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Black Mountain Slide Guitar Rings - Made From Tungsten Steel. Acoustic Guitar Slide, Electric Guitar Slide, Bass, Ukulele, and More. Almost as Hard as Diamond, Smooth Surface Finish, New Invention

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$39.95

$ 20 .99 $20.99

In Stock

1.Size:Extra Large


About this item

  • INCREDIBLE SUSTAIN AND TONE: The Black Mountain guitar slide is made from tungsten steel. Almost as hard as diamond, tungsten steel is highly resistant to abrasion and weighs twice as much as regular steel or brass. Because of this added mass, the Black Mountain Slide ring has the sustain and tone of a full sized slide! The sound of a full-sized guitar slide in a slide ring.
  • THE FREEDOM SLIDE: Play with four fingers the way you always play but switch to slide whenever you feel the urge! You can bar, fret, play four-finger chords or scales.
  • THREE SIZES TO CHOOSE FROM: If your fingers are smaller than most people, picks small. If your fingers are larger then most people, pick XL.
  • ONE SLIDE RING FOR ALL: If you’re a beginner, the Black Mountain Slide Ring is the perfect first slide and an incredible gateway into the world of slide guitar. If you’re a pro, our tungsten guitar slide ring is an essential addition to your tool chest unlocking a myriad of creative possibilities.
  • NEW INVENTION! The Black Mountain slide ring was invented by a full-time guitar teacher. This patented invention is a perfect first slide for beginners, and a must-have tool for pros



4.3 out of 5 stars Best Sellers Rank
  • #2,150 in Musical Instruments (See Top 100 in Musical Instruments)
  • #6 in Guitar Slides
Date First Available July 13, 2023 Color Name silver Compatible Devices Guitar Material Type tungsten Size Regular

Product Description

Slide Ring A+

The Freedom Slide!

Switch between traditional and slide guitar, on the fly, whenever you feel the urge!

A NEW STYLE OF SLIDE GUITAR!

Slide Ring

Fantastic Tone for Slide Guitar!

Our spring-fit design assures comfort and stability. Plus, the added mass of Tungsten steel means that you get the tone of a full-sized slide packed into the versatility of a slide ring.

Slide Ring A+

The Freedom Slide!

Thanks to this innovative slide ring, you can play four-finger chords, four-finger scales, bar with your pinky and ring finger, but still have the option to slide whenever you want to!

Slide Ring

Explore the Spaces Between the Notes!

Traditional slides are tubes that cover your pinky or ring finger. The Black Mountain Slide Ring lets you play slide guitar whenever you want to without sacrificing the use of your pinky or ring finger!

Slide Ring A+
Slide Ring A+

The sound of a full-sized slide in a slide ring!

Tungsten Steel is very dense which results in a fantastic tone for slide guitar

You can bar, fret, play four-finger chords, four-finger scales. There are no limits with the Black Mountain Slide Ring!

Almost as hard as diamond, Tungsten steel is highly resistant to abrasion

Ultra-smooth surface finish!

Slide Ring
CTA Slide Ring

Kev
Reviewed in Canada on March 3, 2025
Fun piece of guitar gear to use when you want to add something different to your solos
Zero Empire
Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2025
This thing is well made and thoroughly thought out, it also has a nice feel to it, but it's not for me. I'm not a very good slide player in the first place. It would take a lot of practice and some getting used to.
Dale Radjo
Reviewed in Canada on June 19, 2024
Love this little slide
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2024
The Medium is a perfect fit for my finger. Was surprised by the weight, but the density makes for great tone. Well-designed. Stay in place on my finger until I’m ready to belt out some screaming tones.
Mark Milan
Reviewed in Canada on December 10, 2024
The product guide said wear it on the first knuckle of your middle finger, and allow for about 50 hours to get used to it. It allows you to play slide guitar, then play full chords right away.Another benefit to this is that I have really bug knuckles, so I can't play the standard slides. I got the XL size, and it stays on with a spring, which solves that issue.A good addition to your guitar accessories.
Justin Hawkins
Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2024
Great slide, really cool to use and be able to use your fingers! I have really big hands so I was worried about the sizes however it fits both my ring and middle fingers well and it is great quality!
Person who wears pants
Reviewed in Canada on November 19, 2024
This ring slide is a genius invention. It allows the player to play barre chords and fingered chords like normal, but at a moment’s notice you can throw in some slide licks. It takes a little while to get used to but you will very quickly be strumming and sliding any time you like.The slide fits on your middle finger, and with the aid of the ingenious spring loaded clip inside the slide, it snuggly fits your finger regardless of the size of your finger. If you follow their instructions to measure your finger you will be able to pick the size appropriate for you.Check out the YouTube videos and you will see how well this slide works.I highly recommend this slide for any guitarist interested in adding some slide flair to their playing.
JimiJames
Reviewed in Canada on October 4, 2024
Still learning to twin with this but, I can this coming…
D. Nov
Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2024
Guitar players, give me your attention. This device is an excellent tool to allow you to play slide while keeping your fingers available to play chords. It is spring loaded so it stays on your finger and it functions beautifully! WELL WORTH the small price!
Peliparius
Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2024
I’ve got mixed feelings here. This slide ring is well made. I don’t think it’s insanely overpriced and may very well be close to production cost, but it’s still asking a lot for what it’s trying to do.First I’ll address sizing. Man, some people are helpless. Yes, if they’re going to sell rings in different sizes online then the least they could do is supply a size chart. Especially if they already have one on their website and just haven’t bothered to copy it over to the Amazon listing, despite all the reviews going “No size chart!!” Well yeah, that’s rather lazy of them. Then again, the size chart I found isn’t that great so maybe more trouble than it’s worth.So before I bought this I decided to make the superhuman effort of Googling “Black Mountain slide ring size chart” first. Went to their site, looked at size chart, measured my finger then ordered. I was right over the edge into Extra Large. I got it and…it’s massive. The only way it sorta stayed in place was the spring plate. If I’d decided to keep this I would’ve traded a size down. I remember I was surprised it said I needed an XL as I don’t have particularly large hands and I’ve ordered rings before and had them fit just fine.Anyway, assume you’ve got the right size and all that is hunky dory. I’m a guitarist but I’ve segued over the bass more the last decade. So my main purpose was bass and saw reviewers say it worked for that. Well, being really careful I could slide one string. This ring fit about perfectly the space between two bass strings so that’s a drawback, kept slotting into the groove. But they do suggest practicing for several hours and I agree with that. But is it worth it doing all that?Here was my thought process: ideally you’d get to where you’re comfortable using this and could throw in slides without sacrificing as many fingering options as you would with a traditional slide. Sure, theoretically could work that way. This is a big steel ring so it’s really heavy. So you’re going to need to relearn a lot. It’s kinda like wearing wrist/ankle weights while working out, but for just one of your fingers. Many of us are familiar with the transition period when you go from acoustic to electric or bass to electric or bass to nylon acoustic (that one’s fun). Basically it takes a minute to readjust your brain, different dexterity and strengths involved, etc. So I had to ask myself, do I really want to learn how to play with this big ass ring dragging my finger down? All so I can pull off a little slide sometimes? No, decided not so much. Maybe if it wasn’t 40 bucks. Maybe the smaller one wouldn’t be so heavy. I could afford it but it’s the principle of the thing.I was on the fence and leaning towards retreating when something else occurred to me that clinched it. I was curious about the spring plate. Appears to be slotted into the ring on the sides. I circled in yellow the part that concerns me. Again, this thing weighs a lot. I actually did the math but couldn’t find anything common that weighed the same. It’s like half a can of soda, with the liquid. Anyway, if the spring plate is held on by two plastic tabs protruding into a recess on either side of the ring, and if said rings is, again, very heavy, and if I predictably drop it at some point as I’m sure to do: there’s good odds one corner of that spring plate could snap off and I’d be left with a massive heavy ring that might maybe fit my thumb, that I’d never want to wear anyway. Maybe there’s a metal bar inside the spring plate to support it more but even then I don’t think that would prevent much if you dropped this on a hard surface and it hit on the side.Anyway, it’s a cool idea. I feel bad criticizing when I don’t have an alternate solution. I’m really not a big slide player anyway so I’m not the target demographic. I was just hoping to add some slides and maybe some fretless vibrato. Maybe if I was still in my 20’s and had more time, something to prove. It’s hard learning something new after so long, no fun sounding bad again. It’s a cool idea but needs work. I’d say make it out of titanium but I already complained about it being too expensive. Aluminum probably wouldn’t cut it. I don’t know. If it was cheaper I probably would’ve kept it. I guess the manufacturer has some math to do, if sales get returned a lot then you’re on the right track but not there yet.But seriously, you guys waited for my lazy posterior to put up a size chart? I took me two months just to finally review this and I just saw it 6+ months before I bought it but still no size chart. I’m prone to procrastination myself but if it’ll help my profits I get moving a lot sooner. People rely on the “free for me” returns too much as it is. It’s getting paid for somewhere. Better to just give customers basic information about your product so they can make an informed decision the first time. It certainly couldn’t hurt.If you like slide guitar, but only on a couple strings, and like working out one finger at a time, and don’t mind thwacking a big heavy ring against your fretboard occasionally, and won’t drop it much, and think that’s worth 40 bucks, well then this is the ring for you. Many customers seem quite happy with it so it’s not a bad product. But it’s clearly not for everyone and at a price where impulse buying is less common. If you’re curious about slide guitar then I’d of course recommend trying a cheaper conventional slide first. They all take practice but this one more so/less intuitive. I really wonder what it’d be like taking this off if you had gotten used to playing with it on. Would you just fret with your (probably middle) finger way harder? Amusing to consider. I bet you can flip a strong bird in traffic after using this awhile. Bonus.Anyway good luck. I’d round down on finger measurements, or measure your finger against a quarter as that’s about the inner diameter of the extra large size. I expect most will be fine with the normal size.
Sydywnd
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2024
I really wanted to like this slide. It goes on easy, stays put, and allows you to use all your fingers just like they say. However, I found it too narrow for my use. Granted, I'm not much of a slide player. However, I played worse when trying to use this slide ring. I had trouble getting a good sound on a single string and had a heck of a time getting two strings to play well. I went back to my regular old glass slide and sounded so much better.This is a well crafted product. For someone that's more advanced in the art of slide guitar, it will probably work great for you. It just wasn't the right thing for me.
Fred W. Anson (aka "12th Fret" Anson)
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2024
Playing slide on a bass gives you three things:1) Clean fretless-like slides on fretted basses, and;2) Bow-like vibrato and tone on long droning whole notes, and;3) A new tone to add to your arsenal of tones.I use mine on both fretted and unfretted basses because I've found I get an even cleaner slide on unfretted bass if I use the slide rather than just my finger (I know it may sound crazy, but it's true).Here's why this particular slide is the perfect slide for bass guitarists: Playing slide on a bass guitar is a very different thing than on 6 string guitar.First, we need to be able to quickly transition from slide to fretting. Second, we're grooving rather than soloing and only throwing in the slides as an occasional flourish rather than as our dominant tone. Third, we're typically only playing single notes - or at the most double stops - rather than chords.Full-finger slides tend to "take over" and make it so the ONLY style that you can use while it's on is slide. As a result, a traditional full-finger slide isn't the right choice for us. (trust me I've tried - it sux!)We need something more like a knuckle slide. But there's a problem there too: Most knuckle slides are too wide for the string spacing of most basses and too loose to give us the level of control that we need over our sliding. In addition, ALL traditional slides - be they of ANY length - take out one of our fretting fingers thus inhibiting our ability to fret efficiently.This slide fixes all those problems. Furthermore, the tungsten steel that they use cuts down on string noise on full-wound strings (which is all that I use - I hate flatwounds).Trust me I tried them ALL before I landed on this slide - the rest are a waste of time and money. THIS is the slide that you need if you play bass.I bought three (including the previous generation egg-shaped one) and I use them all.P.S. This slide comes with some great tips on how to slide - read them, they're "gold". Even better is the video that they recommend in those tips, it's superb!
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