![]() ![]() I'm thinking that a Seymour Duncan APTR-1 might be a good choice. Write down the serial number, which consists of some letters followed by a set of numbers. If anybody here has any knowledge on the old Peavey Reactors pickups, or anything else for that matter, could you chime in here please?Īlso, if there isn't a bass-boosting capacitor in there right now and it really is the pickup's fault, what pickup would you recommend for the neck? Examine the back of your Peavey amplifier. In 2004, EVH parted ways with Peavey and the amp was rebranded as the 65+, along with. ![]() Weren't the very early Fender Teles like that? I seem to recall that even the '52 reissue Tele is like that and has the option of having its neck pickup's capacitor clipped off and making it more like a regular modern day Tele. This led to the 5150 II with separate EQs for each channel, which made the amp even more versatile. I'm wondering if there isn't a capacitor wired into the neck pickups circuit that's making it sound so bassy and muffled. I was pretty surprised at how dull this neck pickup sounds, the bridge one sounds ok from what I could tell. I must say that I now see what many people meant by the neck pickup being way too muffled and bassy. Today I dropped in to put another $40 deposit on it and this time I asked if I could plug her into an amp and they let me. The feel of the neck and the low price tag was enough to make me want it even though I had no idea of how it would sound. Last week I put it on layaway but never had a chance to plug in and play it through an amp. I don't know how Peavey's date code worked but would this be a 1982 model year? ![]() on the headstock and the serial number is 08231863. I posted something here last week about my finding a used Peavey Reactor Tele copy in a pawnshop, I'm getting it for $200 taxes in. Hi guys, new guy here with my very first first post here. ![]()
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