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GFS Pickups Dream 180

Summary
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Manufacturer URL http://store.guitarfetish.com/
Sound 9.2 (21 responses)
Overall Rating 9.3 (28 responses)
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Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/16/2009 at 01:48pm by Dino
Email: Verboten1965 at hotmail<dot>com

Features :
Humbucker, chrome finish, two rows of screws for bobbins. I don't know the impedance of these. But they are as loud as my Dimarzio PAFs's 8.4 kohms. Passive.

Instrument :
These came on a Yamaha RG320 I bought. I bought the guitar used and these came with it as an upgrade, from a musician. The guitar was mint and the pickups looked nice.

Sound : 10
They are moderatey loud, and very creamy sounding to me. The guitar they came in was all mahogany, that I know of. That probably explains it too. They sound like a Les Paul playing through a vintage stack. Very warm, and I like how I can play a chord, pick a higher pitched note, and it shines through without upsetting the other series of notes in the chord, in my honest opinion. I play classic rock like Rush, Zeppelin, Van Halen etc. With this guitar and pickups I'm getting good old fashione sounds here !

Overall Rating : 10
I understand they are cheap, like 30 bucks. SH##. I payed 89 bucks for Dimarzio's here in Canada. These GFS are an incredible value. I used to think GFS were a cheap substitute, adverstised on the internet, but these are awesome. They sound like Gibson Pup's. But the difference is, they sound as brassy like Gibson's and these have a more vintage, PAF like sound. I like to use the word 'creamy' here. Does that make sense ? I hope so.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 30
Submitted 07/24/2009 at 11:19am by Tonytonytony

Features :
Bridge position, specs and other info can be found at GFS website.

Instrument :
Installed this in the bridge position of a Hamer XT sunburst. Stock pickup was on the weak side when clean and muddy when overdriven. I paired this with a GFS Retrotron Memphis in the neck. I was going for a 60's vibe with this guitar, but I still wanted some versatility in the bridge.

Sound : 10
Low output bridge pickup. But that's not entirely a bad thing. I think sometimes people get too caught up in pickups and forget that a majority of your tone can come from the amp/pedals you have. I'm not a huge fan of of some of the more popular (read expensive) pickups out there and I couldn't justify putting $100+ in a $175 guitar. The Dream 180 is advertised as a combination of Filtertron and vintage PAF and that is a credible assessment. On a clean setting, you get a passable Gretch-like sound. Very applicable to the 60's type of music that I play, but also is suitable for REM/80's style music. All notes come out clear and bright when chorded, although to my surprise, slightly more bassy that I would have liked, no biggie, though. Distorted, you definitely can hear the PAF qualities in it. I'm not talking hard core Megadeath distortion, more like 70's era--Zeppelin, Stones, etc. Again, notes ring out well balanced, but a little more bass. I was surprised by the response to distortion because I had originally thought that the Hamer would end up being my "clean" guitar and I would have to use another guitar for "dirty" sounds. Not the case. The Dream 180 is extremely versatile and really doesn't lend itself to one particular genre of music. If pressed, I would probably bring this on a gig as my lone guitar and let the amp do all the work.

Overall Rating : 10
Very satisfied with the choice of Dream 180. Kind of gives you the best of many worlds with the clean and dirty tones you can generate from it. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend this for any humbucker guitar, be it Hamer, Gibson, et al. And, it's cheap. So if you don't like it, you can return it or at the least, you won't be out too much cash.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/04/2009 at 07:16pm by Wallace

Features :
Passive humbuckers.

Instrument :
These pickups were in a 335 copy that I bought. One in the neck and one in the bridge. I learned that they were in the right positions when I took them out of the guitar that they were in.

Sound : 1
There was a strong signal (lots of output) coming from both pickups but the sound was harsh and brittle. The really high end seemed to be cut off by the brittle edginess of the pickups so there were no crystal clear highs. The low end seemed to be cut off like there was a built-in high pass filter in them. I tweaked these pickups up and down to find the sweet spot but the sweet spot just wasn't there.

I tried the guitar in a class A tube amp and a solid state amp both with terrible results. Amps through which nearly every guitar sounds decent.

I think the positions which are unsuitable for these pickups would be any position in a musical instrument.

Overall Rating : 2
If these pickups were stolen from my guitar I would chase down the offender and hand him or her some cash or ask them if I could do their yard work or something.

I took these pickups out of the guitar an replaced them with something nice. I actually will play the guitar now instead of leaving it in the stand all of the time. I've been playing guitars for 25 years or so and own everything from USA Gibsons to Indonesian Ibanez guitars. I have changed pickups on many guitars for myself and for others and believe these GFS pickups to be the worst ones I've ever used.

I loved the looks of the pickups and I hated the sound of them. Tweak them all you want and the things sounded poor.

I wish that it vaguely approached the product description that the company advertises it to be. Just in the ball park would have been ok.

I've compared these pickups to many different brands and models of pickups and yes, they are one of the cheapest pickups out there but the pickup is what takes the vibration of the string and sends it to your amp. DO NOT SKIMP on pickups. I used to think they were 'good for the money' but I cannot recommend them on that basis either as it would be dishonest.

They are not equal to or even close to Seymour Duncan, DiMarzio, Gibson, or Fender and shouldn't even be mentioned or in the parts bin of a shop that has pickups in it by Lindy Fralin, Jason Lollar, WCR, and countless other pickup makers.

I really wanted to rate it at '3' for this section but I just could not bring myself to do so.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/04/2009 at 09:19am by Scott
Email: dettingrunk at yahoo<dot>com

Features :
passive humbucker. slightly hotter than a vintage bucker. chrome cover. 12 adjustable pole pieces.

Instrument :
bridge position of epiphone les paul.

Sound : 9
a little bit hot but not really high output. claims to be a PAF with Gretch sparkle. I don't hear that. What I do hear is a big fat P90. A P90 with more output and a big punchy low end. pretty cool.

Overall Rating : 9
This isn't really what I was looking for but it is great quality pickup and if you are a P90 fan you may find true love in this pickup.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 26.00
Submitted 05/25/2009 at 05:44pm by CaptainStrat

Features :
4 conductor passive humbucker, described by GFS as having "P90 tone with Filtertron jangle and PAF bottom". Actual impedance unknown, though my cheap VOhm Meter gave a reading of about 7.6K (can't b right, can it?). Gold cover.

Instrument :
It is in neck position of my home made DC Les Paul copy; replacing the Kent Armstrong OEM PAF I had previously installed there. No offence intended to Kent Armstrong users, but the ceramic pickups just sounded bland to my ears. The sonic description of the Dream 180 sounded like a refreshing change from the usual PAF sound so I decided to give it a try. I Googled for sound clips and found some on the Agile forum (on a guitar of similar build and woods as mine)and I was convinced I was making the right choice.

Sound : 9
The output level is hot, but expect to do some tweaking to get "that sound". I found it to be a fickle pickup, too close to the strings sounded boomy and dull; backing it off from the strings improved things slightly but I lost pickup balance with the (excellent) Liverpool Retrotron and the overall tone lacked definition.

What I ended up doing is lowering it to just above pickup mounting ring level and compensated the loss of volume by raising the polepieces. I posted a few clips to my pals on the Cyberjammin' board and that seems to have fixed it - the tone is now clear, jangly and well balanced. The combined neck and bridge position has been described as "surfalicious"!

Overall Rating : 8
The Dream 180 sounds good, no question about it, but I'm giving it a chance to grow on me; it's not 100% what I had in mind for the neck pickup. I'm sitting on my hands not to swap it for a Dimarzio Humbucker from Hell immediately, as the HFH has a reputation to "open up" that neck tone quite nicely.

I definitely like the Dream 180 better than its predecessor; does it fullfill GFS' claim that it sounds like the Dream 90 with the jangle of a filtertron and the bottom of a PAF? I'd say pretty close. I can definitely hear the PAF bottom end, and my buddies at Cyberjammin' can hear the jangly top end (sometimes I don't hear it...call it ear fatigue?)I'm honestly not familiar enough with P90's to say whether it has that sound or not.

Now, if it were to crap out on me I'm not convinced I'd reorder that particular one...I might get a Dream 90 instead, or swap it for the HBH and see how well it blends with the Retrotron...

Not to say that it's a bad pickup, it sounds fine it's not just quite "it"...then again it might grow on me and I might say it's the best thing since sliced bread in a few months from now! ;)


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/23/2009 at 08:43pm by Tom

Features :
Humbucking pickups Didn't measure DC resistance

Instrument :
Installed in a project guitar. Samick MB1 body UCACG neck. Put in bridge & neck positions. I didn't have any pickups to begin with & needed something. Don't know of any artists using these.

Sound : 8
Fairly warm pickups. My amp is a Fender Dual Showman & a homebuilt 412 cab. Also using a Digitech RP 80 & a MXR Dynacomp. Tone wise they're a bit on the trebly side. But that's what tone controls are for. I have them wired using individual series/off/parallel switches, one vol/one tone. I play a wide range of music. Jazz, classic rock, country. I get the sounds I need with this setup. I'd look elsewhere for metal.

Overall Rating : 9
If stolen I'd hunt the thief down & beat them senseless with the guitar. I've been playing for over 35 years & had a number of different guitars. A Strat, SG & 335 were my favorites. I like the versatility of these pups. And the articulation is the best I've ever heard. But I wish they weren't so trebly. When I switch to another guitar I have to turn the treble on the amp back up. But overall I can't complain. Better to have that high end & tone it down then to not have enough. You can even get some twang, which saves me reaching for my tele. These are the best pups for me.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 140.00 USED
Submitted 04/19/2009 at 10:04pm by Bret

Features :
Passive humbuckers... I'm told they are two P-90 type pickups put together

Instrument :
These pickups, both neck and bridge, came stock on an Xaviere XV-650 double cutaway (similar to Fender Strat) shape. The guitar has a poplar block to which the pickups are attached directly (no pickup rings). The top back and sides are ~ 1/4" maple full hollow on both sides with an f-hole on the top. I haven't tried them in anything else yet but may replace the pickups in my Epiphone Les Paul with dream 180's, we'll see...

Sound : 10
The output level of these is noticeably higher than my stock Epiphone Les Paul pickups. The rig I'm playing through consists (tonally... minus delays, expression pedals, etc.) of a Boss CO-3 Compressor > Ibanez TS-9 OD > Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive > Boss CS-1 Chorus (stereo out) > Boss RV-5 Reverb (stereo in, stereo out). One cable runs to a Mesa F-50 1x12 combo (2-6L6 power tubes), the other cable runs to a late 50's / early 60's Sano WR-30 combo (double power amps = 2-EL34's to the 15" driver, one EL84 to the 8" driver) with a homebuilt open back 1x12" extension cabinet loaded with a Celestion Greenback plugged into the external speaker jack. I was very surprised by the tone coming out of these pickups. It doesn't matter how much they cost, these pickups are great. They seem to have better bass response capabilities than the epi's and the highs are rich and full not painfull at all. Compared to the Epiphone Les Paul I found I had to turn the amps overall volume down a touch and boost the treble on both amps a notch, no big deal. I am definitely happy I heard about these pickups and gave 'em a try. My ears are pleased. I play all kinds of music country, reggae, rock, classic rock, jazz, blues, heavy distortion (ween), etc. These pickups are definitely not bright but I've always liked the chunkier sound of hums but despite the fact that they're a bit darker than most they are still full of tone.

Overall Rating : 10
I would definitely buy these again (not to mention the Xaviere guitar... for the price, they can't be beat). I've been playing for around 15 years. I've tried them through the mesa alone and the Sano alone and a Kalamazoo Model 2 and it sounds great through them all clean or distorted... I'm happy


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 32
Submitted 01/23/2009 at 06:49pm by FF

Features :
5-wire humbucker style advertised as double P90 Filtertron meets PAF, whatever that means.

I bought a set, the neck pickup measured about 12kohms, the bridge around 12.25kohms.

I got the ivory pearl (the yellow ones). The colour is awesome. It matches the binding on the guitar but not the inlays, the white might have been a smarter choice but they do look awesome.

Instrument :
Installed in a 2008 Agile AS-820 hollow-body. The stock pickups were ceramic. The neck pickup sounded pretty good but the bridge pickup was really boring. I replaced both pickups with a set of Dream 180s.

These are 5-wire and I really wanted to try some different wiring mods. I did full coil tapping on each pickup with a SPDT on/off/on switch for each one so I can get humbucker or either north or south pole single coils. This alone is amazing. I also did a phase reversal switch so that the humbuckers are out of phase when both humbuckers are used. All this is still controlled by the regular toggle switch. I got the wiring ideas from guitarelectronics.com but bought the switches locally. Here's the modded guitar: http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll312/Nathan_AS/AGILE_AS_820_MODDED033.jpg

Sound : 9
These really breathed new life into the guitar. I own a 1997 Gibson Les Paul Studio with stock Alnico pickups. I've played some boutique guitars/pickups in stores but can mostly just compare to the Gibson with my setup. The tonal options I have with the coil tapping and phasing seems endless. I had to drill 3 holes in the guitar but if you're able to replace pickups you might be able to do this mod. I completely re-did the wiring harness and used 500k pots and 0.022uF film capacitors.

The humbucker settings sound great. Really high output, clear as a bell, well balanced, etc... just like all the other reviewers have noted. It's cool flipping the coil tapping switch and hearing the hum come out of the single coils. If you use a neck single coil with a bridge single coil it kills the hum and sounds incredible.

I bet handwound $400 pickups sound great but for $32 each and a bit of time sticking these in your cheap guitar you will have a total tone monster.

My Agile is meant to be a total different guitar/sound in comparison with the Gibson but I would consider putting these in my Les Paul as well.

Overall Rating : 9
I would buy GFS again. Honestly they need to team up with Agile because I hear of a lot of people matching up the two. I would recommend trying these out.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 30
Submitted 01/11/2009 at 06:46pm by paul
Email: wvmusician64<at>yahoo dot com

Features :
Double coil humbucking size. This one has a pearl/chrome cover with 12 pole pieces, 6 adjustable.

Instrument :
In my Epi Dot Studio. tried in both the neck and bridge. The other pickup was a dream 90. See my review for the dream 90 - I love that pickup.

Sound : 9
Didnt really give me the sound I expected, but I really didnt know what to expect either. I tried thisd with a dream 90.. swapping positions, etc.. but ended up really LOVEing the dream 90, but not so much the dream 180. Just my persona preference. The 180 sounded really great clean with some rolled back tone, but I didnt like the over-jangliness and high end in distortion mode. I think this would make a great pickup for someone playing petty, byrds, and even some other popish clean guitar.. but it didnt give me the bottom end and warmth I needed. Cant rate it bad since it did what it was inteded to do, I just didnt like it that much.

Overall Rating : 9
Rates a 9,Only because it simply wasnt for me. You really have to try it. I ended up loving the dream 9o though. I might have to get me a mean 90 to try too. I love gfs pickups - I use them in other guitars, my strat, les paul, etc. They are great - better I think than dimarzios. But you have to listen to the specialty pickups like this one to really decide if it fits. If you want to be absiolutely safe, they have great overwound pafs and of vourse, their overwound strat pickups are great too! I love the dream 90 in the neck of my 335!


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/03/2008 at 08:58am by Scott McKinney
Email: ex7tele at yahoo<dot>com

Features :
Dream 180 Filtertron meets PAF

I haven't tested the output and probablly will not. My can ears tell me all I want to know because I'm not going to play any better wheather they are they are putting out 15,000 kajillagiggaherts of load or not.

Instrument :
I installed these pups in a Fender Custom Shop WR Signature series guitar (retail: 3,999.00). I was extremelly saddened with the custom shops approach to a guitars tone. The pickups were Duncan made by the custom shops specs (Duncan only did what they were paid for, not slammin' Duncan at all) but the craftsman ship was sad...they used capacitors, resistors and wiring trickery to acheive thickness and tone. I have to do fly gigs and the two pickups making up the bridge humbucker actually came apart during flight due to the heat in Mexico melting the freakin' potting wax which was THE only thing holding them on the cardboard mount PLUS...PLUS get this...cosmetics was nothing more than a plastic cover to fill a Jazzmasters cavity with HA! aluminum foil mimicing pole pieces in the pickups!!!!!!! not windings!!! not metal!!! or not even real magnets!!!! I completely stripped the circuit naked and had crap left to deal with so I went hunting for new pickups that would compliment a $4,000.00 guitar. I tried Fralins, Duncans, Dimarzio all good but just not what I was looking for then gentlemen, I found these (with extensive research on GFS) and man let me tell you..these babies scream, they plunk, pop, soar, and land with flawless sustain from Haties PLUS to boot they look absolutely incredible in the Mojo. I am very impressed with GFS even though they are a Foreign crafted product (but what isn't....you buy gasoline don't you?
I have wired them up three different ways to see if they lacked beef or tone and all three have unique characteristics of their own wheather series, paralell or splitting the coil..

Sound : 10
output is strong, stout, smooth, responsive, and clear as a set of tunned wind chimes in a cool summer breeze on the back porch.
From top to bottom (with correct pole heighth naturally) the output is the same, even with no compressor. I am having to pull back on the Keeley fat/mod Blues Driver just don't need as much drive anymore to break up the amp and give me that Nashville grit. I also run through a Keeley compressor Boss TU-2, Boss Blues Driver (no mod) and a Boss Overdrive/ Distortion into a Line6 Flextone XL manual mode on a Black face setting. I re-wired the amp to accomodate a 2 x 12 ext cab loaded with Black widows.
I play professionally for a signed artist in Nashville, TN(sorry cant say who).. so I play mostly country rock/blues based sounding material. Lotta Mason based qualities, after all he played on the CD. I'm not a thrasher or a metal jammer but these pickups WILL foot the bill if needed be. I can play that stuff, I just don't make a living with it.
Bridge and Neck are ballanced perfect with plenty of bottom low mid-thicknesss and a nice high cutting transparency that doesn't make your ears bleed like a cheap radio cranked. Theres no need to apply a boost when going to a neck pos solo. Trust me it's there.
Don't get offended here ok...K. I don't think (personal opinion here)these pickups are for the average Joe Blow looking for something to come flying out of their guitar that they have never heard. You need to be able to play and understand what a boutique designed pickup is all about in order to get it's full potential. Analogy here...its kinda like High Deffinition Television and 4 leaf clovers...you have to know what to look for to see it. Make sure you wire the bridge and neck in-phase or out together. IF one is in and one is out the middle pos will sound like a cheap strat with an even cheaper analog phaser kicked in. cool effect though if your into that...lol! options, options, options...

Overall Rating : 10
I will definatelly buy more GFS pickups. I have been playing
26 years professionally so I've been around a few guitars in my day. Any vetran will tell you this, you don't know what tone is untill you have the right gear to achieve one plus having it infront of 20,000 people is the bomb. Kinda makes you feel like it what it's like to be Ron Jeremy.LMAO here! Tone is like trying to find Atlantis, but when you select the right components (that fit your style) and along with a comfortable playing ability, you will find a tone or find your tone or figure out what it is you're looking for. (My opinion) GFS pickups are a definate beginning or the ultimate solution to that gateway of tonal heaven.

Thank you for your time, I hope my review was some kind of insight to maybe some of your unanswered questions and I trust my explanation was clear and thorough enough that everyone knew what I was talkng about. My price includes bridge and neck together 7 bucks ea shipping my total was $81.90 in three days. Now thats the way it suspose to be.

S


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/19/2008 at 05:57pm by acsmith

Features :
Tap-able humbucker with 2 rows of adjustable pole pieces.

Instrument :
Beautiful franken-Tele:
- maple highway-1 neck
- midnight wine mim body
- Wilkinson bridge, with 3 brass swivel saddles
- Seymour Duncan Quarter Pounder in bridge, and chrome Dream 180 in neck

Sound : 10
Both pickups are well matched (high output). The SD is slightly hotter (as suspected), but adds a desired punch in bridge position.

I first used the Dream 180 in the bridge of a Squier 51. I was very impressed by how well it's balanced, and how harmonics cut through. It has a nice natural compression which really allows for pick definition and detail. Further, this thing is dead quiet.

Curious enough, I put one in the neck of my franken-Tele (honestly, not expecting much, since experience usually reveals that my favorite pickup in one position is characterless in another).

To be shocked, I was blown away by the Dream 180 in the neck position. You can receive surreal jazz tones; particularly noticeable on the mid and high strings high up the fretboard. Again, this thing really shines with harmonics and pick definition.

I call my franken-Tele the 'Bi-Polar Beast': the neck tones are so sweet and defined, ideal for jazz and clean classic rock; the SD QP is pure power and hard rock.

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing for 12 years, and modding for roughly 3.

I've tried a lot of pickups (a lot of Duncans, Dimarzios, and Lace).

I truly believe MOST of the GFS line is comparable to more expensive pickups. I did not, however, have a good experience with the retrotron pickups (cheap sheet metal cover, and devoid of character).

The D180s are cheaper than most of their line. I wouldn't write this review if I didn't think they were fantastic.

I've tried most of their line; the other pickup that is memorable is the alnico fatbody in the neck of a tele (certainly worth checking out for 30 bucks).

Regards,

A.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/11/2008 at 11:29am by Alnico or Nothing

Features :
n/a

Instrument :
n/a

Sound : 10
also to post an update (i forgot) on how well-shielded these are. I mentioned that I installed coil-splitting - well there's really not a wee-bit more noise in single-coil mode!

I know a lot of people like the "exposed humbucker" look, but really, the covers aren't just cosmetic - they're shields! But they also look great. IMHO pretty shiny metal covers make a difference: whether your guitar looks like a classy instrument or a prototype franken-axe. Of course, the latter may still be preferred by some people and that's ok.

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 35
Submitted 06/10/2008 at 01:56pm by DreamOn A_Budget

Features :
splittable humbuckers with adjustable poles on both coils. beautiful yellow pearloid inlay on the gold shield cover - I found a matching les-paul pickguard and got looks on top of tone!

neck: 11.5 kOhm
bridge: 13+ kOhm - I guess this is considered "hot" or maybe "vintage hot" but read on - they got tone! I am not one to like hot pickups - I like sweet/warm TONE! That usually means low-impedance pickups. These seem to have both.

Instrument :
My guitar is rather cheap - SamAsh's Brownsville GG1 - it's a loose variation on the les paul theme, but very nicely made - solid mahogany body (and set neck), striped maple top. I have since installed a bigsby vibrato on it. I love this guitar - after my mods it's easily on a par with gibsons in both looks/feel and tone. I am not inexperienced, either, not hyping - I just made sure I was careful when I picked it out. I loved the tone/feel and that's all there is to a good guitar. Pickups are player's choice.

Dream 180's went into both positions. Stock pickups were "ok" (decent, nice and quiet), but I hate ceramic pickups - they're like gourmet food without salt (even the best of them).

Sound : 10
Plenty of output, without loosing "soul". I am currently using the Fender Super Champ XD - an amp with a Class A/B power section but with a digital "modeling" preamp. I am by no means a "modeling" person - I hate everything digital (for music). But this amp was getting very good reviews and I was able to find a deal (can you already tell I'm all about deals). This amp sounds exactly like a tube amp (because it is).

Dream 180's are: VERY articulate - even with high overdrive they maintain string definition. Neck pickup has PLENTY of clear punchy bass, not loose or muddy or wobbly. Bridge pickup sounds like a bridge pickup - way less bass, more treble and twang, but that's also due to position, right? I would maybe wish for a bit more bass there, but maybe that's not even possible. Maybe in ensemble situations it'll help "cut through the mix". And yet (with this amp) even the brightest settings don't make your ears bleed.

I also installed coil-splitting (currently 1 push/pull splits both pickups). Dream 180 sounds VERY nice in single-coil mode. Let's just say that I really don't miss not having a strat or a tele (I respect their tones, but never liked their feel in my hands).

These pickups are very sweet-toned - rich harmonically. If that's possible they are both: warm and jangly at once. They have the deep sweetness of PAF and they're "kerangy" like gretsches. I am getting more into rockabilly, but also blues/classic rock type sound, so they're a great match. I don't like being like everyone else, so these seem to give me an edge - a little extra "special" something.

I truly love the sound of these pickups, so can't help but give them a 10. Maybe a 9.5 due to bridge being trebly, but again, maybe that's not even a fair rant.

I've seen a few people with strats/teles who didn't like this pickup in their axes. I happen to think these are more for the lespaul/es335/gretsch type instruments.

Overall Rating : 10
Excellent value. I used to have an Epi LP Custom and bought Gibson Classic '57 pickups for it (gold). they were like $150/each! These GFS Dream 180 ($35 each) are same quality, more interesting tone and better look (gold/pearloid) plus both coils are adjustable.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 40.
Submitted 01/02/2008 at 05:01pm by Patrick A.

Features :
First shot at "modding" any guitar (yeah, after 35 years of playing). I am stunned. I really am. I dropped these in a Chibanez Artcore AS73 335-knock-off, and it morphed this guitar from a bland guitar to...well, you pick you own hyperbole. These pickups are awesome.

The Dream 180's are HB sized pickups that supposedly mix a PAF with a vintage Rickenbacker sound. I don't know about all that. All I do know is that each string is super clear and articulated, and either on clear or OD'd, the guitar oozes tone. I play 3x a week on a church worship team, and I get tons of comments from the band about this guitar now...

Instrument :
Ibanez AS73, replacing the stock HB'ers. Email me if you want to buy the stock pickups..I sure won't be needing them.

Had the pickups installed by Gary at Yancy's Music in Ormond Beach. He's great. Tell him Pat sent you.

I replaced the original pickups because they were muddy and tonally pretty dead. I got the guitar as a Christmas present 4 years ago, and never played it because the sound was so uninspired. This guitar sings now.

Sound : 10
These pickups are hot, way more than the stock ones.

Playing through a Digitech RP350 (no amps on the stage), and carefully monitor my sound through an Aviom IEM. Clean or overdriven, these pickups sound good. Real good.

Tone is well balanced.....these pickups are pretty thumpy on the bass end, and pretty sparkly on the treble end. I like 'em.

We're doing a lot of Tomlin/Redman/Hillsong-ish music. If you play at a church, you know what I mean. Pop-rock, U2-ish maybe.

I play rythmn, and they're great for that.

Overall Rating : 10
I've had these for around 3 months, and wanted to wait before I posted a review. I wanted to make sure I was over the honeymoon stage, or see if I got tired of these. I haven't and I don't think I will.

Really makes you think about what it would be like to buy up more good guitar bodies and drop these GFS pickups in them....they sure are cheap enough to buy. What a killer way to experiment with different tones and stuff. I want to try their P90's on something.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 29.99
Submitted 11/26/2007 at 11:09am by jay

Features :
8.7 impedance for Bridge

Instrument :
Put it in a Squier '51 bridge position

Sound : 10
This thing is the you know what.

Let me get right to the point. It is the best pickup I have ever heard, it smokes everything in its path.

It eats gain for breakfast, lunch and dinner, it soars, shimmers, it's lighter than air but with a real rock and roll attitude and a lot of soul. It kicks total .ss. Great for blues, classic rock, you name it.

It is a very bright pickup, but not harsh. Everytime I play it, I hear different tonal characteristics. I think it really occupies it's own territory, it's unique but familiar at the same time. It takes from a lot of different categories, somehow blends them all together in a greater than the sum of its parts way.

It's just jaw droppingly awesome, after I play something I often get one of those "holy ..it" moments.


Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for 5 years, I've got about a dozens guitars, some pretty good ones, LP's, teles, etc.

I don't think it is possible to create a better sounding pickup than this, it's tonal nirvana.

This could be the sound you are looking for, I know its mine!

Get this pickup now, it might change your life!


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/09/2007 at 03:40pm by Jeff

Features :
Passive humbucking pickup, neck position

Instrument :
I installed this in the neck position of an Agile Ghost III. See my review of the GFS Crunchy Rails for more information about my background in pickups. The GFS Crunchy Rails is in the bridge.

I wanted to replace the stock AL-HOT neck pickup (which, as stated in the aforementioned review, was not at all -bad-, but which lacked qualities I was specifically looking for). This pickup is advertised as combining the "jangle" of a Filtertron with the "warmth" of a PAF. Seeing as the bridge pickup of this guitar is incredibly hot and crunchy, I wanted a neck pickup that would have a jazzier character to it, but still have the high-end definition I needed.

Sound : 10
This pickup is advertised as "vintage voiced," but "hot." I don't know about the first claim - frankly, "vintage" has a very gimmicky connotation in today's guitar merchant world so I tend to gloss over it. As to the second, while it certainly isn't as hot as the Crunchy Rails in the bridge (which is the single hottest pickup I've ever used, by a wide margin), it is definitely a lively neck pickup. It doesn't need a boost pedal to push a distortable amp into overdrive. However, it also isn't overpowered - it is in fact a very versatile pickup, capable of everything (with judicious use of the volume and tone knobs) from very jazzy, smooth, warm bell-tones to crunchy, full-bodied riffs. It is a great complement to the Crunchy Rails because it allows me to switch easily between a screaming, thick lead tone to a smoother, rounded rhythm tone very easily while using distortion, and it essentially provides the entirety of this guitar's clean tone (frankly, I love neck pickup cleans more than any other - what a lovely, round sound).

The key word is balance. This pickup has an excellent, even balance of tone that lets it respond very nicely and adroitly to volume and tone knob adjustment and amplifier idiosyncrasies. It is the kind of pickup that brings out the positive characteristics of nearly anything you plug it into. Comparing it to the Lace Blue in my Stratocaster, it has more low-end depth and definition without sacrificing the midrange swell and high frequency delicacy that I've grown to love in the Lace Blue. Of course, being a humbucker, it is a bit less responsive to playing dynamics than the Lace Blue, but the world of guitar is one of give and take. Overall, this pickup has an excellent sound, at least to my ears and with my gear.

I am very impressed with its versatility and with its tonal character. I would like to experiment with a bridge Dream 180 to see how it might differ from this neck position Dream 180, but I am so in love with the Crunchy Rails that such a thing will have to wait until I stumble across a project guitar.

Overall Rating : 10
If I had the same guitar to do over again, having used this pickup in it, I would purchase it again except faster so that I could get the finished sound sooner. I don't mean to dote, it's just that this really is an extraordinary neck pickup that expands the tonal versatility and general utility of the Ghost III (with the GFS Crunchy Rails in the bridge) to places it would not otherwise go. By blending the bridge and neck in the middle position with the two volume controls, I can get whatever degree of tonal variance I want, and it is a great thing.

I had envisioned this guitar as a guitar specifically for the kind of music I like to make - very heavy riffs and leads layered with melodic cleans. I thought the bridge GFS Crunchy Rails would be -just- for the riffing, and that the neck Dream 180 would be -just- for melody, but the end result has surprised me with its versatility. I won't be retiring my beloved Strat, but I can see it getting a bit of dust between plays now that this axe - and more saliently to the topic, these pickups - are around.

See my other review of the GFS Crunchy Rails for some more comments about the overall rating of these two pickups.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/17/2007 at 01:27pm by mikemac
Email: mikemac12 at yahoo<dot>com

Features :
Hello again...another follow up review here.

Instrument :
Installed in both positions of a Jay Turser JT 200 Serpent (LP copy). The guitar is a few years old...from the CHALICE inlay headstock days.

Sound : 10
While I prefer the neck Dream 180's sound for clean passages and nice, smooth jazz / blues rhythms, the bridge absolutely rips, with heavy distortion laid on. The clarity and cut of the bridge pickup in heavy distortion mode is wonderful sounding and unbelievably musical while being piercingly clear. It also drips with harmonics and controlled harmonic feedback. Outstanding. You metal guys owe it to yourself to try these alnico magnet jobs.
I have to roll my volume back a tad when using the bridge pickup for clean solos and clean rhythms. It's just too bright otherwise. This is not a problem on the Les Paul. Dial back the volume to 8-8.5 and this guy gets very tasty, indeed. The neck and middle positions are beautiful, played clean. These are the most musical and the clearest humbuckers I have played to date. Others I have tried are: Lawrence 500 XL, SD JB, Lacie Hemi Humbuckers (great pickups!) and Schaller Golden 50.
I'm not sure if JANGLEY is the right word for these but CLARITY of SIGNAL definitely applies. They ring out with punch and musical authority. Put a set in your solid body and never worry about cutting through the loudest background accompaniments. PERIOD! Plus, they sound mucho musica, musica excellante, amigos.

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/14/2007 at 09:15am by Aaron

Features :
Passive, Humbucking pickup. According to GFS website, the impedence of the bridge pickup is 8.5k. I think the one I received is closer to 10 or thereabouts.

Instrument :
Installed in the bridge position of an Epiphone Dot. I've read reviews here that these pickups aren't quite "jangly" enough for some. But then, they've installed them on solid body guitars. I have to say that (along with the Dream 90 in the neck position) this pickup is quite jangly - almost too much so for my taste.

Sound : 10
I'd say these are medium output pickups. On my Heritage Les Paul, I have a DiMarzio multibucker in the bridge position and that is high output. The Dream 180 has a higher output than the stock pickups the Epi came with. I mainly use it with amp modelers straight into the board (Digitech GSP2101, Digitech GNX1, and Digitech Genesis 1). I don't gig out these days, just studio work, so it definitely fits the bill for what I need.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing since I was 14 - I'm 42 now. I have a Heritage Les Paul, a Jay Turser Les Paul (vine inlay), 2 Jay Turser SG-style guitars (a six- and a twelve-string), the Epiphone Dot, an Antoniotsai SG-style, and a Jay Turser Hofner-copy ("Beatle bass") I'm currently debating putting one of these in the neck position of my Antoniotsai SG-style guitar and matching it with a Dimarzio multibucker in the bridge position.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/04/2007 at 02:32pm by Pork Chops Murphy

Features :
Humbuckers- supposed to be "PAF meets Filtertron". I'm not sure they are, but I know they're too hot for my tastes. I really tried to like these pickups, but they just don't sound good. They talk about "vintag" sounding on the website but there is nothing vintage about these. I'm not putting in ratings numbers here because it could just be my tastes.

Instrument :
These went in (and came out of) a Hamer Newport. Initially, I had a Duncan 59 in the neck and one of these in the bridge. It sounded OK but the output on this one was so much higher, they were impossible to match through height adjustment. So, I bought the neck too.

Sound : No Opinion
I use several good tube amps. The output on these is hot, real hot.
They have one good sound - overdriven leads. The clean sound is sterile and, to me, pretty much unusable. I play blues, rock, country, rockabilly, whatever and I need a real warm clean sound and let the amp do the overdriving. These pickups just get lost in the mix when we play out. They sound like cheap pickups.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I don't want to rip these things too bad because I think I got what I paid for. I was looking for professional quality pickups at a discount price. These are not them. If you're looking for something cheap to play around with in your import guitar or to play in your bedroom, they can be fun and if you don't like them, they're only about $35 each. I chose these on price and on the reviews I read here. I would never buy these (and probably no other GFS pickups). The guy at GFS is very helpful but these look, feel and sound like cheap Asian pickups.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 33
Submitted 06/13/2007 at 11:08pm by mikemac
Email: mikemac12<at>yahoo dot com

Features :
Read my previous reviw for specs.

Instrument :
Jay Turser Serpent-chalice headstoc-old stock. Neck and Bridge

Sound : 10
Here's my follow on review, as I promised...
I played with these through several different amps and the sound has really grown on me. I also sat in with a pro player and let him put the Turser through its paces, playing jazz, classic rock and funk standards. He was duly impressed with the pickup vibe.
I like the clarity and the ever-so-slight jangle that accompanies the sligtly fat, PAF tone of this pickup. Extremely balanced output across the entire frequency spectrum. This is up there with the top three favorites of mine, for sure. I love the sound of these pickups.

Overall Rating : 9
It took a few weeks for these to grow on me...I'll admit that. When i installed them I had expectations of a more jangly sound, so I guess I was a little disappointed. But the more I heard them through a variety of good amps, the more I liked them! These are good, full range, clear-as-a-bell humbuckers with a nice, subdued jangle and brightness that is very pleasant-never harsh at all. I think they are some of the best pickups I have ever heard.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 32
Submitted 05/28/2007 at 10:08am by mikemac
Email: mikemac12 at yahoo<dot>com

Features :
These are passive humbuckers designed to match the P 100 tone signature with a PAF resistance and a "filtertron" influence. I metered my set at 8K oms for the neck and 8.5K ohms for the bridge. I bought the gold covers to match the hardware on my Jay Turser Serpent. They do look cool.

Instrument :
These went in to a Jay Turser, early model Serpent / Les Paul guitar. I replaced both of the stock pickups with these. The stock pickups were very ordinary sounding PAF pickups...not bad but they tended to lose clarity with high gain.

Sound : No Opinion
The output level is about what you would expect from a PAF style pickup. I'm using this with a couple of solid state amps (Roland BC 60, Fender Princeton Chorus, Modified Peavey Transformer 112) and a Fender Champ 25 SE using two 6L6 power tubes. The tone of these pickups is very well balanced. I would characterize the tone as a fatter sounding P100. They don't have the bark of the P 90, nor the jangle of pure Filtertrons but they do have some of the characteristics of both. They are clear and completely uncompressed with a nice, open timbre. As a set they are very well balanced against each other and the middle switch position is nice. I think their finest quality is their clarity and string definition. These are not exactly what I was looking for...but they are pretty nice nevertheless. I'm waiting for them to grow on me because they are so different from what I'm accustomed to. The jury is still out...so I won't give a rating yet, but I really want to like these.
These would be suitable for everything from classic oldies to hard rock. They are probably too weak for the real heavy stuff.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I have three other guitars..another Turser Les Paul with Lace HEMIS, a stock fat strat SA 160 by Ibanez and a Jay Turser Tele with GFS pickups. My amps are two Roland Blues cubes, a Fender Champ 25 se, a Fender Princeton chorus and a Roland micro cube.
I like the clarity of these pickups. The fact that no particular tone quality stands out is a little disappointing...but I've only had them for 4 days at this point so I'll have to put them through their paces in a band setting next. Consider this as an "Initial Reaction" review. I'll do another one in a month or so.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 35
Submitted 12/13/2006 at 09:39am by Nick
Email: viaunick<at>hotmail dot com

Features :
Passive Humbucking, P90 style with a black casing.4-conductor wiring. Bridge position. Overwound alnico magnets I believe. www.guitarfetish.com for specs.

Instrument :
Guitar: Gibson Faded Flying V
Position: Bridge position
Pickups replaced: Gibson 498 and 500T
Other Pickups: GFS Dream 90 in neck
Artists: none that I know of
Reason for change: Gibson pickups were too hot and sterile, I wanted something different and from the GFS line.

Sound : No Opinion
Output: is not listed on guitarfetish.com for this pickup, but says it is wound hot.
Amps: Carvin Bel Air 50watt tube, Peavey Triumph 60watt tube
Effects: Diceworks NPN Fuzz, MXR Dynacomp, EHX Chorus
Tone: Balanced, loud and open. Leave the controls on full for SG era Townshend-esque tone. Roll back for a meaty P90 tone.
Style: I play blues/rock. A lot of slide.This pickup is perfect for that. It can do jangly too.

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing for about 8 years and have tried a lot of pickups. Mainly Dimarzio and Seymour Duncans. My favorite combination thus far has been the Dimarzio Super Distortion and PAF Pro. I've been looking for something to compare to it with different qualities. GFS pickups are just that, different. They are unique in look and tonal properties. They react extremely well to your volume and tone controls. To this point I had been looking for a good slide tone. A pickup that was transparent enough to allow open notes to shine and keep distorted notes tight. The Dream 180 is what I was looking for. If you like classic rock, blues, or slide playing you will not be dissappointed. Plus, they are only $35.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/01/2006 at 03:09am by jeremy r

Features :
passive humbucker. coil-tappable if you so choose.

Instrument :
Installed in an old-ish Epiphone G400 in both positions, replacing the pickups (stock?) that were on the guitar when I bought it used.

I changed pickups because the previous pickups were underwhelming and looked crappy, and because the Dream 180s seemed to have good reviews and they sure did look sharp. They were also cheap enough to buy on a whim without fear of serious regret.

Sound : 9
I first tried these with an early 80s solid-state Sunn combo, and they sounded significantly clearer and sweeter than what I had before.

Now I play through a Sovtek Midget and these pickups make it sing. In fairness, everything sounds pretty great through this amp, but I'd say my guitar with the Dream 180s sounds better through it than my friends' Epiphone Les Pauls with stock pickups. Again, clearer and sweeter are the two best descriptions I can come up with.

I like to play dancy post-punk, typically with relatively low gain; I arpeggiate pretty much everything, and these pickups let those notes ring out and intertwine very satisfyingly, so I'd say it's a good match for me.

They also sound solid on power chords and ringy on octaves and seem to work fine for all the standard pop-punk fare. Sometimes when my band is screwing around I'll put it in drop D and joke around with some metal or hardcore; with higher gain the pickups sound appropriately evil yet still pretty clear. But I'm probably the wrong person to ask about the right tone for metal...

I give these a 9 instead of a 10 because I only know they sound better than whatever comes in Epiphones. I haven't heard any of the more boutique pickups that other reviewers have mentioned.

Overall Rating : 10
I would buy these again in a heartbeat, especially considering it would only set me back something like 50 bucks.

I've been playing for 7 years and have played in a number of bands, all the while using crappier pickups than these. In the 5 months since I bought these my setup has sounded markedly better than ever before.

I love that for a tiny investment I made a noticeable improvement in my sound. I also love the looks, and I love that I could have gotten them in black pearloid instead of chrome if I'd wanted. How can you beat that?

I'm definitely satisfied with my sound at this point, but I am fairly easy to please. It's also probably worth noting that my preferred style of music does not necessarily place a great emphasis on "tone" or whatever. Still, if these pickups sound good enough to make me care about my "tone", it should reflect positively on them.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: USD 34.95
Submitted 11/27/2006 at 12:20am by Gregg Line

Features :
Passive Humbucking pu with 12 pole pieces. All black, but available in chrome or gold also. 5 leads for all kinds of wiring choices. Comes with better wiring info than the last set of GFS Dream 90's that I bought.

Instrument :
Installed on a Mexican Strat in both neck and bridge positions. Not using a middle pu anymore. Had to rout out a bigger neck pu cavity. Used Stew-Mac HB template. Wired a master volume with a treble bypass, master tone with a .047 uf capacitor and a 3 position switch. Replacing 3 Select sc size passive humbuckers by EMG. Changed to these because I'm just looking for something different that has a usefull sound.

Sound : 9
Didn't put a meter on them yet. Output is satisfying, somewhere between single coil and humbucker. I Have not been inclined to break out the Seymour D. pickup booster! So far I've played them through a Peavey Delta Blues 210, and a Vox Pathfinder. Tone is nicely balanced, perhaps close to the best of both the single coil and the humbucker worlds. Highs are powerful enough for singing overdriven solos in all switch positions, and the lows are crisp and clear like a Strat or Tele. I even like the bridge pu for snappy clean Tele-like tones. These sound good clean, crunchy and overdriven. No pickup is perfect and for me the weak point on these would be the low end. I wouldn't mind just a little more punch, but I am not saying they're bad. You just can't have everything. I like these, satisfied with both the neck and bridge tones.

Overall Rating : 9
I would use these again for sure. Ive been playing for 30+ years. I am picking up this Mex Strat with the GFS pu's more frequently than my Les Paul. I chose these pu's for the fair price, the potential for "coolness" and their looks. They deliver on all 3 counts. I find the Guitar Fetish ebay store to be a little quirky. The checkout process is not customer service based. Seems to be set up to make the seller's life easier than it is the customer's. Jay does answer emails quickly, although not always with clarity. I will buy more, as the product is worth the price and the little effort to make the purchase.


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $$60
Submitted 11/13/2005 at 11:13pm by Anonymous

Features :
Pickup features: humbucker
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: guitar
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: stock gibson
Other pickups on guitar:
Artists using this pickup:
You musical style(s): rock
Reason for pickup change: stock pickups went microphonic


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: medium output-very vintage sound
Tone: bright, but really well balanced
Sonic evaluation: gibson 1989 sg
vox ac30, fender deluxe reverb
various effects

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: for rock, blues, or anything

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: i bought these first for the price. roughly $60 bucks for a pair of pickups. you really can't beat that. after i started playing them, i realized how good they were. really clear, open, bright but never harsh or thin. overdriven, these things really shine. even using an excessive amount of distortion, i still got a very clear tone, never muddy.



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $35
Submitted 09/30/2005 at 07:22pm by Wade
Email: wengland<at>glasgow-ky dot com

Features :
Pickup features: Single Coil
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Jay Turser ES-335 Copy
Position: bridge
Pickup being replaced: Stock
Other pickups on guitar: Dream 90
Artists using this pickup: ?
You musical style(s): Blues, Classic Rock
Reason for pickup change: The stock pickups sounded like ass, the were very microphonic.


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: These we pretty hot, abou the same as a Seymour Duncan, maybe a little hotter.
Tone: This pickup in the bridge positioon is pretty bright, but in a good way. Through a tube amp this thing sounds amazing. Clean or distorted this thing sounds great!
Sonic evaluation: I'm playing this throough a semi-hollow body guitar hooked up to a Fender Hot Rod Deville and a 72' Bassman 10. I can't say enough good things about this pickup. I read the reviews her but I was still not convinced, I went ahead and ordered this one and a Dream 90 for the neck. All I can say is damn!!! I still can't believe how good this pickup sounds, it has that great blues tone, especially with a little tube screamer kicked in. It has a good clear tone, almost like a humbucker but a little clearer, it's hard to describe but it is some of the best tone I've ever had.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: This is great for blues and rock, it would probably be ok for country too.

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: I would buy another one of these in a second, as a matter of fact I have. I've been playing for about 10 years in gigging bands and I think I have a good ear for tone. I've always been a hardcore Seymour Duncan guy but these pickups have changed my mind. I'm actually replacing the duncans with these on most of my guitars (I'll probably try different models of the GFS pickups), I can't believe how cheap they are, I'll be able to sell one set of Duncans for two sets of these. This is a great pickup and if the rest of the GFS line is as good as these, well......it's almost too good to be true! Bottom line, these are great pickups for not a lot of money, I'll never buy another set of Seymour Duncans as long as these pickups are around!



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $
Submitted 06/23/2005 at 12:49pm by Anonymous

Features :
Pickup features: 4-wire passive humbucking
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Richwood Les Paul Imitation
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: Crap stock pickups
Other pickups on guitar: Now both GFS Dream 180s
Artists using this pickup:
You musical style(s): Hard 70s 80s Rock, Blues
Reason for pickup change: The original pickups were extremely low output and impossible to play with.


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: Medium Hot (similar to Dimarzio PAF PRO)
Tone: Pretty balanced, very tight mid-low frequencies, good harmonic response
Sonic evaluation: Les Paul Copy into a Mesa Boogie Dual Rectifier. The combination is very heavy and chunky. With low gain, very nice tone in both bridge and neck positions. The neck pup doesn't go muddy on the low strings.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: Can't think of anything. Its a pretty balanced pickup and should work for most

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Comments:


Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $22/39
Submitted 06/08/2005 at 12:55pm by Solomon Sanchez
Email: fightncrazy2 at yahoo<dot>com

Features :
Pickup features: PASSIVE FOUR CONDUCTOR HUMBUCKERS
Impedence or other specs: LOW

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: 1979 Epiphone Genesis
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: Gibson Dirty Fingers
Other pickups on guitar: SAME
Artists using this pickup: Tom DeLonge
You musical style(s): metal, blues, and experimental
Reason for pickup change: Constant search for the ever-elusive perfect tone


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: overwound with a filtertron meets PAF tone
Tone: balanced through and through(not entirely as described, but better!!)
Sonic evaluation: I found these pickups to be the best kept secret on the market next to the guitar that they're on. Crisp jangly highs and a well pronounced low end. Never muddy. They absolutely produce some of the cleanest and most beautiful tones imagineable. With the fender twin reverb and a tubescreamer I got a sweet woman tone that I haven't heard since I used to have a PRS McCarty going through a Bluesbreaker. Unbeliveable!!!!! (Oh, and by the way Epiphone Genesis guitars suck and nobody should ever buy one and inflate the already increasing price of them!)The dream 180's are worth so much more than they go for, and Jay is a real gentleman to deal with. He'll respond to your e-mails and recommend a pickup to suit your playing style.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: I play everything from classic rock, to blues, to progressive metal,and to experimental effect-laden noise.

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: If they were stolen, then first I'd be concerned about the Genesis, then I'd order another set of dream 180's.I have played for a pay-check on and off for nine years and after owning 3 Ibanez guitars, a Fender Strat., Telecaster, Cyclone, as well as a custom B.C. RICH Mockingbird with active electronics and Dimarzio's. I've never been more satisfied with my current set-up and I'd like to personnaly thank GFS for helping me achieve tone nirvana. Now, if Epiphone would just come out with an elitist genesis model.......................Anyhow, just go and get'em while they're cheap and forget about the Bill L's, S.Duncans, Deemarzio's and check out Jay at guitarfetish on ebay.



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $35.00
Submitted 06/02/2005 at 02:05pm by Anonymous

Features :
Pickup features: Passive Humbucking
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Custom Built
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: none
Other pickups on guitar:
Artists using this pickup:
You musical style(s): Hard rock/Metal
Reason for pickup change: Building a custom guitar from scratch.


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: A little hotter than the P-90 style pickups
Tone: Very balanced pickup
Sonic evaluation: I put these pups in a custom build grutar that I hand made. The body is one solid piece of sugar pine (a soft yet very musical pinewood). The neck is Maple with rosewood fingerboard. I don't use any pedals or special setup. I just gun the guitar through my peavey studio chorus 210.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: Normally I play thrash metal, but this guitar is for playing blues, jazz and a little rock. I'd say this pup is a good match

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: I've been playing guitar for over 10 years now & have been building guitars for a little over a year. In the short time I've been building I've learned alot about the inner workings of a guitar that I never knew as a player. Many people will argue that the woods a guitar is made of won't influence the tone & it's all pickups. In my experience I've found this to be false, the woods do influence the sound. This guitar was made specifically for playing blues, jazz, & a little bit of rock. All the materials including the pickups were chosen for that musical style. The sugar pine gives a nice warm soft tone & the maple/rosewood neck brightens it up just a little. The dream 180 pickups is a perfect match for this combonation. The output level couldn't be better. They have a nice warm sound with just a hint of brightness. They sound excellent with a little distortion & even better clean. Every note is crisp & clear. I couldn't ask for a better pickup. I like that these are 4 wire pickups so you can split the coils. The Dream 180's I bought have the pearloid tops so not only do they sound great but look great as well. I am very satisfied with these pickups. I like them so much that I will most likely use them on a 12 string electric I will be building shortly.



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $20.00
Submitted 03/05/2005 at 09:24pm by Big Smooth

Features :
Pickup features: Humbucker with 12 poles
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Neck of a tele
Position: neck
Pickup being replaced: Various
Other pickups on guitar: DiMarzio Virtual Vintage Hot T
Artists using this pickup:
You musical style(s): Blues, Worship, Ambient atmospheric
Reason for pickup change: Being a pickup junkie, I change pickups the way most people change their underwear. Always on the lookout for a great sounding "Bargain" pickup.


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: Very smooooooth and balanced. String definition is excellent..
Tone: Again, very balanced tone. Good highs, Mids and nice, tight bass.
Sonic evaluation: I have read the reviews somewhat sceptically about the GFS line of pickups. For the price, they sounded too good to be true. I usually stick with boutique pickup makers ala Jason Lollar, Steve Kersting, Electrokraft, Novak, etc and DiMarzio and Duncan to a lesser degree. I've been experementing with pickups on this tele for quite a while and have been happy ( neck wise ) with a Seth Lover and an SK Dualtone ll. Due to financial reasons, it was time to re-evalutae my needs and sell some gear. I figured I could get by with lower end pups until things pick up, so the Seth and DT ( along with several others ) had to go. I have a stash of Stew Mac Golden Age ( great pups btw )and a few other old alnico buckers in the parts drawer and was going to stick one in until I can afford a Lollar Imperial. I forgot I picked the GFS Dream 180 up a while ago for $20.00, so when I came across it, thought I'd stick it in while I had the guitar apart so I would at least know how it sounded before I sold it. Well, I believe it's going to stay put until I get the Imperial. I'm very impressed with the tone it puts out. It does remind me of the Seth in many ways but not quite as woody sounding. Close...and not bad mind you, just different. But, it's a tone I really like and it simply kills for blues. It also matches well output and tone wise with the DiMarzio Virtual Hot T I put in the bridge. The middle position yields some very nice tones. The GFS also seems to respond pretty well to the guitars volume and tone controls. Again, not as well as the Dualtone did, but certainly acceptible. It's claimed this pickup is a cross between a filtertron and a humbucker. I'm not sure about that, but I am sure it's a damn fine pickup. Played clean through a vintage tube amp the sound is lush, complex and well defined. Even when adding overdrive in various stages of grittiness, the D-180 did not get flubby or loose it's identity. As a matter of fact, it sounded killer using overdrive. Very detailed with no mush. Every string retained it's definition. Of course, it was not metal type distortion...just good old fashion ass kickin' overdrive. Now I'm anxious to try some of the other pickups in GFS's extensive line.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: I'm blues based and everything I play centers around that style. I do a lot of atmosphereic playing using delays, fuzz, overdrives and volume pedal. THis pickups going to do just fine for my needs.

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: When I read the various glowing reviews, I tend to think maybe they are coming from an unseasoned player or one who has not tried a lot of aftermarket pickups. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a snob by any means. I'd use a $2 pickup ( and have ) if it sounded good. That said, I was a bit hesitant to jump on the GFS bandwagon after so may glowing reviews. Suffice to say...this pickup ( regardless of cost ) is the real deal. Still, this will be a stop gap pickup for me until I can afford ( medical hard times and even a $150 pickup is out of the question at this time ) a Lollar Imperial. At that time, I'm sure it will make it's way into the neck of one of my other guitars. I am very pleasently surprised at the tone this beauty ( gold frame and pearloid top ) puts out. If you play blues, rock or country, check one out. It responds very well to picking nuances. I usually like to have a bucker in the neck and a single coil in the bridge, but I could see having two of these in a guitar. The tone ( while humbucking ) has a lot of single coil quailites. No mush...just open, articulate tone. This pickup ( along with the Golden Age ) is a great bargain imo. I'm giving it a big fat 10.



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $45
Submitted 12/24/2004 at 09:13pm by JPL

Features :
Pickup features: Passive humbucker
Impedence or other specs: ?

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Schecter C-1+FR
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: Stock
Other pickups on guitar: same
Artists using this pickup: Me
You musical style(s): hard rock/metal
Reason for pickup change: Bridge PUP shorted out.


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: Not terribly hot. Actually, it sounds great clean, and needs a boost to send a tube amp into overdrive. Not a bad thing
Tone: The most balanced pickups I've ever tried. Basically just what I was looking for. The bridge is lacking some bass response, but it still sounds great
Sonic evaluation: I play through fender amps and other vintage tube amps. The Peavey Supreme, which will be my next purchase, sounds great with this. I really like the balance.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: Hard rock/metal

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: I would definately buy these again. They really helped in finding the tone I wanted. I would say they could use more output, but the tone makes up for it



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $43
Submitted 10/17/2004 at 07:00pm by Anonymous

Features :
Pickup features: Humbucking - PAF / Filtertron cross.
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Ibanez AF75D
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: Stock
Other pickups on guitar:
Artists using this pickup:
You musical style(s): Jazz, roots, etc.
Reason for pickup change: Wanted a clear, brighter pickup


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: Definitely hotter than stock.
Tone: Bright, but balanced.
Sonic evaluation: These pickups sound great. Very quiet. This pickup fixes the problem with a PAF style humbucker - lousy highs. The pickup has great highs, but is not harsh.
I'm using this guitar with a Mesa Heartbreaker.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable: Great for Jazz, rock, rockabilly.

Overall Rating : 10
Comments: Been playing for 30 years I own a Gibson Country Gentleman, Gretsch 6120, strats, tele, Les Paul, etc. All great guitars but this cheap Ibanez plays great but sounded bad. With the Dream 180's it sounds great. At a price that's appropriate for a $300 guitar.
This pickup is similar to the pickups on the Chet Atkins designed pickups on the Gibson Country Gentleman (the Filtertron was designed for Chet also). It has the range of a PAF but some twang and very clean.



Product: GFS Pickups Dream 180
Price Paid: US $44.00
Submitted 10/13/2004 at 05:46pm by Anonymous

Features :
Pickup features: Humbucking, passive
Impedence or other specs:

Instrument :
Model of guitar or bass: Sanatoga (PRS Knockoff)
Position: all positions
Pickup being replaced: Cheap Chinese PU
Other pickups on guitar:
Artists using this pickup:
You musical style(s): All Styles
Reason for pickup change: Wanted a different sound. Actually, the original Ppups sound the same as these.


Sound : No Opinion
Perceived output level: The same out put as my Yamaha SA2000 humuckers, much less than my Steinberger EMG 85's
Tone: Balanced tone
Sonic evaluation: I am using a roland GP100 through a peavy stereo chorus 400 running a seperate cabinet for stereo imagery. I bought these becuase they were advertised as PAF meets Filtertron which sounded kinda cool. They were also advertised as extremely hot. They sound like standard humbuckers and are not hot at all. They aren't bad, mind you, just nothing to write home about.

For which styles and positions is this pickup (un)suitable:

Overall Rating : 8
Comments: Would I buy them again? Probably not. although I will say they look really cool. Gold hardware with mother of pearl centers.


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