In 1959 and 1960, the bobbin color of Gibson’s humbucking pickups was temporarily changed to cream due to a shortage of black plastic. During this transition, the two coils in a particular pickup might be of different colors. When a cream and a black bobbin were matched, it became known as a “zebra coil” (or just “zebra”). Some guitar players swore that these 2-color pickups actually sounded better, and soon every guitar player was sneaking a look under the nickel cover to see if he or she had one of these “killer pickups.” Eventually, pickup manufacturers began creating cover-less zebra-coil pickups to satisfy the demand. There has never been any scrap of real evidence that zebras were in any way better than all-black or all-cream pickups.
Related Articles:
Max for Live + Ableton Extensions: What Every Producer Should Know
1
Max for Live + Ableton Extensions: What Every Producer Should Know
Why Your Church Needs EFNOTE eKits
2
Why Your Church Needs EFNOTE eKits
The New Era of DJing? AlphaTheta CDJ-1500X Revealed!
3
The New Era of DJing? AlphaTheta CDJ-1500X Revealed!
The Legend Is BACK | EQD Bellows Jr. Demo
4
The Legend Is BACK | EQD Bellows Jr. Demo
Inside Martin Guitar’s Museum & the Four Sweetwater-exclusive Instruments It Inspired
5
Inside Martin Guitar’s Museum & the Four Sweetwater-exclusive Instruments It Inspired
Best Lightweight Guitar Amps
6
Best Lightweight Guitar Amps
Fender ’62 Deluxe Reissue: Everything You Need to Know
7
Fender ’62 Deluxe Reissue: Everything You Need to Know
How to Upgrade Your Microphones for Better Worship Sound
8
How to Upgrade Your Microphones for Better Worship Sound
Inspiration. Information. Passion.
Being music makers ourselves, we love geeking out on all things gear. From the tweakiest techniques to the biggest ideas, our experts work hard to constantly supply inSync with a steady stream of helpful, in-depth demos, reviews, how-tos, news, and interviews. With over 28,000 articles and counting, inSync is your FREE resource for breaking news, reviews, demos, interviews, and more.