I don't know what brand it was because it had no name on it, but it was a single 8 string on a double body. It was tuned by screws on the changer, which tuned like a student model with a pull/release changer. It had three pedals and one knee lever, but the C pedal didn't work, and it had no pedal stops...it used the floor for that. Tune it in one spot, and move a couple of inches and if the floor wasn't perfectly level, you had to retune the pedals.
It was too short to use a volume pedal under it, so I had to put it out to the right of the guitar...I think I remember seeing a picture of Buddy E. doing that with one of his guitars as well.
The undercarriage was literally made from coat hangers and was a nightmare to keep in tune.
I was 16 years old when I got it, and it WAS a pedal steel, at least in the most basic sense of the word!
I was thrilled to at least have one, because North Alabama in 1979 wasn't exactly a hotbed of pedal steel!The thread about the Mavericks got me to thinking about this. At least in my case, a Maverick was an improvement!
Any other "humble" beginnings like this? Let's hear how you started out.
Lem
