Tilt forward for better string contact

About Steel Guitarists and their Music

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Paul Sutherland
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Joined: 8 Mar 2007 3:45 pm
Location: Placerville, California

Post by Paul Sutherland »

Tilting your steel is one of the easier experiments you can do with any steel. You'll know when it feels right.
It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing.
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Fred Treece
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Joined: 29 Dec 2015 3:15 pm
Location: California, USA

Post by Fred Treece »

Roy Carroll wrote:Thanks Gents for all the replies. I am 6'1" and have pretty long arms. My picks are curved so that the fingers are curled in.
Been playing a very long time. I just thought that maybe some of the newbies could try it to get comfortable.
Thanks again,
I am a 6’3 sorta newb with long legs and arms. I have a lift kit for the front legs on the steel. I do the tilt for extra leg room in the back but have to be careful with how much tilt as well as seat height, as regards the aforementioned upper arm-forearm-to-wrist alignment. Shoulder tension is a killer.

Also, one more alert to other new players - hang on to the bar! If you lose your grip that bugger will slide right off a tilted neck.
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John McClung
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Post by John McClung »

Fred Treece wrote:
Roy Carroll wrote:Thanks Gents for all the replies. I am 6'1" and have pretty long arms. My picks are curved so that the fingers are curled in.
Been playing a very long time. I just thought that maybe some of the newbies could try it to get comfortable.
Thanks again,
I am a 6’3 sorta newb with long legs and arms. I have a lift kit for the front legs on the steel. I do the tilt for extra leg room in the back but have to be careful with how much tilt as well as seat height, as regards the aforementioned upper arm-forearm-to-wrist alignment. Shoulder tension is a killer.

Also, one more alert to other new players - hang on to the bar! If you lose your grip that bugger will slide right off a tilted neck.
Good point, Fred! I usually have a backup bar between necks onstage in case that slippage occurs. And it has...spare picks in the pack-a-seat, too. Boy Scout mode!
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Jacek Jakubek
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Joined: 10 Mar 2007 7:53 am
Location: Mississauga, Ontario, Canada

Post by Jacek Jakubek »

I also tilt my steel slightly forward for a comfortable and relaxed wrist position. I just eyeball it, as long as it's a little forward from being level, it's good.
John McClung wrote:Some steels have shorter levers, Carters are a good example, and if you jack up the back end too much, you're missing the lever altogether. One of my knocks on Carters.
I play Carters and I had to attach extensions to the levers (made the levers about 3" longer) because I found them too short even with the guitar level, let alone tilted forward.
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