Fwiw, "toaster" at this point really is used for anything vaguely resembling the top of an old-school actual toaster. Ric toaster-top pups look like:
Each of the black bits is like the bread-slots in an old toaster on this single-coil pickup. Note that the Agile pickups are the same approximate overall shape, but don't have anything resembling "slots:"
I have serious doubts the Agile ones sound anything like Ric ones, although Agile's are at least single-coils. In fact, Ric has a pickup that looks identical to Agile's "toaster," but Ric's is listed as a humbucker. From the Ric website:
At any rate there are at least a couple other non-Agile guitar models that have non-Ric "toasters," and they exemplify how the name now just reflects the look, not the actual construction/sound. Peavey T-60 fans have long distinguished the early humbuckers in T-60's from the design used in later T-60's, calling them "toasters" and "blades," respectively. Here are the "toasters" on my T-60:
As you can see, the T-60 toasters somewhat resemble Ric ones, but the T-60's are humbuckers and of the larger standard HB size.
And just to muddy the waters further, Brownsville, a guitar sold as a Sam Ash house brand, used to feature a couple models with pickups that had 3 (rather than 2) "slots" on the toaster-top. The Brownsville ones, like the Ric toasters, were low-output alnico magnet single-coil pickups. Here are the toasters on my Brownsville Choirboy: