Bare Knuckle Warpig Humbucker Set
When you think of a name like Warpig, you’re probably thinking of some old school Black Sabbath. The ominous heavy metal vibe that conjures the most dire imagery of impending doom. In the decades since, those tones have spawned doom metal, sludge metal, stoner rock, grunge, and more.
First off, we might have to put aside that Tony Iommi was known for P90 pickups and a Dallas Rangemaster Treble Booster at the time “War Pigs” was recorded and released on 1970’s Paranoid album. OK, so now that means I definitely have to check out the BKP ‘Pig 90! Let’s just move forward, looking at this Warpig set at face value.
The Warpig set arrives in the default configuration of Alnico 5 magnets and double rows of filister screws. Ceramic magnets and bolt poles are on standby. Because, yes, I know you guys will want the full monty on these bad boys. And who am I to argue with the smartest and most well-informed readers on the Interwebz. LOL!
In this instance, the set has short mounting legs with standard spacing and 4-con lead wire. Of course, pretty much all the options are available on this set. The poles holes are threaded into the baseplate, which is an interesting touch. That’s generally a detail you see on some of the “vintage replica” level of shops.
Installation
For this application, I’m going with a double cut 2-humbucker body with maple neck and rosewood fingerboard. The guitar has 09-42 strings and is in E standard tuning. Hardware includes a German Floyd Rose double-locking tremolo system.
Disclaimer: We are talking about the 6-string set here. If there is an interest in the 7-string set, drop a comment or a send a message.
Alnico Magnets
Starting with the Alnico option and screw poles, the Warpig set is pretty full-sounding across the range. I’m very much liking the mids and highs this way. The low end is big, and maybe a little more suited for sludge, doom, and stoner rock. The precision for riff rock pedal notes really isn’t there, IMHO. But it’s a good option for heavy blues and lead work with a resolute presence.
From there, looking at the Alnico with the bolt poles. This does add more articulation in the lows. The mids and the highs tighten up a little as well. This makes the Warpig set handy for shred styles and also for lower tuning preferences. I can say that the bolt poles and the shorter screw poles that come with the Warpig set are much more similar in tone that expected. Not 100% identical in the most strict of sense, but definitely on the mark.
Ceramic Magnets
The Warpig with the cermaic magnets is an interesting option. Yes, I did put the ceramics in the bridge and the neck. Although the neck is on the site as Alnico 5 only, we know you guitar player types can get industrious. LOL! In both pole options, the ceramic version keeps thing pretty crispy in the mids and highs. Of course, a little more so with the bolt poles, making it great for black metal styles and lower tunings.
In all configurations, the Warpigs are very harmonically responsive across the entire fretboard. The neck humbucker is also very much usable in any option, which is a bonus. And just as importantly, the Warpig set will clean up pretty darned well with either magnet or pole setup.
Demo
You say you want another? Good! Here you go:
Not enough? You want more?! You’re in luck!
Specs
Warpig Bridge
Series – 21.55 K
Inductance – 9.081 H
North – 11.003 K
South – 10.548 K
Parallel – 5.394 K
Magnet – Alnico 5 or Ceramic
Warpig Neck
Series – 17.1 K
Inductance – 5.987 H
North – 8.804 K
South – 8.372
Parallel – 4.293 K
Magnet – Alnico 5
Wow! 21 K?!? Ease up there, turbo. It takes more than meat to make the sausage. Additionally, there are criminally underrated pickups with resistance in the same range. The DiMarzio Super 3 clocks in at 26.78 K. The Duncan El Diablo and Iommi models (NOT the same thing) are about 22 K. The Mighty Mite Motherbucker is 20 K, and there are pickups reviewed here up in to the 40 K range. Which is to say, don’t read too much in to any one specification.
Conclusion
The Warpig set sort of strikes me as a bigger and meaner Aftermath set. It’s going to be a solid option for hard rock, metalcore, prog rock, death metal, stoner rock, and shred. I might not have gotten the level of Sabbath that I was hoping for, but I did walk away with an offering that’s more versatile than expected.
For reference, this Bare Knuckle Pickups Warpig humbucker set evaluation was conducted with the following: Fractal Axe-Fx II XL+ featuring Celestion Impluse Responses and Fractal MFC-101 MIDI Foot Controller. ADA MP-1 Tube Pre-Amp loaded with Tube Amp Doctor ECC83 Premium Selected tubes, using the ADA MC-1 MIDI Controller. Fryette LX II Stereo Tube Power Amplifier. Physical cabs use are Marshall 1960B, Mojotone British, and Peavey 6505 cabs loaded with Celestion Classic Series Vintage 30s and Classic Series G12M Greenbacks.
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