Guild HB1 Pickups: New vs. Old

NewHB1
As you may know, I am a huge fan of Guild guitars and especially their vintage HB1 pickups. Guild recently released a new version of the coveted HB1s, so I bought one and decided to see how it compared with a vintage model. As of right now, this comparison is only regarding appearance and size. I’ll report on sound differences later.

Short story: they are almost exactly the same size! Let’s look at the details. 

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From an appearance standpoint, the new pickups look fantastic. I would not be able to tell one from a vintage model from the front, which is fantastic and also concerning. The sceptic part of me realizes that unscrupulous sellers may put these into vintage instruments and pass them off as vintage. The happy part of me celebrates that there is finally a modern option for these great vintage pickups should they fail or become damaged. Note that even the new screws look like the old vintage models, an example of which is shown here on my old Guild Nightbird with HB1s.

VintageHB1inNewRing_1600
Size-wise, the new pickups are almost exactly the same size. From a width and height standpoint, they look identical. The picture to the right is of a vintage HB1 from the 1970s sitting perfectly in the ring from the new HB1 purchased in 2016.

OldNewHB1Sidebyside_1600
The reason I write that they’re an almost perfect match is because the vintage pickup has slightly more depth to it as seen in this image. This is due to the legs being just a bit longer on the vintage HB1. Given the choice, this is the preferred outcome since this means that new pickups will fit into vintage instruments designed for the slightly deeper vintage HB1s. This *may* also mean that a vintage HB1 may be too deep for a modern Guild. I’ll update this post when I attempt to put the vintage HB1 into a new Newark Street Guild S100 later this week.

Note that the adjustment screws line up perfectly on the old pickup with the new bezel! This could mean that the new bezels can be direct replacements for old, cracked bezels from vintage instruments.  As a collector of new and vintage Guilds, this is good news.

NewOldHB1Back_1600
If you’re trying to figure out if a guitar you’ve bought has new or old HB1s in it, I’m sorry to say that the only way to tell the difference between these two models is to remove them and examine the backs.

The back of the vintage HB1 (top in the picture) has no stickers, should be stamped “Guild Made in USA”, may be hand-engraved with a date from the factory, and has the small solder lug situated perpendicular to the pickup. The new HB1 (bottom in the picture) has stickers on it (which may have been removed), no stamping, no engraving, a larger solder lug that laying more parallel to the pickup and may also have some non-conductive “goop” on it.

I’ll update with more information when I can make some recordings of how they each sound in the same guitar.

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10 thoughts on “Guild HB1 Pickups: New vs. Old

  1. I just bought a Newark Bluesbird — partially because of the various reviews you offer and because I did have briefly a Newark Starfire 5 — The fit and finish was fantastic- I liked the next but I always felt it need a pick up upgrade — and being a hollow body I didn’t want to tangle with it

    Taking me the Bluesbird — I have a dozen single Coil and P 90 guitars but have always shied away from Gibsons and Humbuckers in general – I play very clean

    But I have been curious — and the Seymor Duncans and Tone Pro hardware on the Bluesbird made me bite.

    After the couple of years you’ve had your BB Newark what are your feelings about the pickups — and did you eventually drop in HB-1? Thoughts

    1. Hey there – My daughter is the primary player of the NS BB, so I haven’t fiddled with it. I can say that the SD pickups are cool but I’d definitely prefer a more PAFish pickup. That’s also a huge personal preference thing, so your mileage may vary, as the marketers say.

  2. Hi,
    Thank you for your very informative articles. I have one of those Fender modern player short scale telecasters and i think the neck pickup is a newark street HB-1 (I learned that from one of your articles, thanks!). That pickup sounds too muddy for me. Is it possible to split the coils on that NS HB-1 to hopefully make it sound like a single coil?

    1. Sadly, no. The NS HB1s were patterned off of the vintage HB1s and as such only have two connections. You need four in order to coil-split.

      Technically you could open the pickup and modify it, but that’s some delicate work so I wouldn’t recommend it if you’re not used to dealing with *very* tiny wires.

  3. Will switching neck and bridge pickups in Starfire NS pickup harness improve K balance, or should I send bridge to guy in England who mods them to classic spec?
    P.S., love your articles…

  4. Was there ever a follow up post about the sound of the new HB-1 vs old?
    At $99 retail price, they’d be a great buy if they get close to that sound.

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