Recently stumbled into an Ace (Rickenbacker) locally that appears to be almost unused. What a hoot! Boisterous pickup, nary a hum. It’s the shortest scale lap I have, so I’m trying an A6th tuning (all the other long scales are in D, E, C etc).
I’ve tried a few. Variants, settled on one that a fellow forumite suggested.
A C# E F# A C#
I’ve been watching some Western swing rules with Eddie Rivers. One thing he mentions is that he prefers an E on top. I twisted my tuning so that it reads:
A C# E F# A E
I’m finding some cool stuff… but what would you call this? Another A6?
Larry Pogreba Baritone 'Weissenheimer
Late 30’s Oahu Tonemaster
LSLME Chatsworth (Lap Steel Legacy Mark Evans w/Sentell cust. Single coil)
Early 40’s Mysterious Employee built National ‘New Yorker’
2017 Richard Wilson Style 1 Weissenborn
Rickenbacker ‘Ace’ lap steel
Quilter 101
Your approach is interesting but it sacrifices the major third (C#) in the upper register, which then limits the melodic options somewhat.
If you leave the top triad intact, but take the major third out of the bass side instead, you could have..
E
C#
A
F#
E
A
This works well if you like having a low root string on the bottom, while preserving the typical 6th tuning intervals/ patterns on the top 5 strings.