DiMarzio DP100F F-Spaced Super Distortion
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zZounds Gear Experts Say...
Hot, thick tone with a tight bottom end.
Overview
This is the pickup that started it all. Many of the classic Rock guitar sounds of the 70's and 80's were produced by a Super Distortion¬ and a raging tube amp. But don't confuse classic with outdated. Diverse artists from Al DiMeola, Frank Gambale, and Vinnie Moore to Metal veterans Iron Maiden and Ace Frehley have chosen the Super Distortion as an integral part of their personal sound. With plenty of output and mid-boost to boot your amp into overdrive, Super Distortion humbuckers put out a hot, thick tone with a tight bottom-end: a classic tone when plugged directly into the front-end of any high-gain tube amplifier. Used in the bridge position of a locking-trem equipped guitar, the Super Distortion puts back low-end the tremolo can bleed off.
The Super is primarily a bridge position pickup, although it can be used in the neck position with a relatively low-gain amp. Specifically designed for solid-bodies; hollow and semi-hollow guitars can be hard to control with warm, high output pickups.
Tech Talk
When DiMarzio first built the Super, it was a one-conductor pickup. As a 4-conductor pickup, it's extremely versatile. Coil splitting produces a very Strat-like option, both in tone and power. Parallel wiring is similar to splitting, but it's still humbucking and a little more hollow sounding; Paul Gilbert used to use 2 Supers wired in parallel when he was in Racer X.
The Super is primarily a bridge position pickup, although it can be used in the neck position with a relatively low-gain amp. Specifically designed for solid-bodies; hollow and semi-hollow guitars can be hard to control with warm, high output pickups.
Tech Talk
When DiMarzio first built the Super, it was a one-conductor pickup. As a 4-conductor pickup, it's extremely versatile. Coil splitting produces a very Strat-like option, both in tone and power. Parallel wiring is similar to splitting, but it's still humbucking and a little more hollow sounding; Paul Gilbert used to use 2 Supers wired in parallel when he was in Racer X.
Specs
Wiring: Standard 4-conductor
Magnet: Ceramic
Output: 425mV
DC Resistance: 13.68K
Year of introduction: 1972
Magnet: Ceramic
Output: 425mV
DC Resistance: 13.68K
Year of introduction: 1972
Reviews
Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 5 out of 5 stars.
(6 ratings)
Submitted July 16, 2003 by a customer from yahoo.com
"Dimarzio keeps on keepin on."
Verified Customer
zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
I have used the Dimarzio in the past and do not expect to use anything else. I have come back to the ultimate pick-up - for good!
Sound
In 40 years of professional experience, playing everything from country to jazz fusion I have run into no pick-up as versatile as the "Dimarzio super distortion." It misses nothing. When my pick attack is light for mellow jazz chords, every note and every thing my right hand is doing is crystal clear. When I play fusion I get the same results no matter how aggresive my pick attack may be. I recently replaced an EMG in the bridge position with the DP100 and there is no comparison. Compared to the Dimarzio, the EmG sounds like a transistor radio that has been turned up way too loud. The Dimarzio has more punch and more volume (had to reduce my post gain to more than half of what it was for the EMG) and it never loses it's tonal quality - extrordinary! Truely, the most productive pick-up around today.
Sincerely,
Mike E. Montgomery
The Wow Factor
If you can play your feelings. You'll have no problem sharing them with the audience.
Musical Style:
Jazz influenced R&B and fusion.
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No longer available at zZounds
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