Enjoy!
(Sorry if I'm stealing someone's job

Eric - I've never played mine sitting (sounds like you are planning on sitting), but standing & playing Taurus while also playing bass guitar (and singing, to boot!) takes a ton of focus (and your eyes on the pedals at all times) to not hit more than one note, especially with the narrower Fatar/Roland spacing of the T-3s. The wider spacing is the one advantage that the T-1s still have, as I have been playing the narrower spacing for 10 years now. My preferred Taurus shoe is the classic Converse Chuck Taylor hi-top, in rock & roll approved black.EricK wrote: Now I have no idea how wide Amos' feet are, but Ive been wondering how far apart the pedals were, if I would be hitting multiple pedals with my shoe or if it takes a lot of focus to just hit one pedal. Organ shoes necessary?
The center-line distance between chromatic pedals (C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C) is 2.5". Taking the width of the pedals into account, there's a one and five eighths inch gap between them. The center-line distance of the sharp pedals (C#, D#, F#, G#, A#) to their nearest neighbor is 1.25".EricK wrote:... I've been wondering how far apart the pedals were...
Eric
I play mine in a similar fashion (substitute 6 string for 4 string, but sometimes add 12 string!?!) and yes, it just takes a lot of woodshedding to get it all down. Over the years, going back and forth between T1 and PK-5, I haven't found one necessarily 'easier' than the other. I just have to have the songs down so my feet know where they're supposed to be going. I will be interested to see if the feel is any different with the T3.superd2112 wrote:EricK wrote: I've never played mine sitting, but standing & playing Taurus while also playing bass guitar (and singing, to boot!) takes a ton of focus (and your eyes on the pedals at all times) to not hit more than one note, especially with the narrower Fatar/Roland spacing of the T-3s.