I've been looking forward to sharing this project with you all for a while now! I love the steel forum so I hope you find this interesting.

I made a video demonstration of the Metro Steel instrument here.
In short: if you get a lap steel, a hexaphonic pickup, and a digital whammy pedal, you can make pedal-steel-like sounds. It's a bit like having digital benders.
As a musician who loves the country sound but without a Ford F-150 or a van, the Metro Steel (or Subway Steel...) emerged out of a desire to make a more transportable and versatile steel guitar. It fits inside of an airplane carry-on suitcase, and is easy to take on public transit or in a bicycle basket.
Most importantly, it opens up a lot of new possibilities. The real fun for me now is figuring out the copedent and actually playing it properly. It has a leather strap so I can play while standing, but it's a little comical to watch me try to balance while playing the pedals and the volume pedal.

This was quite the project for me and I look forward to expanding it. Yes, a Duesenberg Multibender is probably still the best gigging solution. If I was to make this again, I'd just focus on the ABC pedals and maybe LKR.
A special mention goes to Alan Pagliere and his OnePSG project, for being open to me publishing this guide; he is the patent-holder for the software behind his digital pedal steel guitar. His project is very much alive but as of 2025 not yet commercially available; it offers brilliant new possibilites for the pedal steel, like changing copedents with a touchpad. Secondly, Jeff Snyder invented a very novel synthesiser based on the pedal steel guitar.
The idea is to publish this for free so anyone can make a portable instrument and experiment.
If you find this useful or interesting, please check out my first single as I put down my plaster spatula and start playing more music. I also put some useful tools for steel guitarists there: a fretboard generator and a slightly buggy random chord practice tool.