Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
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Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 03/14/2006
at 07:20pm
by Aneek
Ease of Use
:
8
Takes a little experimentation to learn how to dial in. Very easy once you've got used to it. It's nice being able to snap to different ranges of delay time. Feedback knob is brilliant. You can go for infinate, noisey feedback by cranking it on full. Or be really carefull nd get it to just the point where it doesn't overload....and be in bliss.
Hold function is nice....but SHOULD BE A LOT LONGER!!!! then agin, its hold, not loop.
Sound Quality
:
4
Ok.
I have a new taiwan made version.
It's stupidly noisy! even at the first rep. Set the volume on full, delay time long, and feedback to wherever and listen out for the first rep. You can instantly notice a hiss.
Crank the feedback on full and you can hear this noise build up. Now i paid for a digital pedal. So no noise please. If i wanted noise I would have bought an analogue pedal. But even then....the noise would sound awesome.
The processed sound is weak and lacks charecter..
Reliability
:
8
because of its sound quality, I use it AS my backup.
But, Boss' sturdy, tank like designes have never failed me...the same cannot be said for other boss users.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
Only for novice ears... or students.
It's worth looking into getting an older one...one which is made in Japan I believe. They appear to sound fantastic....and have no noise!
Get a second hand DD-6, or an old japanese made DD-3... don't buy a new one...
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: $150 (australia)
Submitted 01/25/2006
at 04:45am
by jack moore
Ease of Use
:
10
ive had this pedal for a while now and ive found it real easy to use. its really simple and just takes a little bit of time to get used to it when you first use it. there is so much you can do with this pedal and so many different sounds you can make. the more you play around with it the more you find out about it.
i use a fender strat with it and you can create some awsome psychadelic sounds with it alone. it ranges from some really creepy spacy sounds to buitifal magical sounds. its real awsome if you love that kind of stuff. its also great for sweetening up solos.
when using try hitting some notes with your finger and turning the rate dial at the same time, depending witch way you can make cool doiyng type noises or diehw type noises.
Sound Quality
:
10
the sound is perfect. there is nothing special to it every note simply sounds how the played note was repeated. it is great for using other effects with. to me it can sound very white and dark blue, or it can sound very clear and watery/dreamy, or blue or purple with some sweet fuzz or something. great sound.
Reliability
:
10
you can deffinetly depend on this pedal. it is extremely tough. ive kicked mine around a bit and its better than ever. it even lookes better to me the more i use it. the only thing is the black rubber thing has ripped a bit on the back were you screw the pedal in. but it doesnt effect it, it just means i gotta keep it screwed all the way in. but this is nothing to worry about.
you wouldnt need a back up at all. just maybe a spare battery.
Customer Support
:
10
i tried to get it repaired just after i bought it but i found out it was the adapter i was using.
its fine, i havent had any problems with it and the support was good.
Overall Rating
:
10
this is a perfect match for my type of music. our band plays original music, and by that i mean original, not ripping off someone elses style but creating our own. its the way everyone who is serious about music and what its all about should play. i love this pedal for our band because it is just so needed. youl have to listen to find out.
been playing 7 years.
yeah id buy it again.
havent compared, dont need to.
the only thing i wish it had was a reverse option, but ill sus out something else for that.
it only helps, unless i over use it or abuse it.
my band is called luph, we are from adelaide and we are on: http://www.myspace.com
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $99.99
Submitted 01/08/2006
at 02:29pm
by Mike P.
Ease of Use
:
10
Dirt simple. Could have been even simpler if they didn't have the extra knob to select the range of delay time, but what this does do is allow you to have much finer control over the delay time than if you had one knob that covered the full sweep from 50ms all the way to 800ms. I haven't gotten the hang of the HOLD feature yet, but I really didn't purchase this pedal for fancy tricks, just a simply delay to fatten up the sound.
Sound Quality
:
9
OK, I've been on a search for the Holy Grail of delay/echo pedals for about a year now. I was previously using a Line 6 DL4, which is a digital delay pedal that emulates different classic digital, tape, and analog delay effects. The DL4 has some geat sounds, but after a while I found I really didn't want or need a dozen different delay models. What I wanted was ONE good delay sound that was pleasing to the ears and didn't mess with my tone too much. I also wanted something with a much smaller footprint that would allow more room on my pedal board. In my quest I tried many analog and digital delays including the T-Rex Replica, Maxon AD-999 abalog delay, and Line 6 Echo Park. Well, I finally sucked it up and decided to try the common, garden variety Boss DD-3. The verdict: this is the perfect delay for my needs. My search for a delay is now over! I found that many of the (much more expensive) boutique delay pedals have special effects and tricks that I don't want. The Boss DD-3 is just a basic, simple delay that to my ears does not sound cold and sterile like most of us assume a digital delay will sound. If you check out the Analogman.com website, there is an explanation of the technology in the DD-3 and why it sounds "better" than many other modern digital delays. Apparently, the DD-3 uses the same compresser/expander circuit that Boss used in their previous analog delay pedals, which re-samples each repeat and accounts for the fact that it is "warmer" sounding than most other modern digital delays (including the DD-5 and DD-6) which just spit out exact carbon copies of the original bit-stream signal. Do I completely understand this technical talk? No. But what I do understand is that this pedal does not sound cold, shrill, or sterile to my ears. Sure, it doesn't have the warm, fuzzy repeats of a true analog delay, but after much experimentation I've decided that I really didn't want that kind of sound, anyway. Just a few soft repeats to add some spaciousness to my dry signal. For this the Boss DD-3 suits my needs perfectly. I also used to be obsessed with having all of my effects be true bypass, but what I've come to realize is that when I'm after a pure guitar sound I tend to just plu straight into the amp, anyway. So true bypass, buffered output, it doesn't matter to me anymore, just as long as the pedal sounds good. And the Boss DD-3 sounds good!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Have never heard of one breaking.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I currently play several guitars depending on my mood or the specific sounds I'm after: PRS Custom 24, Gibson Custom Shop '58 Les Paul, Fender Custom Shop '60 Strat, and Ibanez Prestige RG2550 (for playing Vai/Satriani type stuff). Amps are all low wattage, vintage style, single-channel, non-master volume types. When I use my pedal board I generally keep them turned low for a cleaner sound. My effects chain is GUITAR > Fulltone Clyde Wah > Fulltone mini-Deja Vibe > Fulltone Fulldrive II > Boss/Keeley DS-1 Ultra Distortion > Boss DD-3 > AMP. Effects are all powered by a Voodoo Labs Pedal Power 2 and cabling is George L's. Considering this is the cheapest delay/echo pedal of all the ones I tried, and in my opinion has the best tone with no extraneous features that I don't need, I consider it a fantastic value. If you want an analog sound, get a Maxon. If you want a tape sound, get a Fulltone TTE. If you just want a simple, clean sounding delay and don't need special effects or more than one second of delay time, this is the best route to go and will save you $$ for that next toy you just gotta have. After years of shunning Boss because they weren't a small boutique manufacturer, I've recently come back to them. Some of their pedals need some work to sound their best (the DS-1 is greatly improved with mods from Robert Keeley or Analogman). However, the DD-3 is a real winner right out of the box. My next purchase will be a Boss OD-3 overdrive. Very warm and natural sounding, with enough volume boost to push a slightly dirty Tweed Deluxe into SRV territory!
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $110
Submitted 12/22/2005
at 11:25pm
by PoisonChef
Email: poisonchef at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Easy 4 knob pedal to use, sounds good right out of the box! Little bit of tweaking will get you the sound and speed you want.
Sound Quality
:
10
This pedal sounds very good to me and the amp I had before had on-board delay and this delay sounds so much better to have a separate pedal going through my Tele and Deville 212. This pedal is very spacy and atmospheric sounding, you can get all kinds of weird sounds from it and experiment with already existing songs you have. The thing about this pedal is that it doesn't take away from the tone of your amp or guitar, it sounds like it should on or off.
Reliability
:
9
It's like any other pedal really as far as being sturdy. It also sucks up battery life so buy an adaptor for it because the sounds do change when the battery is low...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
i dunno
Overall Rating
:
10
I am very happy I bought this pedal over all. I was looking at buying an echo park but heard it was noisy and the boss dd-6 was too much and sounded the same to me anyway. I like playing this thing more than my Distortion pedals! Delay is very fun and this pedal was very simple to use to allow me to enjoy my first Delay pedal. I play alternative indie rock and this pedal would be made for anyone into whatever really, so go get a boss Duh Duh Duh, Delay! Today! (OK that was stupid) I also love the color of this pedal as well somthing about "white" going with what this pedal does...I'd buy another pedal like this one if I lost it, yes sir
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: #120 (pounds.)
Submitted 11/30/2005
at 06:26pm
by Stefan Price
Email: stefanprice at fastmail<dot>fm
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use.
Sound Quality
:
8
Only a small noticable change in quality and tone, although this is only 16 bit I believe.
Also it only trails behind the dry louder notes anyway.
Reliability
:
4
Are you joking, its buggered.
You have to turn the volume of the delay full to get just half the volume of the dry sound.
When the volume knob is at half you can't hardly hear any delay.
Boss are absolutly useless in customer support if your pedal is out of the 3 year warranty.
If its under guarantee Boss throw your fautly one away and just send you a new one.
BUT if it not in warrantee they charge #78 AN HOUR to repair it, and thats if after who knows how many hours they find it CAN be repaired.
So as the pedal only costs a bit more to buy, they expect you to just throw it away and buy another one.
Thanks Boss.
I and tired of seeing "Its a boss what can I say" in this section, Boss pedals DO go wrong and I have seen plenty of Boss pedals on ebay which need repairing.
Customer Support
:
10
USELESS VOMIT.
Overall Rating
:
4
Boufgt in 1990, never been gigged, now broken, hardly used because I bought several multi effects machines soon after I bought it.
I have never been happy with the delay length, I need about 1.5 seconds and at the time NO pedal did that.
There are now better pedals than the Boss which do not cut off the delay when you switch it off, like the boss.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: #50 (Uk sterling) used
Submitted 10/06/2005
at 07:22am
by Richard Underwood
Ease of Use
:
8
Three sweep rotary knobs and one incremental mode knob. All clearly labelled and unambiguous in what they do. And, of course, that great slab of a Boss footswitch plate. This unit is delay made easy.
As it is mounted on my pedalboard it is powered from a mains converter, so failing batteries are not a consideration. HOWEVER when I first acquired it I did notice how willingly it ate PP3 9 volt cells. There is no way I would use this pedal without mains power.
I generally use the DD-3 to colour clean blues solos, so it is used in a fairly subtle way. But when the mood takes me I like nothing better than to crank up the delay and feedback and have a bash at some John Martyn Inside Out-type stuff. Getting the sound? no problem. Hitting the right notes? well that's nothing to do with the DD-3...
The HOLD function I played with at home but would never risk using it in a live situation. Come to think of it, I can't think of any reason why I would need to use the HOLD function in a live situation.
Sound Quality
:
9
Very transparent sound, with little or no sound colouring as far as I can tell.
The DD-3 is the final processing stage in my pedalboard. Like the other FX units it is powered by a 9 volt 1,000 mA stabilised power supply. Why it took me so long to put a pedalboard together is beyond me! Apart from mains power, secure patch leads, a safe, robust flight case to protect the stompboxes and much reduced setting up/breaking down times, what have the Romans ever done for us?!?
But I digress. Guitars {2x Les Paul, 1x HSS Strat) go into:-
Boss CS-3 >> Morley Power Wah >> Rat II >> Boss DD-3 which then feeds either a Hiwatt Dr103 or a Marshall 30 watt combo, depending on venue size.
When I fitted the DD-3 to my pedalboard I didn't tell the rest of the band. At the first gig when I used used it for the first time on a Peter Green-era Fleetwood Mac number, our keyboard player was seen leaning forward over his keys mouthing "what the f*ck was THAT?"
I assume he was taken aback by the fattening and sweetening of a clean out-of-phase Les Paul sound. It really does make a massive difference to clean sounds. I don't tend to use the DD with huge overdrive.
It is a pretty versatile unit, I can easily get a good Shadows approximation to seriously upset our drummer when the Apache lick is thrown into a solo. Mostly I don't want an overly intrusive "daaaang-yaaang" delay. A more subtle, atmospheric quality to simple yet emotive blues lines is all I seek. The DD-3 delivers but I can't always say the same for the guitarist!
Overall I am impressed with the DD-3 and find its quietness and lack of colouring as satisfying as its versatility and ease of use.
Reliability
:
8
This pedal was bought second-hand, albeit only six weeks after it was initially sold. Being a Boss played a big part in my decision to buy second-hand. They are known for being rugged and reliable, and working pretty well. I can't ignore the fact I paid half RRP for it though!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I play regular gigs with a blues band and the odd pick-up rock'n'roll band with some mates.
I find that four FX units (or five if I opt to use my old Electo Harmonix talkbox) are enough to give me plenty of total variety for the blues band. Compression, wah, distortion and delay provide the principal characteristics. Pickup selection and use of guitar volume and tone pots provide the subtleties.
The DD-3 has added an extra dimension to my sound that is both subtle yet noticeable. When I need a bit of slap-back for some good old Rock'n'Roll I am confident it is easy to set up the sound and the DD will deliver. I would have little hesitation in having another DD-3 if my current one were lost or stolen. The chances of it actually failing are pretty remote. And the fightcased pedalboard means that knobs, switches etc. are far, far less vulnerable to damage.
It's a Boss. It does what it says on the tin. Yeah, I'd have another one! Actually I'm quite happy with the one I have...
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $45 used
Submitted 09/24/2005
at 10:32pm
by j. b.
Ease of Use
:
5
easy enough to use 4 knobs . i pulled this one out of the drawer after my 4 month old sib mr echo switch went bad.and after not using this pedal for a while i forgot how weak it was......oh did i mention it is dark and weak?
Sound Quality
:
1
i use about 6 different guitars through a fender hotrod deluxe and vox ad30vt.this is the 2nd dd3 ive owned.the first one back in 1993 wish i still had that one because i really liked the realtime feedback control it had.......now the new taiwan made one is weak, dark,and just all around crappy sound.it is next to useless. the repeats dont have any umph at all.
Reliability
:
9
it is a boss ive never had any realibabilty problems i will give them that.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
1
i play psycadellic rock and like to add feedback while changing the delay time in real time this pedal is not up to the task.i also use an sib"mr echo" which is much mor bright and musical and smokes the dd3 by a mile.but this pedal needs a new switch which is a common problem with that model...i also have a ds1 distortion which does not sound like the old ones......in short all their taiwan made stuff is junk. boss has declined from a top notch company to making useless crap...i could go on about the me50 multieffects processor but thats another story.i need a good delay for my pedalboard and may get a digitech digdelay as the line6 is noisy.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $86.00 used
Submitted 07/11/2005
at 01:52pm
by james
Email: cheryl_bowman<at>comcast dot net
Ease of Use
:
10
It is pretty easy to get the sound you might want out of this pedal. I had no problem getting what I wanted and don't even have the manual ! Pink Floyd/Radiohead sounds are super easy to get.
Sound Quality
:
10
The sound kicks A$$ for what I have as far as gear, which isn't that much. I play through a 2004 American Deluxe Tele to a Fender Twin Reverb, my pedals in order from left to right are DD-3, PS-5, Mt-2, and BD-2 (Keeley mod), what can i say, i like Boss.
Like i said above, very easy to get Radiohead/Pink Floyd sounds, The BD-2 going through the DD-3 sounds great when playing "Comfortably Numb"
With the PS-5 and DD-3 together you can get somw Bad ass RADiohead sounds, spacey,spacey,weird, great stuff.
Reliability
:
10
Boss has always been reliable, extremely, but i never had to call them or anything.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to call
Overall Rating
:
10
I play just about everything exept death metal. I've been playing guitar for 6 years. With my gear it sounds awesome BUT it is the only delay pedal i have owned but i dont think i'm missing anything by not getting DD-5 or DD-6, IT suits my just fine with the style i have which i pretty broad.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $89
Submitted 06/22/2005
at 07:35pm
by David
Ease of Use
:
1
Not too hard to use. I imagine if you need to sync to midi gear your clocks would wander, but thats the beausty of live sound.
Sound Quality
:
10
I would play this through any set up. It does sound very good, however keep in mind it is a digital pedal. i took this thing apart and looked at and I was like, WOW this is a serious work of circuitry. It may be digital, but it has all the integrity of a botique shop analog pedal. This is made in Japan.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Made in Japan. Rock solid
Customer Support
:
10
No need.
Overall Rating
:
10
Glad to own a pedal like this!!!!!!1
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $100.00
Submitted 06/11/2005
at 08:26pm
by Def
Ease of Use
:
8
its real easy to get good sounds out of it. takes a little getting used to how to dial in what you want it to do, but that makes sense since delay pedals are a bit more in depth than your standard 3 knob overdrive pedals. the manual is alright. okay, i never read it. i guess that goes to show how easy it is to use this.
Sound Quality
:
9
my main setup is as follows: Les Paul > Maxon OD808 > Boss DD3 > Blues Junior. it isn't noisy, so thats a huge plus. the effect sounds great. i got this for a few reasons. one being that i'm a lone guitarist and i wanted to make my sound a bit bigger in some songs. i also wanted to add some atmosphere in a few tunes. also, i just think that delay, when used sparingly, is an awesome effect. i picked this unit because its been around for so many years and there are a few bands that i love that use this pedal. also, it was in my price range. i bought it without trying it and its absolutely a keeper.
Reliability
:
10
seeing as though there are about 120ish reviews for this pedal and only 15 people put down scores for customer support and i'm sure that out of the 15, not even half of them contacted the company because of a defective dd3, i think this is very reliable. also, i've had several boss pedals before. boss doesnt always make the best sounding pedals, but they are among the most reliable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had to contact them, which is how i like it
Overall Rating
:
10
I play brit-rock and the like. Influenced by Oasis, The Beatles, Coldplay, Dave Matthews Band, BRMC, Interpol, and other bands. I've been playing for almost 6 years and have owned a lot of gear for only playing for <6 years. Aside from multi fx units, i've only had one other delay/echo pedal and that was the Danelectro Dan-echo. It sounded great, but i could never get exactly what i wanted out of it. Not knocking it though. I did have it a few years back, I'm sure if i had it now i'd be more capable of finding use for it. If it were lost, i'd definitely by another one. this pedal has given me a lot of inspiration. I was contemplating either this or the Line 6 Delay (whatever its called...) but went with this for a few reasons. One is that its Boss and I know that it wont break on me (unlike EHX pedals). Another being that there are a few bands whose delay sound i wanted to somewhat emulate use this pedal, and it wouldnt have been smart to get any other delay pedal other than the one i'm trying to emulate.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 04/24/2005
at 09:52am
by lyssipos
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use, simple and straight forward. Didn't even look at the manual, there's pretty much no reason to.
Sound Quality
:
6
The DD-3 is probably THE most popular digital delay floor pedal of all time. It's easy to use and gives you a good range of delay setting to work with. Not noisy, doesn't color the guitar's sound when off. The repeats on the delays have a specific sound to them though. I can tell the DD-3 apart very easily - the repeats have a hint of coldness to them. It's a digital delay after all, but the point is that digital is supposed to copy the note exactly as it comes in and it doesn't. Some people like the sound of it, I don't. It's a matter of taste I guess, but the point is that it definitely has it's own digital/cold sound.
Reliability
:
10
It's a BOSS. Don't need to say much more :)
Customer Support
:
10
Never needed it for BOSS.
Overall Rating
:
7
I play everything from jazz to rock, funk and blues. I play on recording session of all kinds, on my own projects and live. I'm a professional musician in Los Angeles. I've been playing for about 15 years and have owned and played A LOT of effects - I'm very picky about sounds :)
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $90 used
Submitted 04/22/2005
at 10:20am
by Iamadoorknob
Ease of Use
:
9
You kind of have to learn how to use it, but once you do its very easy to get a desired sound out of it.
Sound Quality
:
10
Use this with my Fender stratocaster and a charvel 15 watt amp. It doesnt create any extra noise. The sounds are always great! I can always get the exact sound I am looking for and its beautiful. It repeats sounds perfectly. I also sometimes plug this in through my microphone and it creates a perfect echo of my voice. Perfect for many uses.
Reliability
:
7
It will never break, but the battery will die after about an hour of playing. But that doesnt mean you'll actually get an hour of playing in, since the quality starts to go down after a half hour and you'll have to re-adjust the knobs to get the desired sound again. Basiclly, if you get this you MUST get the boss power adapter. If you do, this pedal is perfect.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
This seems like it would be good for any kind of music that uses effects. If it were lost or stolen I would replace it pretty quickly. I love all the sounds that you can get out of it, you can even make it sound like there are 2 guitars. I use it all the time, it adds a noticeable flare to my music.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $109
Submitted 04/01/2005
at 10:30am
by MJS
Ease of Use
:
8
Not as easy as most boss effects, but it has a lot of versatility. Minor adjustments with any of the three "main" knobs (EV, Fdbk, delay)produce a wide variety of sounds. I generally keep the right-most knob on 800.
Sound Quality
:
9
Basic setup: Les Paul Studio or Fernandes Retro Rocket Pro -- Vox wah--TS9--TS9/808 mod (analogman)--Mini Bicomp (analogman)--FX Loop--Dunlop Univibe--Boss Phaser--DD-3--to Fender Hotrod Deville 410.
No new noise when I added the DD-3, and at "band" volume who hears it anyway? After playing around with the DD-3 for an hour, I found several different settings that improve my sound/tone a ton. I'm the lone guitarist in a 3-piece band, and this does a great job "fattening" up your sound. Chords and leads now take up more space musically in a nice subtle--but very noticeable to your ear--kinda way. Band mates commented immediately the first time I ran it. Really amazing what it can do for leads. Again, the versatility of it let's you go from Van Halen to Radiohead pretty quickly/easily. One downside, if you consider it one, will be the constant tweaking during a set. I can already see the need to write down my various settings for certain tunes, so I don't have to dik with it too long. It has quickly become another one of those pedals that may be tough to live without. If I was at gunpoint, I'd take my TS9/808 and Mini Bicomp to the grave, but this wouldn't be too far behind. A good test to see what it does is to play a favorite riff/chord progression with it on...then play the exact same thing with it off....It's tremendous.
I give it a 9 because the fastest modes aren't really applicable to my playing style (kinda tinny and 50's ish) but what I get out of the 800ms setting far outweighs that shortcoming.
Reliability
:
10
Uh, Boss...brick sh!thouse. period. Definitely need the boss adapter (or other power supply). Will suck batteries through a garden hose.
Customer Support
:
5
Uh, Boss...Customer service not their strongsuit...luckily some quality effects are!
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a wide range of stuff...From the Bob Dylan to Beck. Doors to Phish. Mostly bluesy or rocking jams. The DD-3 performs. Great for spacey solos/jams. Lots of possibilities. If stolen, I'd demand a federal manhunt, but would buy another without thinking twice. The hold feature is OK to practice quick solos, but I don't use it much. And Battery Eater could be a nickname for this box--get another power supply. Would love to take a nice analog delay for a comparison test drive, but I'm an impulse buyer and that could get expensive! This will open up creative doors that you never knew you had! End of story: Just get one, you won't regret it--you'll never know what you were doing without one.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $70 used
Submitted 02/25/2005
at 10:55am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Takes a little learning, but if you have any experience w/ delays it?s nothing too complicated. The Level nob is very responsive, as is the Feedback nob.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a 1991 strat plus, mid 70?s Aria II, and a Gibson 1949 BR 9 lap steel. My effects chain runs so: Ernie Ball Volume, Crybaby wah, TS-9, Seymour Duncan Booster, Boss DD-3. I play through a 1971 Super Reverb and Mesa Boogie Subway Blues.
The DD-3 and I have been through a lot together. After I retired my old Crybaby it became the oldest pedal in my arsenal. I have over used it, under used it, abused it, forgotten it, and cherished it. Still, when it?s all said and done, I love this thing. I almost gave up on it to go to Line 6 DL-4. I LOVE the DL-4, but I?ve realized that the DD-3 is a cool little mofo. I really like the sound of it better than the DD-5 or DD-6. It just sounds warmer to me. If you disagree than buy one of the others. As for the DD-2, I?ve never had the privilege of playing one, so I don?t know. The DD-3 is not just a ?delay pedal?, it?s a sound effects unit. Really! Given some time and ingenuity you can get rockabilly sounds, Gilmour sounds, space ships, and sitars. It really I very cool.
The only thing that is pretty useless is the hold function. If you had more time it be great, but you really don?t enough. It fun to play around with though. You can do some interesting loop sort of things. Every time you introduce a new sound it will slightly change the fist sound that is repeating it. As you introduce more sounds all of them start to change. It?s a bit unpredictable thereby making it unreliable for on stage use.
Reliability
:
10
I have the same pedal for close to 10 yrs. It has never given me any problems.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
9
As a delay unit it serves a specific function. It woks for me b/c all I use a delay for is Gilmour stuff and slap back stuff. You have a broad range of slap-back sounds. Likewise, the Level and the Feedback nobs are very responsive. Through all our trials the DD-3 and I work well together. You just gotta giver time and find the little things you love about her.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $175.00
Submitted 01/29/2005
at 07:18am
by Billy Jackson
Email: kididaho<at>comcast dot net
Ease of Use
:
10
I picked the DD-3 due to its simplicity, ease of use and because Boss uses more analog components. I also do not use excesive delay times or any funky sounds, like reverse or space echo, etc. Just a straight-ahead delay the way I like it.
Quite easy to change from one setting to another. Manual is not really necessary unless you don't understand type on the pedal. Mike's website gives you instructions on the high-cut switch, which is helpful. But other than that, it's easy to use and sounds great.
Sound Quality
:
10
Lots of different guitars and different amps. I use the effects loop on my Rivera, but do not on my Vibro King. The King has a loop, but any Fender sounds better with pedals in front, so there you have it. I also have a deluxe reverb that uses the pedals in front. It all sounds great. I don't have that much modulation. Just delay and a phasor. With the pedals in front, it sounds good too. I have a compressor and a couple of overdrive pedals that don't hamper the tone at all. The wah can sound weird with the delay on with too much level, but wahs sound weird anyway. The high-cut filter really does add an analog deminsion to the pedal. The middle position of the high cut switch leaves the delay in stock digital form. So don't worry if you think the mod makes the digital delay unuseable. Some folk like digital delays. I do not, but after paying out the butt for an analog that could give me only 300 ms. of delay, I had to do something else. Far left the delay is darkened, but still has lots of bounce. Far right the cut is great. You hear the first couple of repeats, but the sound really starts to drop off just like an analog pedal. Perfect! Just great for what I was looking for.
Reliability
:
10
Boss makes reliable stuff. I don't know how well this will last after the mod, but since Mike has been doing this for a long time and there doesn't seem to be many issues related to reliability, I am not worried. He's a good guy and backs up his stuff. So there you have it. I wouldn't kick the switch with your foot or drop the pedal off a tall building, but it seems to be modded with great care and precision.
Customer Support
:
10
Mike is great. Follows up and personally signs the receipt. Lots of folks use him, so that's a testament of his commitment to customer service.
Overall Rating
:
10
I tried different digital delays that claimed to give analog sounds. Well, they really did not. Still metallic sounding and stiff. I didn't see myself paying over $200.00 for a delay pedal that had tons of sounds just so I could get one or two. After all, I could just spend another $150.00 and get an analog with more delay time. Instead I thought I'd try this guy from Analog Man. I'm very happy I did. I feel this pedal sounds great. In fact, I'm so happy with the pedal, I will not hesitate to send more pedals I think could be great if they had one or two things different about it. I owned a DD3 before and sold it because of the boingy and semi-harsh sound. This simple mod changes everything about it. I'm not knocking people who like digital delays. Many have found great use for them. I just like a little bit of slap back or a subtle amount of echo. For the money, I just think this is a great deal for those wanting an analog sound from a digital delay. If you can get a hold of a DD2, I would bet that would even sound better.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/06/2005
at 03:51pm
by kerem
Ease of Use
:
8
I'm sure some people may have trouble with it but I'd mastered everything there was in about a day, and this is my first delay pedal. getting the exact level of feedback or delay time may be a little trouble.
Sound Quality
:
9
i was looking for the guitar for the verse of dredg's "same ol' road", which gives out that quick clicking sound. i got it. this is great for post-rockers, and i know the guys from explosions in the sky and mogwai use this.
Reliability
:
10
yeah, haven't had a problem.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never needed them.
Overall Rating
:
9
i play post-rock and 60s stuff. this thing is pretty damn versatile. and i'd buy another if i lost it. i wish the hold feature lasted more than a couple of seconds though. i don't know about any of boss' other delay pedals, so i'd check them out before getting this.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: 90 (GBP)
Submitted 12/29/2004
at 01:18pm
by Matt Russell
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy. 4 nobs to control effect level, feedback (length of delay), downtime (frequency of delay) and delay setting. Its a stomp box tbh how difficult can it be?
Sound Quality
:
10
With bass and guitar I generally use the long delay setting as it is soooo much fun. In my opinion it adds so much to your sound if ur looking for warm, ambient tones. You have to be careful that it doesn't become a mangled mass of notes though...
The very short delay setting is excellent for making an electric sitar sound (whack the feedback right up and the downtime right down, or the inverse I can't remember actually) and u get a sitar! Wahey!!!
Reliability
:
10
Well hasnt broken yet and I doubt it will
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
They prob don't need one.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play a kinda ambient rock and it is a perfect match for the style. It may destroy you creatively however as hours can be wasted without producing anything constructive (although that may be just me). I play bass in the band and write using guitar.
For bass I would say it is pretty unneccessary although unbelievably good fun.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/21/2004
at 03:34pm
by Paul S
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Granted, if you're a delay fiend/fanatic, you're gonna probably gonna have a DD-6, or something along those lines, but if you have a little experience with delay, this thing is rediculously easy to use. Because of the nature of the knobs, it'll take a few moments to get the exact time you want. But is that a problem for normal people? No.
Sound Quality
:
10
I have a rickenbacker 650 through a fender deville 212 combo. This rig sounds fantastic, and this pedal doesn't take anything away from it. No noise whatsoever (anyone who complains about it should replace their battery). On the first mode, you have extremely fine control over the delay time. I LOVE the digital-ness of this pedal. When you crank the time so it's very short, the echos actually oscillate to produce notes. It'll boost certain notes, and produce interesting harmonics on others. On the second mode is a good range of slap-back effects, which can be almost reverb like, or make it sound like you're playing inside of a metal container. On the third mode are more atmospheric sort of sounds, which can really thicken up your sound. The hold function is a little bit enigmatic to me. I don't quite understand what you would use it for. Also, i don't quite understand the means by which it finds the "last sound you play," which can make it kind of awkward when you try to make it play the middle of a note, but it gets cut off so just sounds like a series of pops. You CAN make some neat sounds using it though, from a short riff to jam over for a few bars to weird pitch bending effects. 800ms is enough to satisfy me, although i'm quite sure that it wouldn't be enough for some people. Overall - very good sounds come from this little thing. It doesn't have the surreal swelling and reverse modes of some pedals, but it's definitely enough get you through the day.
Reliability
:
10
Are you kidding? BOSS.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never ever had to deal with them. It'll probably stay that way.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play alternative rock and other styles which don't really have names. Think along the lines of Radiohead. This pedal fits right in.
Needless to say i'd want another if it disappeared. I love pretty much everything about it, that's there. Of course, i had to experiment with it a little to find out how to use it well, but that's a given with any good pedal.
It gets a 9. It's stellar, but it IS a little limited, just by the fact that it's simple to use and compact.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: $48 (Signapore) used
Submitted 11/26/2004
at 08:08am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
7
if you're not familiar with delay pedals, it might take several minutes or so to get used to it. but it's really pretty simple. it's not exactly rocket science to get a good sound out of it cause i guess every sound is a good sound in this pedal.
Sound Quality
:
9
im using an ibanez rg470 >> boss ds-1 >> proco rat2 >> boss dd-3 >> marshall mg15cdr practice amp.
i must say...the dd3 is excellent. i mean it's one of those pedals where after getting, you wonder how you ever lived without it. i know its a digital delay. but it doesn't seem to color my guitar tone at all. so that's a +.
Reliability
:
10
i'd think it's totally dependable on. i got myself an adaptor, so no battery problems for me. (i prefer all my effects to be on an adaptor)
there's no doubt that's it's gig worthy in terms of sound quality and it seems to be built like a tank. i'm pretty sure if i threw it down a flight of stairs it's still be in tact, but i would never try that anyway.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
i play anything and everything i can handle from metal to jazz. and this pedal is game for anything i put it through. i love the depth the pedal brings to my sound. i mean although in my opinion i've got a pretty decent sound even without it, with it, it just put's iceing on the cake. if this thing was stolen i'd get a new one for sure. it's just one of those pedals...
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: US $90.00 used
Submitted 11/13/2004
at 06:17pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Slightly hard to use, only because you can get so many different awesome sounds out of it. Very hard to make this pedal sound bad. Although if you turn the feedback to 100% it will extend the noise forever, so it will get so loud it will eventually blow your amp. You can get the hang of this easily.
Sound Quality
:
10
As I said, hard to get a bad sound out of it. It works very well, whether you are playing your guitar or plugging it through your microphone. It won't work as well once the battery starts to run out though.
Reliability
:
5
The battery life on this is about an hour, but it will start to go dead and lose quality after 20 minutes or so. I wouldnt use this in a gig unless you change the battery after each song. Basiclly, you have to get the adapter. This thing is a tank though and you could play trampoline on it and not break it.
Customer Support
:
5
Boss makes it so it wont work with any 9v adapter except for theirs, and they design theirs to short out very quickly so you have to keep buying it. The actual pedal however does have a 5 year warrenty.
Overall Rating
:
8
Once you have an adapter, there is no limit to the fun you'll have, and the awesome sounds you will make. I've found a use for it in all but one of my band's songs. This item, although expensive, definitely has many useful purposes. But you don't really need it.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: 190 (euros (Ireland))
Submitted 10/04/2004
at 02:58am
by Quirke
Email: n<dot>quirke at pinewood<dot>ie
Ease of Use
:
10
If you are familliar with delay its simple....if not it will only take a few minutes to suss it out and years to master the art.
Simple controls and layout. Not a complete no brainer but delay is not a complete no brainer effect.
Sound Quality
:
10
The sound is very good indeed. It gives nice lush textures to a lush guitar sound. The repeats are exact in tone as the original signal and to me thats a good thing. If you have a nice guitar sound then this pedal will echo that nice sound......as much as you want it to.
It is a pro piece of gear with pro sound quality. It is used by alot of top pros who are not restricted by what they can afford so yes this pedal has a professional sound quality.
For my needs the delay time at 800ms is long enough and a nice slap back is acheivable aswell if thats your bag. Rack unit quality in a handy floor ready package.
Reliability
:
10
Well built, durable and strong. I've had mine for 4 years and it is still in perfect nik. Dont abuse your gear and it will always be there for you. A six monthly clean and tightening of the screws and stuff helps to keep these things well in check.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed......touch wood!!!
Overall Rating
:
10
Great pedal for me....my band is a Pearl Jam/Radiohead type rock band and it suits my style perfectly and works well with my other pedals. I use a '72 thinline telecaster and a Vox AC30TB with overdrives like the TS-9 and the BD-2, sound quality is very important to me and im very happy with the DD-3.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: 110 (#)
Submitted 09/17/2004
at 02:32am
by rich
Email: none
Ease of Use
:
8
If you've never used a delay pedal before it might take you a bit of time to find the sounds you want, otherwise dead easy.
Sound Quality
:
9
Les Paul copy with lots of pedals with this one at the end of my chain into an ashdown p60 tube amp. The sound quality is excellent. For a digital delay it has a good warm sound. I mainly use it to get a claer delay between notes with a medium amount of feedback. There are loads of possibilities with it. I have a carl martin analogue delay pedal and inmy opinion this is a better sounding more usefull and cheaper box.
Reliability
:
8
Bought when my carl martin pedal concked out as a back up. The carl martin can't get back in the chain now. Have gigged with it and i leave my other delay pedals at home.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
NA
Overall Rating
:
9
My chain at the minute is jacques bat fuzz --> jacques fuseblower 2 --> pharoe amps tone engine --> jacques meistersinger --> akai intelliphase --> Vox Wah -> EH mini q tron --> ibanez fl9 --> boss dd3 --> amp.First up, i hate boss pedals. There the mcdonalds of the guitar world. Cheap effective and everywhere. I bought it cuase there was nothing else in the shop and i had a gig that night. I was desperate. I took it out of my chain when my carl martin pedal came back, then put it straight back in. In a word : excellent. I'm still not buying any other boss stuff though.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: 99.99 (UK Pounds Sterling)
Submitted 09/04/2004
at 03:54pm
by Mather's Studios
Ease of Use
:
8
This is pretty easy to use once you've messed about with it for a few minutes. I couldn't quite see the point of the 'hold function' exept using it as a weird sort of pitch-bender but as soon as you play a new note it doesn't stay at the 'bent' pitch and will return to it's proper pitch.
The manual's not very brilliant. There's a reference to a 'stereo mode' which as far as I can tell doesn't exist. The pedal theoretically is a mono delay and what makes it stereo is that you can have an untreated signal coming from the other channel so the first note you play will come from channel A and the delayed repetitions generated by the pedal will come through channel B rather than swapping between channels like a stereo delay would.
Sound Quality
:
8
I'm a keyboarder and use this pedal for creating echoey arpeggios and spaced-out chord sequences. It works really well as well in conjunction with a chorus and then you can hold chords down and get the illusion of slow attack pads as the effect builds up over itself. I don't recommend trying this without a chorus though because it sounds metallic, phasey and generally not very nice.
I find that balancing the effect level with the direct out signal while the effect is switched on actually helps to reduce the level of noise. If the effect level is turned up to full, the direct sound gets drowned out so you lose the stereo effect.
I personally don't think much of the really short delay or (echo) because it sounds like everything has been put into a metal box. If you turn the feedback right up it will self oscillate and gradually get louder and louder - and probably blow your amp if you leave it long enough!
The best delay is probably the 800ms one with the delay time somewhere between 12 and 2 O'clock.
Reliability
:
10
It's Boss, it's a stompbox - will last forever except that thin battery wire. Experience teaches me that keeping a soldering iron to hand means this pedal will live longer than you will.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Nope...
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I play all sorts of music from Dance/Funk to Progressive Rock. I only just bought this pedal after I realised I could use it in conjunction with a chorus pedal to simulate really washy, slow attack pad sounds with the most basic of equipment (believe me I can make an old Casiotone sound like a million dollars through this pedal and my Super Chorus CH-1!). This set up works well on FM strings as well. They almost sound real with this tratment added.
I think this pedal would be cool if you could detune the delayed signal against the direct out signal so you could do basic chorusing all in one.
My other stuff:
Korg 01/wFD
MicroKORG
Oberheim MC1000
Yamaha DX7
Yamaha DJX
Yamaha PSS 470
Casiotone 101
Technics EX 50L
Evolution MK-125
Stylophone(!)
Boss PW-2
Boss CH-1
Boss RV-5
Behringer MX-2004A
Fostex VF08
Peavey KB-100 x2
Marshall MG10CD
Yamaha PAC112
Ibanez GSR200
J&D Brothers 5-String Bass
oh and about three miles of cable!
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: 200 (DEM)
Submitted 08/14/2004
at 06:24am
by Sven
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy in using, especially on stage. Never needed a manual. Best when used with a Ac adaptor (no need to buy the original, but keep regard to a larger current capacity, else you'll get a humming).
Sound Quality
:
5
State of art sound in the late eighties (when I bought it). Nowadays rather old-fashioned.
Reliability
:
10
absolutely perfect.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never needed
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I've been playing lots of styles for 24 years now. In the 80's the DD-3 was perfect for delay dominated Pop music like U2. Nowadays modern equipments offers better opportunities for creating special sounds. i wouldn't buy again if it was stolen.
Product: Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Price Paid: 250 (CDN)
Submitted 05/29/2004
at 07:47am
by Mark P
Email: wdmp51 at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
This pedal is extremely easy to use. the knobs are clearly/logically labelled. If that isn't enough the manual is very helpful as well. 99% of users should find the sound they need in minutes like i did.
Sound Quality
:
10
I had been using a Zoom GFX 707, and i was impressed with the delay on that initially. I also tried the POD and my Spider amp has delay as well but something about those didn't feel quite right either. Recently i phased out my GFX and made the transition to a pedal board and stompers, so a good delay unit was in order. Within minutes of taking the DD-3 out of the box and sticking it too my board i had the delay sound i needed, and i was very impressed. the sound i needed BTW is The Edge (U2) sound.
Also of note, i am using a Powerall with five pedals and there is no noise.
Reliability
:
10
I gigged with it the first time last week and it worked very well. 2 of my 6 pedals are Boss and they stand out construction wise next to my other pedals. Very heavy, very durable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I am the guitarist for a rock band (www.revolutionofthevoid.tk) who does a number of different styles. I think everyone should have a delay pedal but that is just me. I am a big fan of the Edge and U2 but my playing is funkier than that as i am also a HUGE fan of Tom Morello and RATM/Audioslave. Both players use delay differently, and i like this pedal because i can do both.
Guitar -> Digitech Synth Wah -> NexFx Fuzzstortion -> Cyrbaby Wah -> Boss DS-1 Disortion -> Ibanez SC-10 Chorus -> Boss DD-3 Delay - Line 6 Spider 210.
Like i said above, i had been using delay on those multi FX jobbies, and even though they aren't bad they don't compare to a dedicated delay unit. When i first started playing i was in love with delay but got bored with it. Now i feel like writing with it again! My band mates are going to kill me lol.
As for the reason i wanted this pedal, it was the last piece i needed to complete my collection and i splurged (yes splurged, not alot of cash in MY pocket) on a brand new Boss. Everything else on my board was used, and used delays aren't that much cheaper than a new one so there ya go.
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