

🎶 Own the sound that shaped rock history — Pure Vintage '52 Telecaster Pickups
Fender Pure Vintage '52 Telecaster Pickups deliver authentic 1950s Telecaster tone with enamel-coated Alnico 3 magnets and flush-mount pole pieces for balanced string response. Designed to replicate the classic warmth and edge of early Fender Tele pickups, this set includes period-correct materials and installation hardware, making it the perfect upgrade for players seeking legendary vintage sound.














| ASIN | B000WIPGG8 |
| Back Material | Nickel |
| Best Sellers Rank | 42,340 in Musical Instruments & DJ ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments & DJ ) 3,392 in Electric Guitar Parts |
| Body Material | Nickel |
| Colour | American Vintage 52 |
| Connector | Single coil |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (237) |
| Date First Available | 6 Aug. 2012 |
| Fretboard Material | Rosewood |
| Guitar Bridge System | telescaster |
| Guitar Pickup Configuration | S-S |
| Item Weight | 181 g |
| Item model number | 0992119000 |
| Material Type | Alder Wood |
| Neck Material Type | Maple |
| Number of Strings | 6 |
| Product Dimensions | 29 x 19 x 9 cm; 181.44 g |
| Scale Length | 25.5 Inches |
| Size | Set |
| String Gauge | Light (0.008 to 0.042 inches) |
| String Material | Nickel |
| Top Material | Nickel |
S**M
Fantastic classic tele tones
That classic vintage tone, nice and bright bridge with a warm and milky neck. I have installed a four way switch so when in the fourth position I get a really nice growly tone which is just on the edge of breakup when clean and has a lot of bite when some gain is added.
P**.
Quality pickups.
Fitted these to a kit I’ve built. They sound just fantastic!
A**Y
awful thin tinny tone
What a let down, put them in my mexican tele,after reading good reviews, i couln`t believe how bad these things sounded, thin, metalic,piercing, no warmth unless you turned down the tone knob, then it was muddy, rubbish!
P**E
Sound nice when they work
Bridge pickup sounded very nice but the neck didn't work. According to my guitar tech this is more common than you would like it to be with Fender pickups. Such a shame as Amazon sold them for a very good price. If you get a pair that work and for £140 like I paid then you won't be disappointed. If it wasn't a common problem and they were always being sold at £140 then they would easily get 5 stars.
G**Y
Unfortunate
Had to return as Bridge pickup was dead ..
D**.
Sonido clásico de telecaster, se la puse a mí telecaster koreana y El sonido mejoró notablemente
C**N
I got these for a Tele partscaster project I just completed. I considered probably about ten different sets of pickups for this guitar. One of the sets that intrigued me most was the Pure Vintage '58 set, but disappointingly Fender no longer offers them. I came very close to ordering a Bill Lawrence Keystone set, and I considered a Ron Ellis set, as well. Bill Lawrence passed away years ago (his wife continues making the pickups to spec, apparently), and the wait time for a Ron Ellis set is notoriously long. I even considered the special Brad Paisley La Brea set offered by Seymour Duncan, but the premium price turned me off. In the end, I gravitated more toward a Fender set, as I wanted a classic Telecaster sound. I also considered Fender Tex-Mex Tele pickups. I have sets of Tex-Mex pickups in a couple of my Strats. While I like the pickups, I felt getting that set for this Tele would give me a sound I was already familiar with. I wanted something different, maybe older school. That's where these pickups came in. I read some favorable comments about them on TDPRI. Unfortunately there are only a few good demos of these pickups available on YT, and interestingly it was a very short, 30-second Fender demo that sold me on these. The sound was clean, but they handled gain very well. The price was also pretty much unbeatable. I halfway expected the output of these pickups to be less than 6k, but was surprised to find both pickups tested on my multimeter at more than 7k--the bridge at 7.07 and the neck at 7.28. That's more than adequate for what I wanted. The pickups have waxed vintage cloth wire, and I had no trouble getting them connected and mounted. With the amp set clean, the pickups are chimey with that distinctive Tele sparkle in all positions. With moderate gain, the pickups provide enough spank from the bridge, a nice mix in the middle position, and a somewhat Strat-like sound at the neck. So far they are very noise-free on my Blackstar Fly 3 (I have not tried the guitar on my tube amps yet), and I have not yet encountered the dreaded 60 cycle hum. I am very pleased with how usable they are in all positions and with a variety of tones and volumes. I highly recommend these if you're looking for classic Tele sounds. To wrap this up, I want to reach out to Fender with a request. The branding of these pickups needs to be more consistent and less scatterbrained. I have seen these pickups referred to variously as 'Original Vintage,' 'Pure Vintage Reissue,' '52 Reissue,' and other phrases. Even on this listing here on Amazon, the box says 'Original Vintage' but the description says 'Pure Vintage Reissue.' The box my pickups arrived in is marked 'Original Telecaster Pickup Set.' And on the side of the box, the sticker with the UPC symbol is marked 'AM VINT 52 TELE' aka 'American Vintage 52 Telecaster.' Even now, I'm not certain how to refer to these pickups if someone were to ask me what pickups I have in my Tele. I'm tempted to go with the name on the sticker and call them American Vintage '52s. In any case, I would consider these the standard American-made Telecaster pickups, and I think they deserve to be called one name.
I**N
Estás pastillas están de 1000. Las puse en mi squier tele affinity. Mi primera electrica . Simplemente suenan extraordinario. Las toque en un champion 40 y suenan genial. Ahora en el tonemaster deluxe sin hacerle modificaciones ni actualizaciones al amplificador y suenan a fender años 50 early 60s . No necesito ni siquiera conectar pedales al ampli. Solo mi ehx nano Looper. Curiosamente con estas pastillas ahora sí puedo subirle al reverb más de 7. Y suenan a surf, Dick dale en una Telecaster , cosa que con otras guitarras fender incluso ,después de 5 la reverb se vuelve pesada o algo rara. Capturan el twang de los 50s con la bridge. La del neck suena a strato. Muy bonita y nítida. Bájale un poco el tono y estoy jazzeando. Pastilla media muy versátil para tocar Allah las , mystic Braves , sunroom. De mis grupos favoritos. Seriamente me estoy replanteando que muchas guitarras que tengo ya no las necesitaría nunca pensé q mi vieja affinity se volviera tan versátil con estas pastillas. Repito. Geniales para los géneros q me gustan. Surf. Country. Jazz. Clean. Independiente. Lo hacen y muy bien . Creo q lo q da un buen tono es las pastillas y un buen amplificador sin importar la madera o marca de la guitarra y pues claro y más importante...El guitarrista. Recomendado ya estoy pensando en comprar otras
R**Z
Qualité pas au rdv deux exemplaire différent les deux le micro manche était défectueux j'attends de voir après la réception du troisième mais sans trop y croire qualité vraiment pas top et vente plutôt déçu
B**N
First, I want to clarify what was, to me, a little confusing prior to placing my order. The description of the product in the listing, at least as of 2020-Aug, doesn't make it clear exactly which set of Fender pickups this is. Part of the confusion is also that Fender has changed the names for this and its related products. The pickups I received are Fender model number 0992119000. What I received are labelled "Original Telecaster Pickups" and "American Vintage 52 Tele" (see photos). Fender's website lists this product (same model number) as "Original Vintage Tele Pickups." This is different from what Fender calls their "Pure Vintage '64 Telecaster Pickups," which have a different model number. The Pure Vintage '64 pickups are a little hotter than the '52 pickups that I'm reviewing here. So, simply put, I love these pickups! They are low output pickups, which is exactly what I wanted. Generally they sound exactly like you'd expect tele pickups to sound, singly and in combination. So no surprises there. Within the broad range of "what a tele sounds like," these pickups (neck, bridge, and both in combination) are very bright, not mid-heavy, not overly bassy. I would describe the sound as "glassy" with a very sparkly top end. With chords, each note is very articulate with the whole sound having a lovely shimmery top end. In contrast, hotter (more "modern") pickups, like presumably the Pure Vintage '64 pickups, would have a bit less high end sparkle and more mid-range growl. I play several different styles -- traditional jazz/bebop, jazz chord/melody, rockabilly, early country, bluegrass, and occasionally some classic rock or punk. These pickups work wonderfully for all of those styles. The neck pickup is not at all muddy, but again very sparkly and glassy. For jazz, simply turn the tone down a bit to warm up the sound, but the notes still retain plenty of articulation -- good attack on picked notes, nice piano-like ringing with fingerstyle. With the tone full up, the neck pickup twangs wonderfully! The neck and bridge pickups together capture a great rockabilly or early country / roots music sound. Plenty of spank...a sound only a tele can make. The bridge is very bright and twang-y. Apply a compressor and chicken pick country tunes for days! To be fair, folks that don't like the sound of tele bridge pickups might call this icepick-y; my preference is to err on the side of having more top end than I might need and just use the tone knobs (on the guitar or on the amp) to sculpt the tone I want. Roll the tone off slightly and it'll do a fair imitation of a humbucker. The pickups aren't hot enough to aggressively push an amplifier front end much beyond moderate breakup, but that's what boost/drive/distortion pedals are for. And again, if a more aggressive pickup is what you're looking for, something with a hotter (more "modern") design is probably a better option. When I play my telecaster with these pickups, the sorts of sounds I'm reminded of are -- lots of Steve Cropper (Booker T & the MGs), Hollies Long Cool Woman, early funk by the Meters, plenty of surf and early 60s country, James Bond theme song, the guitar riff in They Might Be Giants Don't Let's Start, In terms of hardware bits...the bridge pickup has a steel baseplate with copper plating; the magnets are alnico 3 (according to the packaging and Fender's website); both pickups have two wires coming out of them both of which had cloth (as opposed to plastic) insulation. Inside the packaging was a wiring diagram, a set of screws (2 for the neck pickup and 3 for the bridge pickup) and five short pieces of surgical tubing to act as "springs" inside the mountings. I personally would prefer actual metal springs than rubber surgical tubing, but that's a trivial complaint.
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