No, this isn't a SPAM post although you can currently buy these at 50% off from MF, GC or Amazon ($33.99).
http://www.behringer.com/EN/Products/UCG102.aspx
The hardware itself is very basic- I think I am most impressed with the software that comes with it- a very limited version of Native Instruments Guitar Rig. You get your choice of the AC-30, Plexi and Twin Reverb amp models. You can demo all 3 of them, which means it stops after 30 minutes and you can't save presets. I had thought that the 30 minute limit was forever, but you just need to exit the program and restart it to play for another 30 minutes.
I was sure that I'd want the Twin Reverb rig but I wasn't crazy about the clean tones- practically all of the presets were distorted and did not clean up well. The Plexi rig was the fanciest with 16 knobs and 1 switch. It was the AC-30 rig that I liked the most, with a version of the Vox Treble Boost ahead of the preamp, along with reverb and tremolo- 32 presets.
There is a "tape recorder" function that you can use to record your playing, before or after all of the effects and modeling, or to play back pre-recorded backing tracks to play along with. I have never had so much fun playing guitar through headphones! I have never liked to use headphones with any of the multi-processors I've tried- I never liked the presets which were usually aimed towards arena rock, and editing them didn't really help.
Native Instruments has a free Guitar Rig 5 Player which gives you a small rig to keep plus 30 minute demo access to a whole bunch more from their Guitar Rig 5 software.
NATIVE INSTRUMENTS : HOME | HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE FOR MUSICIANS, PRODUCERS, DJS, GUITAR AND BASS PLAYERS
With all of the threads about the ultimate bedroom guitar amp I'd suggest that someone look into this (for $33!). FWIW I had checked out the $39 Vox AmpPlugs which plug into your guitar and have a headphone jack. None of the 3 models I tried had any decent clean sounds, although the AC-30 one came the closest. (Turning down the gain helped, but then that would reduce the maximum overall volume.) I had also tried using the $250 Korg Pandora 5 but was disappointed with the quality of the clean sounds. Once you turned off all of the effects there really wasn't much of anything left.
Steve Ahola
http://www.behringer.com/EN/Products/UCG102.aspx
The hardware itself is very basic- I think I am most impressed with the software that comes with it- a very limited version of Native Instruments Guitar Rig. You get your choice of the AC-30, Plexi and Twin Reverb amp models. You can demo all 3 of them, which means it stops after 30 minutes and you can't save presets. I had thought that the 30 minute limit was forever, but you just need to exit the program and restart it to play for another 30 minutes.
I was sure that I'd want the Twin Reverb rig but I wasn't crazy about the clean tones- practically all of the presets were distorted and did not clean up well. The Plexi rig was the fanciest with 16 knobs and 1 switch. It was the AC-30 rig that I liked the most, with a version of the Vox Treble Boost ahead of the preamp, along with reverb and tremolo- 32 presets.
There is a "tape recorder" function that you can use to record your playing, before or after all of the effects and modeling, or to play back pre-recorded backing tracks to play along with. I have never had so much fun playing guitar through headphones! I have never liked to use headphones with any of the multi-processors I've tried- I never liked the presets which were usually aimed towards arena rock, and editing them didn't really help.
Native Instruments has a free Guitar Rig 5 Player which gives you a small rig to keep plus 30 minute demo access to a whole bunch more from their Guitar Rig 5 software.
NATIVE INSTRUMENTS : HOME | HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE FOR MUSICIANS, PRODUCERS, DJS, GUITAR AND BASS PLAYERS
With all of the threads about the ultimate bedroom guitar amp I'd suggest that someone look into this (for $33!). FWIW I had checked out the $39 Vox AmpPlugs which plug into your guitar and have a headphone jack. None of the 3 models I tried had any decent clean sounds, although the AC-30 one came the closest. (Turning down the gain helped, but then that would reduce the maximum overall volume.) I had also tried using the $250 Korg Pandora 5 but was disappointed with the quality of the clean sounds. Once you turned off all of the effects there really wasn't much of anything left.
Steve Ahola
Comment