Hello,
I've had the Novak JM-V / JM-Fat combo in my CIJ pretty much since I owned it. I love the JM-V in the neck, but never really bonded with the JM-Fat in the bridge, certainly not on its own anyway. It does sound good with overdrive, but I play my Jazzmaster clean 99% of the time.
I want to stick with a classic JM sound in this guitar, so I'm debating getting hold of a JM-V for the bridge too.
Can anyone describe what the difference is going to be? I know its hard to put these things into words.
Or as I'm in the UK I'm wondering if I should just try a JM bridge pickup from one of the UK winders, such as the creamery,
Thanks!
Novak JM-V vs JM-Fat
- gusgorman
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- IceBlueBoogaloo
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Re: Novak JM-V vs JM-Fat
I can’t speak from experience but my understanding of the JM-Fat (and fat bridges in general) is that it’s designed to compensate for the weaker string vibrations near the bridge.
But I managed to nail a much more satisfying tone from the bridge just by adjusting the pickup height until volume levels were balanced between the two pickups. For reference, this is on a stock Vintera JM which is supposed to be pretty faithful. Novak and Creamery should both be good options for getting a classic JM bridge.
But I managed to nail a much more satisfying tone from the bridge just by adjusting the pickup height until volume levels were balanced between the two pickups. For reference, this is on a stock Vintera JM which is supposed to be pretty faithful. Novak and Creamery should both be good options for getting a classic JM bridge.
- gusgorman
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Re: Novak JM-V vs JM-Fat
Thanks for the reply.IceBlueBoogaloo wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 4:36 amI can’t speak from experience but my understanding of the JM-Fat (and fat bridges in general) is that it’s designed to compensate for the weaker string vibrations near the bridge.
But I managed to nail a much more satisfying tone from the bridge just by adjusting the pickup height until volume levels were balanced between the two pickups. For reference, this is on a stock Vintera JM which is supposed to be pretty faithful. Novak and Creamery should both be good options for getting a classic JM bridge.
Yep I think I need to give a classic JM bridge p/up a try. I've had the JM-Fat for about 4 or 5 years now so I've given it a good go.
- ryland
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Re: Novak JM-V vs JM-Fat
I had a JM-V/JM-V combo in a Jazzmaster and found that the bridge sound was too shrill. I replaced the bridge with a JM-FAT, which evened out the high end ice pick sound. I find it much more useable than the JM-V.
- MapachoPunk
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Re: Novak JM-V vs JM-Fat
gusgorman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 10:19 amHello,
I've had the Novak JM-V / JM-Fat combo in my CIJ pretty much since I owned it. I love the JM-V in the neck, but never really bonded with the JM-Fat in the bridge, certainly not on its own anyway. It does sound good with overdrive, but I play my Jazzmaster clean 99% of the time.
I want to stick with a classic JM sound in this guitar, so I'm debating getting hold of a JM-V for the bridge too.
Can anyone describe what the difference is going to be? I know its hard to put these things into words.
Or as I'm in the UK I'm wondering if I should just try a JM bridge pickup from one of the UK winders, such as the creamery,
Thanks!
I'm currently trying to decide on this very thing. What did you decide? How did it go? I also play clean most of the time and want to maintain the classic JM sound, but it seems many favor the JM-Fat in the bridge.
Thanks!
- redchapterjubilee
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Re: Novak JM-V vs JM-Fat
Most smaller pickup makers will allow you to customize your pickups a bit. Like our OSG'er that runs Sunday Pickups, and to a certain extent Lollar, Fralin, Pickup Wizard, and others allow for a little bit of bespoke work. Lollar and Fralin make + 5% and -5% of their standard Jazzmaster style pickups. A -5% neck and a +5% bridge balance well. Sunday and Pickup Wizard will allow you to really customize windings. Both my pairs of black bobbin Pickup Wizards have +10% bridge pickups. They don't hit an amp as hard as a JM-FAT does but have enough windings to attenuate a bit of treble. That has worked better for me than anyone's set of off-the-shelf standard Jazzmaster pickups.