Around, that is, in my PRS SE model. I had the 85 in the bridge, and the 60a in the neck... now the 60a is in the bridge, 85 in the neck. I think it works better this way. Before, my neck position was crystal clear and sensitive while my bridge sort of blustered. Now my neck is fat and smooth, and my bridge is sensitive and clear. The two positions balance out better I think. It's more of a cohesive guitar rather than two pickups with different tonalities. Even high gain chugging on the bridge sounds a heck of a lot better with the 60a than it did with the 85, though the 85 in the neck is heavy enough for liquid type solos and even some riffage. It sounds more like my guitar this way, rather than the pickups imposing their sound on the guitar. This is good, because it had soapbars stock (which were moved to my strat, digging it) and it was a really natural sound, so I'm glad to have that back with the switch to 60a bridge and 85 neck. I won't try and analyze why it works better this way, but it does, and I'm glad that I picked the 85 and 60a due to their swapability. Though I'll note that it does take some getting used, leaving the guitar volume at 3-4. That's where I get my best sounds, even with higher gain. There's just too much output on tap with those preamps, I guess it comes in handy with some setups but with mine I only need a quarter of the available power, tops.

It seems like for me, my setups never work well the first time... it takes time, adjustments, and contemplation to bring my tonal goals to fruition. And if often takes me considering selling something, in order to fully explore its possibilities, to make sure I REALLY want to sell it... if that makes any sense.

Anyways, thanks for reading, just wanted to share some thoughts.