Steinar,Steinar Gregertsen wrote:I've read this claim many times and it makes no sense to me - perhaps a square nosed Stevens makes split slants hard/impossible, but in my experience split slants with the 'curved' nose of the Shubb SP2 are no more difficult to execute properly than with a round nose. With my lap steels, which has a 25" scale length and relatively wide string spacing, split slants are actually easier with an SP2 than with a smaller round nose bar, possibly because of the SP2s flatter radius(?).Doug Beaumier wrote:it defeats the purpose of a steel guitar bar by making split slants impossible or very difficult at best
The only real disadvantage, IMO, is the difficulty of reverse slants, but there's been videos posted here of a dobro player executing ligthning fast reverse slants - even while simultaneously pulling strings behind the bar - so nothing's "impossible" (wish I remembered the name of that player, he's a member here...), some stuff just feels more natural with different types of bars.
Cindy Cashdollar, Jerry Douglas, and Phil Leadbetter don't seem to have a problem with slants in any form, Of course the laws of physics don't seem to apply to those people! LOL!