steelplayer wrote:The Rittenberry guitars are really nice. Mine are the normal E9th tuning, the blue one does have the Wallace pickup. I own two of these fine instruments, here is a pic of the other one.

Sadly, the pedal steel suffers from a lot of stereotyping, I personally believe it can be used in most styles of music. Lots of other musicians are kind of narrow minded about this. 
I noticed the blue guitar has four pedals, is that doing something beyond the standard E9?
Because of the 4 pedals I had thought it might be their "Cajun Special" that pulls 5 strings with a 4th pedal.
I agree that there is a limiting stereotype attached to the pedal steel.
Some notable exceptions ...
With Alvino Rey it started out as a big band jazz instrument.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fi9xxddl4is
The Sacred steel guitar gospel tradition that goes back to the 1930's, has developed almost parallel to, yet totally independent of, the C&W steel guitar tradition.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VQN6HIuOjM
Susan Alcorn takes the PSG way way out there!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihBM5F1KOSQ