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Full Version: Dimarzio Titan review.
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I'm a high-output guy. I love "PAF's" and have a few guitars loaded with them, but at the end of the day nothing (that I should mention in a review) makes me happier than pummeling the input of a high gain amp into submission...but high output pickups are typically a sacrifice: you get more power while losing clarity. Your riffing sounds huge, but your chord work lacks definition. Its the eternal stuggle of wanting clarity and a sound reminiscent of a nuclear warhead raining hot death over those who oppose you.

I searched for months and read enough about pickups to make me regret playing guitar. Some were seemingly perfect (and expensive), but lacked enough info to get me to make a purchase while others had too much info and scared me off with their technical mumbo-jumbo and advertising. By the time I made it back to the Dimarzio offerings I was ready to give up. That's when I found the Titan.

At 418mv it doesn't appear to be a very high output pickup, in fact, it comes in just behind the Super Distortion, but don't be fooled - the magic is in the wind. At "only" 11.07k you get an incredibly clear pickup that sounds absolutely crushing. If I had to choose on word to describe this pickup, it would be "Accurate" - but those of you that know me know that I'm a verbose guy so let's get wordy.

I put this pickup in an 83 Roadstar with a basswood body and maple top and plugged it into a Hovercraft Dwarvenaut...but enough with the shit that you don't care about, lets talk Rock.

Low gain is crisp and crunchy, almost like a suped-up PAF with balls. As you get into medium gain, you start breathing fire: Riffs stay tight, power chords sound massive, and whatever I try to pass of as leads cut through with ease. Now were having fun.

High gain is unreal. So unreal that I needed a page break to put my thoughts into English. If medium gain is like a beast breathing fire, high gain is like molten napalm spitting through your speakers. The lows are like a Comet hurdling towards Earth but never get boomy, the highs cut with precision without getting shrill, the mids are full and focused like something full and focused and fill out your sonic palette. Even with as crushingly massive as this pickup can be, it never gets congested or falls apart. Everything stays right where it should be.

With an even response in the lows and highs coupled with a slight mid bump, I'd say that this pickup would work in just about any guitar if you're willing to play with your height adjustments. It doesn't just "Djent", it is more than capable of doing whatever you need...as long as you need it to kill.

Whether it's Doom, Stoner, Thrash, or Death - this pickup brings metal in spades. Hell, I'd even recommend it for anyone that just wants a little more push through a vintage amp.

I like it so much that I may buy another.

I should probably mention how well your picking dynamics come through since I forgot to do so previously.

So yeah, they translate exactly the way you think they should.
cool man, glad you managed to get the setup problems outta the way and that you finally managed to be happy with your Roadstar.

Next step: see if it survives the honeymoon phase.
(12-02-2014, 09:33 PM)CTN Wrote: [ -> ]cool man, glad you managed to get the setup problems outta the way and that you finally managed to be happy with your Roadstar.

Next step: see if it survives the honeymoon phase.

Roadstar is seemingly fixed, we'll see how she does.

I'm not sure that the honeymoon will end to be honest. This is just a really good pickup, man.
Congratulations. You are the first person ever to seriously inspire me to look into a DiMarzio Pickup! Sounds like what I refer to as a "Skull-Crusher." Pickups of note here are the EMG 81, SD Black Winter, SD Alternative 8, and the Gibson 500T. I think I need one.

And here my good man is your reward:
[Image: 8.jpg]
It feels like a vintage pickup to boot, So its head and shoulders above you're typical high output pickup
(12-03-2014, 12:13 AM)Big Flannel Wrote: [ -> ]It feels like a vintage pickup to boot, So its head and shoulders above you're typical high output pickup


I find a lot of dimarzio pups are like that