Not exactly a new purchase, but very recently got it working...
Behringer Xenyx 1202FX, same board Mike posted about, my sister found it at a resale shop a couple of years ago for $5. I got a DC power supply later for a buck at another resale shop, it happens to work. Dug both out of a box in my shed around 2 weeks ago, crossed my fingers and plugged it in. Works perfect.
Used it in the practice room to check it out, make sure it would work, then used it at a gig 2 weeks ago as an acoustic amp. Worked great. Send a line signal to the main board, it did a very good job. Cut the effects on the man board and used the echo in the Xenyx board, if you tinker with it some it's not hard to get usable effects from it. The trick is to set the main effects level pretty high and the channel effects low, and it works well that way.
I plugged it into my Fender Champ to test it out at home, amp volume around midway still gets a clean sound, combination of guitar EQ and board EQ works out pretty well for a good sound, and tinkering with levels, EQ and effects let me figure out how I wanted things set before I got there, didn't take long at all to get it working right. Soon as we figure out what was wrong in Shane's Acoustic channel of the main PA board we'll be able to use it for both acoustics, (pan one left and one right, they don't bleed into each other, one main output into each of our PA channels) and I can still use one for electric guitar for some of the chorus/flanger type effects, which work well if you tinker with it and learn how to use them.
We're playing a family get together next weekend, and might use it with just acoustics, haven't decided yet, but so far I'm pretty pleased with it. Not built of plastic like some Behringer stuff I've seen, it doesn't feel like cheap plastic junk when you pick it up, like most. Works well, and should do a nice job for recording. Effects aren't great, but if you tinker with them some you can get some usable ones. I like #52 for onstage, short echo, #10 works pretty well for just reverb if set kind of low, and the octaver might be useful too, can't remember what number it is. But you have to spend some time with it learning to fine tune the levels. Things like the Chorus, Flanger and Octave have to be set higher at the main effects level, and fairly high at the channel control, echo and reverb both just over midway at the main control and channel level seems to work pretty well. Main output level in the recording level bracket seems to work well for everything, and it gave me no problems with feedback at all onstage.
Overall I'm pretty pleased with it, I'll be using it as an acoustic amp onstage and we're probably going to use it as the main PA for practice and for recording. I've done some test recordings at home, just the acoustic so far, and it seems to do pretty well. Trying to decide now whether to redo the one song I finished or let 'er rip as is...
Oh yeah, I fully agree about too much echo onstage, my mic had a midrange howl all night onstage, I think that's why...too much echo...Everything changes onstage compared to the practice room...same as guitar, you have to cut back the saturation or distortion or it gets really muddy really fast...
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