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Line 6 Echo Park
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Line 6 Echo Park

List Price: $279.99
Our Price: $149.99
You Save: $130.00 (46%)
Shipping:Free
SKU:

15790

In Stock
Usually ships in 4-5 business days
Only 5 left in stock, order soon!

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Description:

Echo Park is based on Line 6's award-winning DL4 Delay Modeler. Echo Park is loaded with unbelievable sounding models including analog, tape, and digital delay, all easily adjusted with the Tap Tempo feature. Different delay patterns such as slap, ping pong, swell, and sweep can be adjusted with the twist of a knob, and the Mod dial can be tweaked for even more variations. Echo Park also features stereo ins and outs.

Features:

Based on the award-winning DL4 pedal


Analog, Tape and Digital Delay models


Includes Tap Tempo


Stereo inputs and outputs


Rugged metal construction


Product Details:
Product Length: 0.0 inches
Product Width: 0.0 inches
Product Height: 0.0 inches
Package Length: 6.4 inches
Package Width: 4.0 inches
Package Height: 3.1 inches
Package Weight: 2.6 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 7 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.5 ( 7 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5Just what I'm looking for!Mar 22, 2011
By Alvin
The echo park is a joy to use, the settings are very accessible and it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure this pedal out. It is on the heavy side though, feels like a brick in my hands. No noise issues experienced so far with a regular daisy-chain power adaptor.

5DGMILLER4Aug 20, 2010
By David P. Miller
Awesome pedal!!!

This pedal is the best compromise between price and performance - Bar none!!! Great versatility and flexibility from a unique pedal. Love the adjustability, user-friendly controls and above all, the sound!!! This pedal provides a myriad of adjustable parmeters, easily manipulated by the controls on the pedal. Great job, Line Six!!!

5AMazing Pedal!!!Jun 28, 2010
By J. Ramirez
With all the different delay modes in here you can cover ALL genres of music. I really like how musical the modulated delay was and how how you could get dotted eighth delays :)
But one of the features that makes it such a musical and useable delay is the fact that it features tap tempo. just tap twice to set the new tempo for the next song. You will not be disappointed.

5Echo Park in the Line 6 "module" series - a success!Jul 13, 2008
By Rob Vaughn "Chaostrophist"
I bought a used one of these, skeptical that Line 6 could pull off the whole "Echo Park" pedal sound in one of their "tone module" units, but to cut to the chase, this is about 90%+ of what you'd get out of a real Echo Park and at far, far less the price, and unlike my Echo Park, so far, much more reliable. It doesn't do quite everything, but for the price and the solid build, I don't think you can go wrong with this one. A surprise indeed! Well done Line66!

1 of 2 found the following review helpful:

2Feels like a tank, weighs a ton, does everything under the sun but ... it packed up all the sameJul 04, 2010
By O. Buxton "Olly Buxton"
I am a big fan of Line6 gear: I owned an original version 1 POD, a Line 6 Floor Board, I upgraded to a rack-mounted POD Pro and I currently use Line 6 Amp emulation software on my Mac with Logic and the Line 6 Tone Port UX2 Interface. So I'm one of the party faithful. Line6 stuff is generally well manufactured, hardy, incredibly functional and cheap: you get a lot of bang for your buck.

So it seemed to be with the Echo Park: It is die cast metal, weighs about 2kg, looks indestructible, and because it is digital-algorithm based, has any number of super-cool Line 6 emulation features - reverse delays, swells, sweeps, ducking, modulation - all sorts of stuff you don't get on a normal digital delay. The longest delay time is monstrous (something like five seconds), and as long as the unit is working - a big caveat - you'll have far more options than a single guitarist could ever possibly want or need out of this item. Indeed, I wish they'd stripped it down a bit: there's just too much stuff on board and you're paying for stuff you'll manifestly never use.

And I suspect that design complexity contributes to this unit's big drawback. It is unstable and has a tendency to fail. Judging by user feedback on Harmony Central, this is an unacceptably common problem: My Line6 Echo Park unit, under *extremely* light usage conditions, inexplicably crapped out. I don't gig very often (I used it in full-scale battle combat about three times), and I am careful to screw everything down on a board so as to avoid accidentally damaging items in my rig. But one day, in my bedroom, it just stopped working. No water damage, no impact, no power surge, no nothing. It just died. Because I'd owned it a couple of years, it was out of warranty. Nothing for it but to de-couple of from my rig and throw it out. Feels like a waste of a lot of metal.

I'm going for a Boss DD-3 Digital Delay Pedal next time. Nothing fancy; but that model has been around for 25 years - as long as I've been playing guitar - and I think that tells you something.

Olly Buxton

See all 7 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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