Buy Digitech RP350 Multi-effects Modeling PedalDigitech RP350 Multi-effects Modeling Pedal Product Description:
- Intuitive operation - pick one of 30 settings from the Tone Library; add your choice from 30 Effect Library combinations
- 27 Amp/Preamp/Acoustic models with A/B switching - Vintage models of '57 Deluxe, '65 Twin, Vox AC30, Marshall Super Lead etc. - Modern rectifiers and boutique amps
- 70 Factory/70 User presets
- Power supply included
- Included Cubase LE4 Music Production Software
Product Description
Digitech's new RP Series effects pedals feature brand new models based on classic and coveted amplifiers, distortions and effects, with up to 11 available simultaneously. A myriad of options for creating high quality tones and connectivity makes the new RP series perfect for guitar players in any genre. The flagship RP350 features 118 models, including 73 effects models, 27 amplifier/preamplifier and acoustic guitar models with A/B switching, and 18 speaker cabinets. Seventy user presets and 70 factory presets allow ample storage for even a complex stage show. Three footswitches, four buttons, six encoders, and an integral expression pedal provide complete control over essential parameters during performance, while an eight-character LCD gives the player visual feedback on the darkest stage.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Good Sounds but Limited Flexibility
By Antony W. Alumkal
The amp simulators alone make the Digitech RP350 worth the price of admission. No piece of solid state equipment can capture all of the nuances of tube gear, but this thing comes reasonably close.The main limitation I found is that you can run only ONE effect at a time from the Chorus/FX module (delay and reverb are in a separate module). So running chorus and flange together is impossible. Ditto with phaser and pitch shift. I would strongly recommend visiting the Digitech website and downloading the manual so that you know exactly what you are getting. The website also has clips of the presets, though actually playing one would of course be better.My only other gripe is that the Marshall Plexi simulation could use a higher maximum gain level. You have to mate it with a distortion pedal simulation to get a decent among of distortion. I prefer my Tech 21 Sansamp GT2 for 70s hard rock sounds.For the price, this was well worth it for me. I just hope Digitech makes future models with two FX modules instead of only one.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Great value!
By David Lamkins
The RP350 is simple to learn, sounds great and is both compact and lightweight. If you have a PA, a keyboard amplifier or other full-range sound reproduction system available, then all you really need is an RP350 and your guitar. (I wouldn't recommend using *any* modeler in conjunction with a guitar amplifier; the sound through a guitar amp is not what you'd like it to be.)The RP350 was my second modeler after having ditched my high-end tube amps and boutique pedals at the beginning of 2007. (My first modeler was a Boss GT-8 which was larger, heavier, and way more complicated than the RP350. The GT-8's advanced tweakability was a poor tradeoff against the practical simplicity and higher sonic quality of the RP350.) I've recently bought an RP355 for its added stomp mode and looper, but still recommend the RP350 for anyone who'd rather build up a collection of patches and doesn't really need a looper.The built-in drum machine, while being limited in its number of patterns, sounds pretty good and is very handy for practicing your groove. It's certainly preferable to any metronome.A patch editor/backup program is available for both Mac OS X and Windows. It works well on my MacBook for saving patches. However, Digitech's editing controls (on the pedal itself) are so simple that I prefer to simply put the RP350 on a table when I'm editing patches. There are just two or three parameters that you can only edit through the computer interface; they're obscure enough that I've never found myself wishing that there was some way to get to them without the computer.I paid $199 for my RP350 over a year ago; I considered that to be a great value. Now that the RP355 occupies that price point, $149 for the RP350 is a steal.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Perfect as your 2nd pedal, awesome if this is your first one
By Carlos Huertas
The pedal is awesome, it looks like cheap, but the true power comes from the USB connectivity, the Xedit software gives you a lot of options, you would need a lot of buttons and knobs to get that without the software.You can record easily with the USB cable (not included), I recommend Adobe Audition v3, it works wonderful with this device.The only complain is that it doesn't have a separate module for Chorus, so you cant use Chorus while using another FX, but its ok, I play it through a Peavey 212 EFX with 3 extra modules for FX.
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