Fralin'Tron features a scooped midrange and defined bass and highs.
When Lindy started designing the Fralin'Tron, he did so with a particular goal: to get as much clarity and articulation as possible out of this design. The Fralin'Tron features a scooped midrange and defined bass and highs. In addition, you can expect more nuance out of the wound strings, not found in other designs. Furthermore, the treble strings have a round, warm quality, making our Fralin'Tron perfect for all styles of music - from clean to dirty.
Features:
- Lindy Fralin Unique Design, with medium output and a clearer tone than other designs.
- Overwound Bridge pickup for compensated output and tone across all positions
- Hum Cancelling in both positions for dead-quiet performance
- USA-made Alnico 5 Magnets, Wire, and Covers for impeccable build quality
- Hand-wound with our "Sectioning" technique for unique, dynamic tone
- Backed by our 10-Year Warranty on manufacturing defects & Risk-free 30-Day Exchange Policy
Starting at $330. For more information, please visit fralinpickups.com.
Put that router away and say hello to brighter, grittier tone with these drop-in, humbucker-sized single-coils.
Transforming a guitar’s sound with a new set of pickups is exciting, but it’s not always easily doable without routing. We’ve assembled 10 options designed to serve up delicious P-90 tone, but sized to slip right into your humbucker-routed guitar.
H90 Standard
These low-wind pickups offer snappy and brighter single-coil tones for those in need of more chime and less power, and can be ordered with custom wood tops.
P90 – Humbucker
Boasting clear lows, thick mids, and percussive highs, this vintage-voiced P-90 was designed for versatility, clarity, and snarly midrange, and is available in a number of finishes.
Dream 90
These P-90s are reported to provide fat, warm-yet-crunchy body, and can offer full humbucking performance when both pickups are selected, because the neck pickup is reverse wound.
Heavy House P94
Based on the company’s House Special P-90, this pickup brings all the power and tone of a true P-90 but in a humbucker package—measuring 7.4k for the neck and 7.8k for the bridge.
Humbucker Sized P-90
A faithful recreation of a vintage P-90, these pickups feature spec plain enamel wire, alnico 4 magnets for the neck for clear and fat sounds, and alnico 5s for the bridge for bite and grind.
Pro-90
For those chasing authentic tone, these pickups duplicate the construction, materials, and growl of a vintage ’50s-era P-90 by using the company’s proprietary Vintage Core specifications.
Hum-90
Housing alnico 2, 4 , or 5 magnets and 43AWG coil wound around its humbucker-sized P-90 bobbins, these pickups are said to offer single-coil tones with clarity, presence, and a defined voice.
Fat Bastard
These single-coils are designed to offer plenty of crunch by capturing the classic P-90 tone of the 1950s with “a little South Texas funk” thrown in.
V-90
Regardless of your style, these degaussed alnico 5 pickups were made to be touch sensitive, respond well to pick attack, and provide tight lows, grinding mids, and singing highs.
It can be difficult, confusing as hell to the untrained ear and possibly expensive, depending on your budget
It can be difficult, confusing as hell to the untrained ear and possibly expensive, depending on your budget.
How can you tell (in advance) what pickup will be right for the sound you want?
If you don''t already know, then you simply can''t answer this question without help or a lot of work. You will have to rely on someone you believe you can trust. This could be a friend, a guitar repairman with a good reputation, a cool guitar shop known for their expertise, or even a pickup company that you have heard good things about.
There are many online sites with reviews of pickups from all the manufacturers. Validating the information found there is another matter altogether. Sound clips are great, but do they represent your guitar, your rig, in your environment? Pickup tone charts generally only talk about the characteristics of the pickup itself and might even confuse you more. If you are new to the pickup game, understanding all the vague jargon just doesn''t happen overnight. Do you really want to go back to school just to change your pickups? I don''t think so. You just want to improve your tone and get back to playing your guitar!
In this month’s “Wound for Tone,” I will try to lay down some simple guidelines to get us at least close, if not on the mark in choosing a pickup. And for the sake of keeping it simple in this article, I will focus on single coil pickups for Strat-style guitars. Let''s simplify and break it down:
First, your existing pickups must be properly adjusted...
for a true evaluation of what your guitar is capable of. Bring the pickups as close as possible to the strings without physical, or sonic (particularly on the low E string, usually manifested as weird overtones) interference. This is usually about 1/8” from the high E when the string is depressed at the last fret, and as somewhere around 1/8”- 1/4” clearance on the low E depressed at the last fret.
Describe what you like and don''t...
like about the sound of each pickup. Is the neck meaty? Rich? Sound like Stevie? Is the middle clean, strong but full, rhythm supreme? Does the bridge have good, clean bite and cut through? Do your combinations have that quack? Is there hum canceling for bad hum situations?
Analyze the tone personality...
of your guitar. Consider the weight of your guitar, particularly the density of the wood used, which is the number one factor in the tone. The less dense a body is, the lighter it will be and so on. The neck will certainly play a part, as well as hardware types, and so on, but generally to a lesser degree. An often-used generalization is that maple necks are brighter than rosewood- necked guitars. This is a factor, but a very light guitar will almost always sound warmer with any quality set of pickups (warmer is not always enough for tone hounds!). A medium weight instrument can go either way, while a heavy guitar typically is thinner or bright sounding while breaking your back at the same time.
I often hear complaints that a guitar sounds too weak overall with the bridge position being way too thin, often to the point of being unusable. It is clear in these cases that a stronger pickup is needed in the bridge position. That''s why Rio Grande, like most pickup makers, offers more than one style (output) of Strat pickup. These guitars may need a hotter pickup, with more signal to work with, such as our Muy Grande or Dirty Harry (which is actually a miniature P-90).
In most cases pickup configuration, as in all things, is personal taste. For myself, a tapered set is an absolute necessity. Your guitar is physically tapered from the day it was made. A tapered (often referred to as calibrated) set of pickups is only natural. Smooth and round for the neck, solid and compatible for the middle, and strong and punchy for the bridge. That is a set getting stronger from the neck towards the bridge. You can have all these things and still retain pure natural Strat tones without going overboard.
We will change pickups in guitars, usually for one main reason: we do not like the sound we are getting from the guitar. The pickups are the most important variable you have control of on your guitar. Try a new set, you will be amazed at how much it may affect your sound. Once you get a set of pickups you''re happy with, you won''t have to fight your rig for tone!
One thing is certain...good tone makes you feel and play better. There are lots of pickups out there, so happy hunting!
Dave Wintz
Dave Wintz founded Robin Guitars in 1982, and Rio Grande Pickups with Bart Wittrock in 1994, and continues to be involved with both.
fralinpickups.com