Jack - there are some incredible guitars being produced today, with fine attention to detail and wonderful engineering. Mike Mantey has highlighted one of these. Steel players today are really spoilt for choice. The push pull is certainly not for everyone, especially those who can't hear the difference between different guitars. The push pull is not the most intuitive guitar to tune or change pedal and lever set up, but once the principle is mastered it will stay in tune as well as any all pull guitar.Jack Stoner wrote:"Tone" is very subjective and what one person considers "great tone" or "the ultimate" tone, someone else may (and many do) have a totally different thought on it.
If everyone thought the same make/model was the "best" everyone (or practically everyone) would be playing that make/model. If the Emmons PP REALLY is as desireable as many think, why isn't it still a standard production model?
Some players buy guitars for the looks, others for sound, some for the weight (or lack of it), some because of who play them, some for the ability to change pedal action and set up, and some for a combination of these. There is no definitive overall 'best' guitar because as Jack said, everyone would simply buy the one make all of the time.
The thread is about whether some pedal steels sound 'like a push pull'. The simple answer to that is no. But they can still sound great in their own way.