On 1., you're missing the fact that the F-lever and E-lever can be used together as described by Paul Franklin in the post I referenced above. If you don't find that move useful, I guess it doesn't matter, but a lot of us do.John Polstra wrote:I think I'm missing something, because I can't understand why folks would use anything except LKR to lower the Es on an E9/B6 uni. Here's my reasoning:
What am I missing?
- 1. The knee that is holding the Es lowered is out of commission for anything else. It can't operate another knee lever.
2. When using the B6 foot pedals, the left foot is way over to the right, making it impractical to use the left knee for anything except holding the Es lowered with LKR.
3. Therefore, if you lower the Es with your right knee, you have no B6 knee lever available at all. Whereas if you lower the Es with LKR, you can still use your right knee as the normal B6 knee lever.
John
On 2., you're missing the fact that many of us find it very uncomfortable to hold the E-lever in with the left knee while operating the B6 pedals, which are to the right of the guitar. It's a very awkward movement to me and obviously many others.
On 3., the solution is to put the typical B6 knee levers - for example, string 3 half-tone B=>Bb lower (root=>maj7 lower), string 4 half-tone Ab=>A raise (6=>b7 raise) - on the left knee. That is easily done. All my universals have 3 left knee levers I can use for this. No matter which knee you put the E-lever on, you are restricted to using the other knee for B6-mode lever moves. For me, it's a tradeoff between combining pedal moves with the constant E-lever move and the occasional other-lever moves.
Do you play universal? Points 2 and 3 are irrelevant for an S-10 E9 player or D-10 E9/C6 player, which is why I suspect many more of them put the E-lever on LKR.
On point 1, if one looks at the E and F levers in isolation from each other, then putting them on separate knees reduces combinatorial options. But I don't look at it like that, and I think Paul makes that point very clearly.