Yes, Dave, a doubleneck steel (e9, c6 necks). The four legs and pedal rack/rods screw into the four corners to right it and play. The shiny bars pointing to the ceiling are the knee levers. You rock your legs to the left or the right to actuate them. These along with the pedals and knee-lifts (like the levers, except you raise your leg to push them) all are keyed to raise or lower a given string to alter your tuning. The WHOLE thing is a B-Bender! There's no standard instrument as far as these go. You see some with only a few pedals and levers, then others you can't imagine how there's room for the guy's legs there's so many under there. All depends what you need and want.
I LOVE pedal steel. My brothers-in-law are terrific players, and of course you see them a LOT here in Nashville (duuhhhh!!). A good friend of mine is Doug Jernigan, one of the greatest steel players on the planet (
www.digndoug.com), a wonderful player and educator, and a truly terrifying speed picker. Also plays wonderful jazz on it that sounds NOTHING like country music. Not a lot of steel players that have Charlie Parker in their set list!
And they are utter MONSTERS to learn to play: Fretless, the tuning must have been sorted out by roulette wheel, one pedal pulls one string one way, the next the other, it makes me dizzy to think about it. But in the hands of the right person, they make magic. Not just the tinny, whiny thing most people think. Gilmour and Garcia get LOTS of brownie points just for being able to play anything on one!
J o e y