I said 'bell like' because single coils are inherently 'bell like'. At least, most of them are - the single coil in my Ibanez does a pretty good job of being nothing like a single coil 'should' be. I digress - yeah, they'll sound more like a bell in the neck position, but I'm not looking for a bell-like tone per se, I'm just looking for that 'true' single coil sound. I actually want to run it under distortion - yes, in the bridge - precisely because of that biting harsh growl -- so no intent for emulating bells here, you know?
Here's a bit of a can I gotta open here - just to make sure I understand this. I always thought the 89 is simply a normal, dual coil humbucker, but with two preamps built in - one for humbucking mode, the other for single coil mode, making it 'two pickups in one'. However I read, from multiple sources, that it's actually literally two pickups - as in, a total of three coils. This is just completely bizarre in my eyes, and I'm assuming it's not true. I mean, I'm right to assume that, am I not?
Anyway, I know what R stands for. In the R model, the coil dedicated for single operation is closer to the neck. If both coils are actually identical, this means there is no difference in humbucking tone between 89 and the 89R. However, if there is a difference between the two coils (Dimarzio likes to call this 'dual resonance'), there will of course be a difference depending on which side the pickup is facing.
That's the question I was supposed to ask - is there an actual difference between the coils? If not, it's just kind of funny to me that there's a different model just because the logo is flipped. Unnecessary confusion over something I'd rather not have on the pickup in the first place as I probably won't be endorsed by EMG any time soon. Heh, this reminds me of one of my friends who decided to be 'ironic' about it, so he slapped one of those big pickup sized EMG stickers on his 707.