been a pro for many years, I am mainly a metal and shred guitarist but I play many other styles. I used nothing than the best passive pickups until now. But nowadays, if you record with computers (and who doesn't) actives are a must....got rid of all these annoying buzzes when you get near the computer screen, when you use a tablet (which is not grounded), when you touch the mouse, when you use lesser power supplies....all these stupid noises are a thing of the past. How did I manage until now?
This is my personal fav, the 85.....chunky low mids, lots of power, and even the price is frankly a bargain, I mean this is an American handmade pickup, usually they cost more. Top quality parts, and to top it all, no more dealing with that silly soldering stuff.....I installed this in my guitar with a single pickup and single volume control, and I was up and running in less than half hour.
And all that silly stuff I hear about how active pickups supposedly all sound the same, have no dynamics, etc.....it's all nonsense. These pickups sound as great as any greats I have used, this is top notch stuff.
EMG has another convert.....I could never revert to passives now. I'd now say that passives are for low gain tones.....if you play metal, these are a must, will kill all these damn buzzes and simplify your life in general, you won't have any of these problems anymore when recording, performing etc.
--------
in regard to the nonsense 'but I don't like batteries', as per EMG's specs, the battery for the single humbucker in my guitar, if I play every single day for 2 hours a day, will be about FOUR YEARS. Four years! Ridiculous.
EMG rules the kingdom of pickups.
----
by the way, I am a musician first of all, not a tech, but a long time ago, when I first learned about noise gates (always used at least one at the input, if not a second one in the fx loop of the amp, too), I learned from a book that noise suppressors/gates will attenuate certain noises, and thereby WIDEN the dynamic range.
So this pretty much proves that with an EMG the dynamics aren't worse off, but better, at least at high gain settings: because by getting rid of all these 'impurities' in the sound, such as buzzes, the dynamic range widens. The same happens with mastering....if the signal is lower, you can boost it more. So if in your tone you have all these 'impurities' such as buzzes, you are already getting out of headroom, but since the EMG kills these buzzes, the headroom expands, and therefore you get MORE dynamic range.
Again I am not a tech or a sound scientist but a musician, my area of expertise is writing music and performing it. But chances are, I am still right.