🎶 Unleash your inner sonic beast with the ULTRA OCTAVER UO300!
The Behringer ULTRA OCTAVER UO300 is a compact analog effects pedal that adds one and two octaves below your guitar tone, featuring three dedicated volume controls and a flexible 3-mode range switch. Designed for true bypass signal integrity and powered automatically via jack insertion, it delivers powerful octave effects with smart battery efficiency, perfect for players seeking bold, buzzing distortion and single-note tracking.
Product Dimensions | 12.3 x 7 x 5.4 cm; 331.12 g |
Batteries | 1 9V batteries required. |
Item model number | UO300 |
Colour | black |
Connector | 1/4 inch audio jack |
Hardware Interface | 1/4-inch Audio |
Signal Format | analog |
Country Produced In | china |
Size | Pack of 1 |
Power Source | Stud |
Voltage | 9 |
Item Weight | 331 g |
J**U
Great octave pedal
Great octave pedal, perfect for how I use it which is playing bass lines as part of a looper pedal setup.A note about some of the other bad reviews, these people are complaining about bad sound quality and distortion, this is not the pedals fault! This pedal can only handle a single note at a time, if you want to play chords whilst using an octave effect you need a POLYPHONIC octave pedal which are much more expensive and not what this pedal is!
P**Z
For the money, and to test the effect, this is an decent enough pedal!
For the money - and to test the effect - this is an decent enough pedal.Pros: Cheap, durable, does the job, 9v battery or power cableCons: Limited functionality, can't handle chordsIt's easy to knock Behringer pedals, but you need to be realistic about what you're paying for. If I'm curious about an effect, I'll usually pay £15-25 for a cheaper pedal to test if it's something worth shelling out for a more professional one. In this case bought the UO300, used for a couple of jams, and upgraded to the Boss OC-3 which is a far superior unit, but around six times the price!!Don't expect a £14 pedal to be all singing and dancing. Notes about the poor quality of Behringer pedals really annoy me. Unless you're jumping up and down on them they're decent pedals. I've got 5 and they all still work perfectly - the oldest one is +13 years old.
B**E
Arrived faulty
Was highly disappointed with this product. Arrived only working with batteries and didn’t work when plugged into a power supply. The effect itself sounded awful with ridiculously high levels of buzz. This was very disappointing as I have heard good things about this brand and the design is very intuitive and really great quality for the price. It’s just such a shame that it doesn’t work properly. I hope this is just a one off so I will order a replacement and update this review applicable.
P**P
Works really well and at a fraction of the price of the other popular ones.
Robust although in plastic. Works really well and at a fifth of the price of the supposed market leaders.
M**R
Not fantastic, but usable.
Not fantastic, but usable is the review headline and that sums the pedal up for me.All my guitars and basses are low output, and this seems to play a big part in the success or otherwise of the pedal in use.Blend out the original signal as much as possible and wind octave1 up and still the original is there. No problem. Full output from the original and blend octave1 in to get a reasonable sound, but, it really can't track unless I either select both pups on the guitar(s) or really dig in on the bass(es).Octave2 stays wound off. Hippofarts aplenty otherwise. Put the pedal behind the compressor or overdrive to get some boost and it tracks somewhat better. The pedal introduces noise when activated, seems to attenuate the signal slightly when merely in the chain and is about as bypass as a banana. Introduce too much zizzle+fizz from the compressor and/or overdrive and some very weird harmonics get 'octaved' better than the original signal. This is not a good sound. Careful level setting required then!Battery life was marginal. It ate a Duracell in 30 minutes ( pedal PSU not around :-/ )If an octaver were to form a larger part of our sound as opposed to being used for effect rarely, I'd not have bought this. I know some Behringer pedals are very good and some not so and knew this was one that teetered on the cusp of crapola. Teeter it does. Want a good octaver?, this isn't it. Want an octaver to donk about with without spending a lot?, it'll pass muster. Barely.I've yet to actually break a Behringer pedal, I do use some live without issue, but this one is not good.
A**R
Works well on bass haven't tried on guitar yet
I've bought a few of these pedals and have been quite pleased with them obviously they won't last long if you want to stomp on them at gigs but they are sturdy enough if you look after them.I've tried this with bass only so far and have got a pretty good sound out of it, i put the octave 2 knob to zero as having it up any amount sounded odd with the octave 1 knob on or on it's own, but i am pretty pleased with it, i did find on bass it doesn't handle anything from open E to about 7th fret on E very well but anything higher is good, i imagine its because it's already a low note on bass so it might struggle to match it at an octave lower. I still give it 5 stars it isn't perfect but the right settings it is quite effective its easy to see if you just put everything up on the controls it does sound bad, just try some tweeking
M**R
Be sure this is what you want.
I wonder if some of the negative reviews are confusion around what this pedal is and what it is and isn't capable of.Nowadays for a bit more than the cost of this pedal, you can get a digital octave pedal or a harmoniser that makes a good copy of your signal at various pitches that is good for doubling or harmonizing what you play.This is archaic technology, an attempt in the second half of the last centuryto create copies of a signal one and two octaves below and it largely fails. high on the neck, tone rolled off, neck pickup you might get cleanish below octave copies of single notes that you are playing but deviate from that and you get glitches from a pedal that gets confused and dumps out random sonic information.Straight out of the box it sounds terrible and if you like high gain but defined distortion this is likely to be too unruly for you.But if you put it through fuzz or high gain overdrive so you lose some of the definition of those glitches and you spend time with what to feed it into, you can create a crazed unpredictable dinosaur.Neil Young uses an analogue octave divider to help him get to that Weld Era monster (along with a lot of abused amplifiers). Is his mutron better than this? Haven't played one but thus gets you in that ballpark. You just need to find the right distortion to make the noise.
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