![]() ![]() It produces more output than its specification suggests, especially clearer bass and more treble (due to the coils being mismatched). In the bridge it is simply an extremely flexible humbucker. Three of these guitars have the BurstBucker #3 at the bridge, where it is mostly intended for, and one uses it at the neck. ![]() If I either need a versatile tone or I simply don't know what tone I want, I reach for one of the guitars with a BurstBucker #3 in. I've had them in four guitars now-two Les Pauls, one Telecaster Delxue and one Telecaster Thinline-and they have become my 'default' pickup. Gibson mostly use these in a few Artist signature models as well as some Custom Shop models, though they have been used in a couple of production guitars and even two Epiphones. When installed as the 'stock' pickup in a guitar it comes wax potted when sold separately it is not wax potted. The #3 variation is the 'overwound' model. The Gibson Burstbucker PAF-style humbucker with asymmetrical coils and an AlNiCo II magnet.
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