Here's another reality check on perspective. Pedal steel is at heart a guitar. And almost no one starts from scratch on pedal steel. Virtually all steelers play guitar for years before moving to pedal steel. Therefore, even the "student" model pedal steels are really very elaborate guitars for advanced players. From that perspective, all pedal steels, from student to pro models, compare favorably to pro quality acoustic and electric guitars. And when you consider that they are all limited run, hand assembled instruments, pedal steels begin to look like incredible bargains. They are. And this is only because virtually all the manufacturers are players in business for the love of the instrument, as opposed to giant corporations making big profits off a mass market. Can you imagine what Martin or the Gibson Custom Shop would charge for an instrument that took the engineering, materials and assembly time of a pedal steel?
Also, pedal steels last forever, and can be mechanically upgraded with additional pedals and levers to keep up with modern trends (or you can forget that and go retro). There is an abundance of great used pro pedal steels available just right here on the Forum, if you are a little patient. I can only afford to buy used, and have paid about half price for several of the recent top pro models made. And when I sell them I always get my original price or more. So once you get one of these babies, you can just play musical chairs with different top models without spending much more than shipping. And even buying from scratch they cost way less than the amateur piano sitting in my living room, or the used pro tenor sax I play.
Sure, you have to buy an amp and a volume pedal. Look at the prices on the most popular pro steel amps (Peavey NV112 and NV1000) compared to pro level guitar amps. Even if you want to go vintage tubes, the Fender silver-face amps we like for the clean headroom go for peanuts compared to the black-face small and medium sized amps 6-stringers feel they must have, not to mention the boutique amps. Also, the best steel volume pedals available cost peanuts compared to the array of stomp boxes on the pedal boards of most guitar players I know.
Maybe we should count our blessings.
