What do you guys sit on?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
- CrowBear Schmitt
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- Location: Edgewater, Florida, R.I.P.
Dont know what he said, but when I first got my steel , I built on to order to fit my buns. try it..... I built it out of scrap wood and upholstery material, even put whells on it, couldn't afford a motor......
Jennings
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EMMONS D10 10-10 profex 2 deltafex ne1000 pv1000, pv 31 bd eq, +
Jennings
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EMMONS D10 10-10 profex 2 deltafex ne1000 pv1000, pv 31 bd eq, +
- Dustin Rigsby
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- Archie Nicol
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For playing out I use two milk crates, with one of them shortened to adjust the total height, and an upholstered seat on top which I made to fit. They are light, easy to pick up together or separately, and hold a lot of stuff (pedal, stomp boxes, cables, extension cords, snacks -- even milk!). Now that I have two matching black crates, it looks pretty slick!
Welcome to SGF Paul! I'm rather new to steel myself (almost 2 years). I bought a Roc-N-Soc w/back. It's just like the seat Buddy Cage uses. That must be what influenced me to seek one. Looks like a big bicycle seat. It's really comfy and swivels, and has the hydraulic(is that what it is?) height adjustment. They are a little pricey(about $185 w/back), but then most good pack-a-seats are up around there. Only problem I know of is ya can't pack nuttin' in it.
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Rick Summers
-RAWOODS Custom Shop- West Peoria, IL rick@rawoods.com
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Rick Summers
-RAWOODS Custom Shop- West Peoria, IL rick@rawoods.com
I used my first Sho Bud PIII case until it wore out. Then I liked one of those wooden milk crates in every club with the mesh in the bottom. Just the right height.
Then 20 year of whatever chair I can find in the club I'm playing. Folding chairs work fine.
Looking forward to again using a case. One I had built by Texascase and sent to Marrs for my Professional to be sent out here in.
I tried a couple packaseat type seats, but I lost them.
EJL
Then 20 year of whatever chair I can find in the club I'm playing. Folding chairs work fine.
Looking forward to again using a case. One I had built by Texascase and sent to Marrs for my Professional to be sent out here in.
I tried a couple packaseat type seats, but I lost them.
EJL
- John Bechtel
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I think I'm still at least 35-yrs. behind the times! I'm still using ‘one of the very first’ {Duane Marrs} SHOBUD Pack-A-Seats, which Shot sold to me for $20! [Sorry ’bout that Duane!] Over the years I did put more foam-rubber and a new covering on the seat and increased the heigth 1½” with white conduit pipe-connecters. Sometime I need to paint them aluminum to match the original-legs! Once in a while it screaches a little, but; tightening a few screws and a little oil solves that problem!
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“Big John” Bechtel
(2)-Fender ’49–’50 T–8 Customs
Fender ’65 Reissue Twin-Reverb Custom™ 15”
click hereclick hereclick hereclick here
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“Big John” Bechtel
(2)-Fender ’49–’50 T–8 Customs
Fender ’65 Reissue Twin-Reverb Custom™ 15”
click hereclick hereclick hereclick here
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- Jerry Hayes
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I used my old ShoBud seat from '77 until about a year ago when I got the Walker Deluxe wide model with the folding back from Ray Walker. I never thought I'd ever pay that much for a seat ($325.00) but it was dang well worth every penny. Ray has a great product out there and very well thought out with some little extra touches. Have a good 'un, JH
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Livin' in the Past and the Future with a 12 string Mooney Universal tuning.
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Livin' in the Past and the Future with a 12 string Mooney Universal tuning.
- Gere Mullican
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I have been using a home made seat for about 40 years. On one side the legs were reinforcing steel bars and the other side was hollow tubing. I was afraid the tubing bout get a kink and I would wind up sitting in the floor so I went to Bobbe Seymour's store and bought an Elite seat. I had to get them to cut about 2 inches off the legs because most seats are about 20 inches from the floor and since I am a short guy I needed about 18 inches. Used it last night for the first time and it fit really good. Only thing is my power strip don't fit inside cuase it is too long. No problem, I just carry it in by itself. I don't know if it helped my picking but at least I am not concerned about winding up in the floor.
Gere
Gere
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With the exception of my good friends Jerry Hayes, Ryan Giese and a couple of the ole Sho-bud guys I am just sitting here laughing my tail end off. This is funny stuff. Now I am not trying to be mean spirited hear...the Good Lord only kows I mean well, but for the life of me I am laughing so hard it's all I can do to sit in my chair. I have spent a lot of money developing a steel guitar seat that will last almost forever and is comfortable and more than half the people on this thread are sitting on milk cartons...cans and kitchen chairs...and seem perfectly happy. I need to re-think my business plan and start making collapsible milking stools. HA!!! I mean it HA!!!!. b0b I love this forum my friend I really do. God bless each one of you who posted and I for one am truly happy to know what a lot of folks sit on too.
Ray Walker
Walker Seats
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Now before anything starts....boys and girls this is all in humor only...
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Sarah darlin' your newest seat's on it's way to you...I had no idea <FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Ray Walker on 08 October 2004 at 05:55 PM.]</p></FONT>
Ray Walker
Walker Seats
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Now before anything starts....boys and girls this is all in humor only...
PSS
Sarah darlin' your newest seat's on it's way to you...I had no idea <FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Ray Walker on 08 October 2004 at 05:55 PM.]</p></FONT>
- Dustin Rigsby
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No need to bend anything. Why copy? Think outside the square!
One of the nicest seats I've seen used 3/4" threaded pipe for legs. the legs screwed into threaded flanges (aboutb 2-3" dia) that were screwed to the bottom of the seat.
The legs could be cut to the exact dimesion needed.
A few "broom-handle holders" screwed down under the seat, held the legs in place when they were unscrewed.
As for me... I'd love a seat with a back. I've been using a Sho-Bud pack-a-seat for years. Put a new foam top on a few years ago.
JW
One of the nicest seats I've seen used 3/4" threaded pipe for legs. the legs screwed into threaded flanges (aboutb 2-3" dia) that were screwed to the bottom of the seat.
The legs could be cut to the exact dimesion needed.
A few "broom-handle holders" screwed down under the seat, held the legs in place when they were unscrewed.
As for me... I'd love a seat with a back. I've been using a Sho-Bud pack-a-seat for years. Put a new foam top on a few years ago.
JW
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The backrest is well worth having. I had an original Sho-Bud seat too, years ago and let it go with my '79 MSA when I sold it. I got a ToteSeat a couple years ago and thought nah, don't need a back, didn't have it before...W.C. convinced me to get one with a back and he was right. It's worth having if only for relaxing between songs, during soundchecks, etc.
- Klaus Caprani
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Savell,
RE: Sewing machine seat
That's precisely where Duane Marrs,who came up with the whole idea in the first place,got the idea from. I think Duane ought to be put in the SGHOF,just for coming up with that idea,alone!! BTW,I'm proud to say that I have the FIRST steel seat that Duane ever made,& was the first steeler to have one. TOOT-TOOT!! <---(that's me,tootin' my own horn. )
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<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre> ~ ~
©¿© It don't mean a thang,
mm if it ain't got that twang.
www.ntsga.com</pre></font>
RE: Sewing machine seat
That's precisely where Duane Marrs,who came up with the whole idea in the first place,got the idea from. I think Duane ought to be put in the SGHOF,just for coming up with that idea,alone!! BTW,I'm proud to say that I have the FIRST steel seat that Duane ever made,& was the first steeler to have one. TOOT-TOOT!! <---(that's me,tootin' my own horn. )
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<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre> ~ ~
©¿© It don't mean a thang,
mm if it ain't got that twang.
www.ntsga.com</pre></font>
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- James Cann
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- Location: Phoenix, AZ
Well, OK, since you asked:
I used to (in MSA Semi-Classic days)use a metal milk crate with a pillow. As rude as it was, it was the exact height for me although a point of some embarrassment in its primitive appearance, so I painted it matte black and attached a 1/4" plywood (stained in dark maple) platform, and found a more aristocratic looking pillow to complete the idea.
Whether my butt deserved such treatment is, of course, another discussion.
Dare I say it? I still have the milk crate (platform and pillow long gone. Is it appropriate now in the presence of an LDG or should I grow up and spend some money?
James
Sho-Bud LDG
I used to (in MSA Semi-Classic days)use a metal milk crate with a pillow. As rude as it was, it was the exact height for me although a point of some embarrassment in its primitive appearance, so I painted it matte black and attached a 1/4" plywood (stained in dark maple) platform, and found a more aristocratic looking pillow to complete the idea.
Whether my butt deserved such treatment is, of course, another discussion.
Dare I say it? I still have the milk crate (platform and pillow long gone. Is it appropriate now in the presence of an LDG or should I grow up and spend some money?
James
Sho-Bud LDG