Why only one pickup on pedal steel?
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Peter Siegel
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Why only one pickup on pedal steel?
With the exception of Sneaky Pete, I do not know of any steel players regularly using a multi-pickup guitar.
Why don't steel guitars feature them as a matter of course?
Who has experimented with them, and what were the results?
Just wondering.
Peter
Why does a flamingo stand on one leg?
Because if he pulled them both up, he'd fall over.
Why don't steel guitars feature them as a matter of course?
Who has experimented with them, and what were the results?
Just wondering.
Peter
Why does a flamingo stand on one leg?
Because if he pulled them both up, he'd fall over.
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Michael Douchette
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Uh... because steel guitar got it right the first time? 
Seriously, I don't think you can put enough distance between the two to make a significant difference. It's been done, but it's never really caught on.
Seriously, I don't think you can put enough distance between the two to make a significant difference. It's been done, but it's never really caught on.
Mikey D... H.S.P.
Music hath the charm to soothe a savage beast, but I'd try a 10mm first.
http://www.steelharp.com
http://www.thesessionplayers.com/douchette.html
(other things you can ask about here)
http://s117.photobucket.com/albums/o54/Steelharp/
Music hath the charm to soothe a savage beast, but I'd try a 10mm first.
http://www.steelharp.com
http://www.thesessionplayers.com/douchette.html
(other things you can ask about here)
http://s117.photobucket.com/albums/o54/Steelharp/
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Danny Naccarato
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Donny Hinson
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Some guitars (like early 'Buds) featured them, but I think they lost popularity because they got in the way of the picking hand. Anyhow, most players like fair amounts of treble. Only players like Curly Chalker and Jim Murphy used rather bassy sounds, and they could still get plenty of bass with the right amp.
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Richard Sinkler
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If I remember the youtube videos I saw of Paul Franklin with Dire Straits and The Notting Hillbillies, he had double pickups on the Franklins he used.
Edit: Just watched of few of the Franklin videos and the guitar that was 2 tone red (maybe brown) and yellow had 2 pickups, at least on the front neck.
Edit: Just watched of few of the Franklin videos and the guitar that was 2 tone red (maybe brown) and yellow had 2 pickups, at least on the front neck.
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Austin Tripp
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Bob Hoffnar
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Desert Rose is making a 2 pickup steel:
http://www.desertroseguitars.com/
Dan Tyack swears by his neck pickup.
http://www.desertroseguitars.com/
Dan Tyack swears by his neck pickup.
Bob
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b0b
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I have 2 pickups on my Sho-Bud Maverick. Also, Jackson makes a model with 2 pickups.
www.jacksonsteelguitar.com/guitars-xtreme.cfm
Frankly, there's just not a demand for multiple pickups. On electric guitar you switch from lead to rhythm. Most steel players just play lead.
www.jacksonsteelguitar.com/guitars-xtreme.cfm
Frankly, there's just not a demand for multiple pickups. On electric guitar you switch from lead to rhythm. Most steel players just play lead.
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Dan Tyack
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I *love* my two pickup Desert Rose. The key is to get the second pickup far enough from the bridge pickup. I have mine in roughly SG position. I have a Lawrence 705 in the bridge position and a Tonealigner in the neck position. This guitar rocks, it sounds as good as my lap steel (long scale Valco with a Gibson PAF added in the neck position). The pickup does get in the way, but the additional tonal versatility is worth it.
It's not as simple as wanting a 'bassy' versus 'trebly' sound. A pickup in the neck position has a very different tonal quality, a 'throatiness' that you just can't get from a bridge pickup. And the 'both pickup' sound is great too. With the current configuration it makes the pedal steel sound like a fat stratocaster (very similar to a tone that Buddy got on a late 70s Roy Head record that he played with the basket weave 12 string guitar). The in-between sound is also great for doing the Mooney thing.
Of course, it all depends what you are looking for. I think most steel players are perfectly happy with a single pickup, since most of the sounds they are trying to achieve were played with single pickup guitars.
I'll post some sound clips.
It's not as simple as wanting a 'bassy' versus 'trebly' sound. A pickup in the neck position has a very different tonal quality, a 'throatiness' that you just can't get from a bridge pickup. And the 'both pickup' sound is great too. With the current configuration it makes the pedal steel sound like a fat stratocaster (very similar to a tone that Buddy got on a late 70s Roy Head record that he played with the basket weave 12 string guitar). The in-between sound is also great for doing the Mooney thing.
Of course, it all depends what you are looking for. I think most steel players are perfectly happy with a single pickup, since most of the sounds they are trying to achieve were played with single pickup guitars.
I'll post some sound clips.
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Twayn Williams
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My PSG will be a Desert Rose because I can get 2 pups. Also, Stringmasters have 2 pickups per neck. Personally, I'd like a steel with the same tonal variety as a good Strat.
And while we're at it, why don't PSG's have volume and tone knobs??? I've more than once thought about going to a Fender 1000 for the volume/tone knobs.
And while we're at it, why don't PSG's have volume and tone knobs??? I've more than once thought about going to a Fender 1000 for the volume/tone knobs.
Primitive Utility Steel
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Richard Sinkler
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Some guitars used to. The volume knob is actually unecessary as you have a volume pedal for that function. Tone controls are still on some guitars (Emmons still have them if my memory serves me correctly) and could be cool.And while we're at it, why don't PSG's have volume and tone knobs??? I've more than once thought about going to a Fender 1000 for the volume/tone knobs.
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b0b
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Tony Glassman
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Dan Tyack
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Twayn Williams wrote:My PSG will be a Desert Rose because I can get 2 pups. Also, Stringmasters have 2 pickups per neck. Personally, I'd like a steel with the same tonal variety as a good Strat.
And while we're at it, why don't PSG's have volume and tone knobs??? I've more than once thought about going to a Fender 1000 for the volume/tone knobs.
I'm with you Twayn. Except I also want to get the sound of the`front pickup of an SG. My current Desert Rose setup has this.
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Larry Weaver
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Wow, great thread! I've been really thinking about this a lot lately.
Dan, how different is your Desert Rose set up from the standard build?
I'm wondering if the Desert Rose or the Xtreme are available in a U-12 configuration. If they are, I see one of these in my future.
Dan, how different is your Desert Rose set up from the standard build?
I'm wondering if the Desert Rose or the Xtreme are available in a U-12 configuration. If they are, I see one of these in my future.
Last edited by Larry Weaver on 30 Aug 2008 10:57 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Dan Tyack
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chas smith R.I.P.
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ed packard
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Pickups
There are a few around...the changer is on the other end. Both pickups are tapped. Each tap can be in parallel or series, and be phased. The two pickups can be parallel or serial and phased. In the pic, the front pickup is off (pulled back). They are both interchangeable.


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Dan Tyack
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My Desert Rose has the neck pickup a little further towards the neck than with Ed's or Chas' guitars. I wanted to get something like the relative spacing of an SG or a Les Paul, but this made it nessesary for Chuck to use a different neck.
Note that this picture is with a Truetone on the neck position. I've replaced it with a Tonealigner, which is better for what I'm going for (I like the sound of a PAF style humbucker in that position).

Note that this picture is with a Truetone on the neck position. I've replaced it with a Tonealigner, which is better for what I'm going for (I like the sound of a PAF style humbucker in that position).

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Olli Haavisto
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I think the neck pups on most electrics like strats teles and pauls are on or near the 24th fret. Polepieces at the fret, approx.
Do I detect a slight Derek Trucks influence here , Dan ?
I was just watching the Song Lines DVD yesterday and wondered how many different tones he gets out of the neck pup of the SG...
I wonder if someone could make a pickup thin enough to just slide under the strings and attach temporarily with doublesided tape or something ? You`d be able to nail the sweet spot by trial and error.....
Do I detect a slight Derek Trucks influence here , Dan ?
I wonder if someone could make a pickup thin enough to just slide under the strings and attach temporarily with doublesided tape or something ? You`d be able to nail the sweet spot by trial and error.....
Olli Haavisto
Finland
Finland
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ed packard
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pickups and system
RE volume and tone controls...as an option, OK. I have two jacks on my instruments...one is a utility to be used for Volume/tone modules, staccato switch( ham radio bug?, tuner, other "stuff". The strip above the jacks is velcro for quick mount of whatever.

The nect pic shows an M-Audio box mounted on the velcro strip, and being the USB interface to the computer.

The next pic shows the computer screen for the computer used as an electronic rack = effects/patches/backup tracks etc. from there it is bluetooth wireless to the amp(s).

As for a thin moveable pickup, the next pics show the one that I use. I use stick on magnetic strips...one on the neck where I want the pickup, and on on the pickup = just slide on and off.



The nect pic shows an M-Audio box mounted on the velcro strip, and being the USB interface to the computer.

The next pic shows the computer screen for the computer used as an electronic rack = effects/patches/backup tracks etc. from there it is bluetooth wireless to the amp(s).

As for a thin moveable pickup, the next pics show the one that I use. I use stick on magnetic strips...one on the neck where I want the pickup, and on on the pickup = just slide on and off.


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Dan Tyack
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Bingo!Olli Haavisto wrote:
Do I detect a slight Derek Trucks influence here , Dan ?I was just watching the Song Lines DVD yesterday and wondered how many different tones he gets out of the neck pup of the SG...
You are absolutely right, Olli. I have played with Derek a number of times, the last time I even played using his backup Super Reverb. And his tone still kicked my *&^%$. So I asked him about pickups, and he said that he uses his neck pickup most of the time.
That's when I added a Gibson PAF in my lap steel, and started investigating adding a second PU in a pedal steel. My Desert Rose guitar has that basic SG sound now. Unfortunately, Derek's touch and talent doesn't automatically come along, but at least I can start in the same ballpark.
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Dean Parks
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ed packard
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Dean Parks
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