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Post new topic poll do you play the emmons et up or the day set up vote
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how many players play the day set up?
how many play the emmons set up?
79%
 79%  [ 118 ]
how many play the day set up
20%
 20%  [ 31 ]
Total Votes : 149

Author Topic:  poll do you play the emmons et up or the day set up vote
Mike Archer


From:
Church Hill, Tennessee, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 7:58 am     Reply with quote

players here that play the day set up?

post why
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Donny Hinson


From:
Balto., Md. U.S.A.
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 9:13 am     Reply with quote

This has been done before, and the Emmons setup players outnumber the Day setup players by about 8 or 9 to 1.

I think the Day is more comfortable, and also more ergonomically correct. (The inside edge of our foot rolls up easier than the outside edge does.) Also, the Day puts the most-used A&B pedals closer to the center of the guitar, making you feel less like you're straddling a bull when you're playing.

But what do I know? Muttering
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Roger Rettig


From:
An Englishman in Naples, FL
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 9:31 am     Reply with quote

Smile
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Last edited by Roger Rettig on 2 Oct 2009 9:37 am; edited 1 time in total
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Ryan Barwin


From:
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 9:32 am     Reply with quote

I play the Emmons setup.

Neither setup is better ergonomically, because you roll your ankle both directions no matter which setup you're playing.
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Roger Rettig


From:
An Englishman in Naples, FL
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 9:32 am     Reply with quote

You must know as lttle as I do - 'Day' for me, too, and for exactly the same reasons.
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Mike Archer


From:
Church Hill, Tennessee, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 9:52 am     thanks Donny Reply with quote

thanks Donny you are correct for sure 100%
ive played the emmons set up for 25 years
I went to bryan Adams weds along with 2 of my close friends and I played his day set up emmons
man what a great set up! ive always known about the
day set up but a few years back I tried it and
at that time I coudnt do it but after 2 knee surgerys and a pitifull back I see the day set up
is going to be great for me!!
Bryan is going to change my emmons in a few weeks
I cant wait

thanks for the post guys it means a lot to me
Mike Very Happy
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Dick Wood


From:
Springtown Texas, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 10:12 am     Reply with quote

Emmons for me and that ain't no Bull.
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Gary Preston


From:
Columbus, Ohio, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 10:24 am     Reply with quote

Very Happy Sho~Bud setup for me . Razz
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George Brown


From:
Winston-Salem, NC, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 10:52 am     Reply with quote

My first Pedal Steel Guitar, a Marlen, had the Day setup, so thats the way I learned to play, and I'm still using it on my present Emmons. I'm comfortable with it, so I guess I'll keep it.
George...
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Kenneth Farrow


From:
Alaska, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 11:19 am     Day or Emmons Reply with quote

Day, for 25 years
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Billy McCombs


From:
Bakersfield California, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 11:53 am     Reply with quote

Day for me, I wonder how many of the big guns use the day set up? Anyone got the answer?
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Roger Rettig


From:
An Englishman in Naples, FL
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 11:59 am     Reply with quote

Tommy White for one. Norm Hamlet and Weldon Myrick are two more.Then there was Curley Chalker, John Hughey and Hal Rugg. Rusty Young still does, I believe...

Then there was, of course, Jimmy Whatsisname....
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Jerry Roller


From:
Van Buren, Arkansas USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 2:39 pm     Reply with quote

Day
Jerry
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Bob Tuttle


From:
San Angelo, Tx, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 6:20 pm     Reply with quote

Day setup since 1967. That's the way I first learned E9th and see no reason to change. Works for me.
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Ben Elder


From:
La Crescenta, California, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 6:21 pm     As different as Emmons and Day Reply with quote

I started lusting after pedal steel circa 1970. Got my first Maverick in 1982. Never heard of the Day (although I knew who Jimmy Day was) setup until well after I joined the Forum, 2004-2005-ish. It was too well-kept a secret for too long and too late to go back. I'm afraid the notion--even later stumbled upon--of having both E knee levers on the left leg (i.e., E->Eb on LKR)--is likewise too far back upstream to change old ways (and several psgs) now.
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pdl20


From:
Benton, Ar . USA,
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 7:29 pm     Day setup Reply with quote

My first Pedal Steel Guitar, a Marlen, had the Day setup,and ive stuck with it,it could have been Emmons if i had started that way,sometimes i wish it had been,much easier to set in on someone else's steel.
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Stan Schober


From:
Cahokia, Illinois, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 7:32 pm     Reply with quote

Donny Hinson wrote:


I think the Day is more comfortable, and also more ergonomically correct. (The inside edge of our foot rolls up easier than the outside edge does.) Also, the Day puts the most-used A&B pedals closer to the center of the guitar, making you feel less like you're straddling a bull when you're playing.

This is exactly why I'm thinking about switching.
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Tamara James


Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 8:38 pm     Day set up rocks Reply with quote

Day for 2 years. I started with the other.
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Jim Sliff


From:
Hermosa Beach California, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 8:50 pm     Reply with quote

What Donny said makes perfect sense; still I tried it and it just didn't "feel" right. My whole setup is bizarre, but the first two pedals are essentially "A & B" pedals - a few guys have reversed them in the B6 tuning I (and some others) use But for me it just didn't click.

I still screw round with it on my Fenders just for fun, since changing it take abut 5 minutes.
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Mike Archer


From:
Church Hill, Tennessee, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 8:53 pm     great responce Reply with quote

thanks Im enjoying everyones post

and the poll

Mike
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Brint Hannay


From:
Maryland, USA
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 11:23 pm     Reply with quote

Donny Hinson wrote:
This has been done before, and the Emmons setup players outnumber the Day setup players by about 8 or 9 to 1.

I think the Day is more comfortable, and also more ergonomically correct. (The inside edge of our foot rolls up easier than the outside edge does.) Also, the Day puts the most-used A&B pedals closer to the center of the guitar, making you feel less like you're straddling a bull when you're playing.

But what do I know? :aside:

As to which edge of the foot "rolls up easier": beside the fact that different people's anatomies surely lead to different answers to that question*, which move are you talking about? Moving on and off the A pedal while holding down the B pedal? Pressing the A pedal only while keeping off the B pedal? Those two moves, arguably the most used ankle-turning moves, require "rolling up" opposite sides of the foot. I can't see how considering "which side of the foot rolls up easier" could cut one way or the other concerning Emmons vs. Day, in any "universal" sense.

*Go to a good "sports" shoe store, and they test to find out what tendency your anatomy has: ankle turning in or ankle turning out, and recommend shoes that work properly with your inherent tendency.

I like the A&B pedals being in positions 2&3--I play Emmons, but have a different change on the "zero" (position 1) pedal. But on a couple of SD-10 guitars I have where I only have the three Emmons-set up pedals, I find that placing my heel behind the C pedal facilitates all moves, especially the B pedal+F raises (LKL) move. But that's for MY anatomy. IMO there is no "one setup fits all".
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Tony Glassman


From:
The Great Northwest
Post Posted 2 Oct 2009 11:45 pm     Reply with quote

There is no ergonomic advantage to either set-up.

The normal range of motion of the ankle is:

35 degrees for inversion (raising the inner edge of the foot)
25 degrees for eversion (raising the outer edge of the foot).

So the ankle can turn the sole of the foot slightly farther inward than outward

Day advantage : lifting off of pedal A when both pedals are engaged & depressing pedal B by itself.

Emmons advantage: lifting off of pedal B when both pedals are engaged & pressing pedal A by itself.

IMHO:
a] the advantages cancel each other out
b] pedal pushing is the least challenging part of steel guitar. If you learn to play in tune and block well, by comparison, the differences between the Day and Emmons set-ups are insignificant.
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Sonny Jenkins


From:
New Braunfels, Tx. 78130
Post Posted 3 Oct 2009 5:35 am     Reply with quote

Jeff Newman used the Day set up,,,,but I think he and Emmons could both sit in at each others guitar,,,
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Larry Baker


From:
Columbia, Mo. U.S.A.
Post Posted 3 Oct 2009 2:30 pm     Reply with quote

I go for the Emmons set up on a MULLEN guitar. Hard to beat it. Larry B.
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Alan Harrison


From:
Murfreesboro Tennessee, USA
Post Posted 3 Oct 2009 5:06 pm     Day all the way. Reply with quote

I have used the Day setup for fourty years. See no reason to change now.....Day/Mullen, great setup.
Hey Mr. Archer, bout time we had another get together. alan
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