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Lexicon mx200

Summary
Price New Lexicon mx200 @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.lexiconpro.com/
Ease of Use 8.3 (16 responses)
Sound Quality 7.9 (16 responses)
Reliability 6.2 (10 responses)
Customer Support 4.6 (5 responses)
Overall Rating 7.6 (14 responses)
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Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/05/2009 at 10:09am by ohernie

Ease of Use : 9
I'm fairly experience with keyboards and hardware so setting up the reverb wasn't a problem. I did the usual - look for the factory reset method and then experiment, reset, experiment, reset ...

I should mention that I prefer PDF manuals over the real thing because they are easier to search.

Sound Quality : 9
I'm a one man band and this is my systems reverb. It works. I'm not an expert on reverbs, but to me it sounds good and I've been having a lot of fun with it. I haven't had a problem with noise.

Reliability : 8
Here's my main reason for posting. There is a problem with the rotary encoder.

When depressed the shaft of the rotary encoder (knob furthest right)is about 1/32" short of bottoming out. The encoder is held together by four "forks" that come up from the bottom and go into slots in the top assembly. The unit is held together by the tangs of the fork being pushed apart. As you might guess, there's not much strength there. At the same time the nearest PC board mount is about 3.5" away. In other words, it can bend.

The result of this is that if you push too hard too often you'll push the back of the rotary encoder out that 1/32" and split the rotary encoder's back from the front. When that happens the contacts become intermittant and the push switch will no longer work.

The symptoms are lots of blinking of the numeric display, as if someone was rapidly spinning a pot, and, as mentioned, the inability to select a patch. In my case, the behavior was intermittant.

Repair was relatively simply. Note that all the voltages are too low to shock you and you don't need to do any soldering, but if you are not mechanically inclined, don't try it.

Warning: There are at least two dozen plastic parts between the front panel PC board and the front faceplate that will fall all over the place when you remove the rack faceplate. Make sure you have them all before proceeding.

Remove the phillips screws and hex screws that hold the front panel on. Keep the unit face up and photograph or take a good look at the panel. Turn it upside down over a towel so the pieces don't fall on the floor. Remove the knobs - pry up between the chassis and knob with a flat blade screwdriver to get them started. Remove the nuts on the pots and encoder. Remove the two screws that hold the PC board to the front panel and carefully remove the PC board. Grab a small flat blade screwdriver and while holding the top and bottom of the rotary encoder together, spread the "Y" part of the four forks apart. When you're done, wiggle the shaft. It should feel pretty solid. Pull the board out in front so it can't touch the chassis and check the unit out. You don't need to hook up sound, just make sure the LED's are stable, the rotary encoder works when you turn the shaft and selects when you push it. Remember that the "Input" knob has two washers ON THE INSIDE and reassemble.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't needed their support <g>.

Overall Rating : 9
I own two of these. It it was stolen I'd be really pissed because it's in a rack with another $2k worth of gear. Yeah, if I had to rebuild I'd buy another one.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/22/2009 at 10:14pm by Peter L

Ease of Use : 10
Had no problem getting great sounds from this unit. Mainly use it for my vocals when recording to the computer. Very simple to edit either from the software or manually. As far as the manual goes its very simple to comprehand.

Sound Quality : 8
I am useing the MX 200 with Logic Pro 8 and I have not had one single problem. It runs beautiful and sounds just awesome in this set-up. I see some other users have complained about the sound and say its noisy. I really have no idea what they are talking about, maybe they should learn to how to set it up properly. The tales are warm and lush and remind me of the old lexicons units from the mid 80's. I also like the delays they mix well with the reverbs when needed. I will give the unit an 8 only because there are so many more high end units out there that will outdue the MX 200 in build quailty and sound.

Reliability : 10
Never had a problem in the 2 years that I have owed it. I dont gig out, its used in the studio only, so its never moved or tossed about. So I will rate it as a studio unit only.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never delt with Lexicon and never what to. Did one update and the unit had no problem with the new software.

Overall Rating : 8
No its not the reverb of your dreams, but it works quite well and has a wonderful sound to it. If your just doing demo's or writing some new tunes the MX 200 will get the job done without to much of a fuss. I have been playing a recording now for 30 years and I like what I hear with this unit. The price cant be beat for what you get, and yes you will have to tweek a little here and there, but in the end its worth hitting that store button for your efforts. Oh sure if I had big bucks I would definitely get something other then this unit, but for now its a keeper that keeps doing the job well enought to stay in my rack.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/13/2009 at 05:01am by cozmovox

Ease of Use : 8
It took me some time to understand the routing options (dual mono,
cascade, and all that stuff.
Since I'm only a mixing engineer and not a reverb designer
the few parameters to handle are the only ones I really need
(pre delay, reverb time (decay), and liveliness, regarding reverb.)
saving a program is fairly easy. a good thing about the delays
is that when you store a delay program, it will store the
delaytime you manually set as well.

Sound Quality : 8
It's a bit noisy, but I generally don't care about that, since
I use a very low effect level, just to flavor the sound a bit to
place it well in a mix.
When not overused you will get THAT reverb you expect from
a lexicon, meaning it will not mask any of the sounds you recorded or
created. Just for fun we compared the thing with an Altiverb (which
is spectacularly good, considered as the BEST REVERB IN THE WORLD nowadays.)
we found out that the mx200 was just as usable, but for
diffent things (the lexicon plates are great, even on the mx200!
you get THAT sound, heard on many recorings)

Regarding the other effects, I particularly LOVE the chorus on
synthesizers, especially because it gives that right stereo-feel
you need on pads. Delays are crap; when turning the
delayTime pot, you expect to pitch you delay reflections,
it will destroy your sound insted.
since the delays seem to be fed back
into the delay (this is UGLY).
As you can see my emotions are very mixed about this device,
but I'm happy about it, because LEXICON means REVERB,
and they don't let down here, and frankly... for only 200bucks/euro's !?




Reliability : 9
I don't undestand how a thing like that could ever fail, unless
you start smashing recording gear around, like Pete Townsend
did with his guitars. The power supply is a bit cheapo, but you can
hide it well (since power supply's have a psychological effect
on customers. be carefull, you might lose money there, unfortunately)

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
I tempt to buy stuff that's meant for doing a job,
so I'm not busy dreaming about the colorcombination of
my rack featuring big brands. This thing is fine.
But always remember: Lexicon means REVERB and they're making
it accessible to the common man !


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/03/2008 at 05:52pm by dogger
Email: eiflow at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : No Opinion
ok so this is an appendage to the last review i wrote. I traded the mx for a tc m350..... well i went right back to the music shop and got the mx200 back because it sounds way better. so read on

Sound Quality : No Opinion
for the money the sound quality is very nice and has way less background noise than the tc m350. I can't even hear any. the m350 buzzes like a bee.

Reliability : No Opinion
well i got it to respond to midi clock... my fault.... as i assumed my DSI prophet 8 transmitted clock to the mx200. a quick parameter change solved this. I still have not figured out why the mx200 "freaks out". i've narrowed it down to this: the program knobs seem to get stuck in between parameters thus locking it in edit mode therefore not allowing you to change programs. delicate tweaking seems to correct this. i've emailed lexicon regarding the problem. so i'll let you know. As far as reliability. it's got a 1 year warranty, hey it's made in china so what do you expect for a bottom of the barrel priced processor. you get what you pay for.

Customer Support : 10
lexicon returned my email regarding the supplied software problem, and they said...."there is no software support for the mac leopard yet, but is in the works" so i'll give them a 10 to offset my previous rating

Overall Rating : 10
there is no other hardware effects processor currently available with this kind of power or sound quality for the money, so i'll live with it for now. Hopefully lexicon releases the software for Mac leopard sooner than later. Once again i'll give it a 10 to offset my previous
rating


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/01/2008 at 03:45pm by dogger
Email: eiflow<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 9
once you figure it out its pretty ez

Sound Quality : 7
sounds pretty good

Reliability : 2
heres were it gets ugly, sometimes when you power it up it freaks out eg: led's flash uncontrollably( it has to "load it's software") and there is nothing you can do unless you power it down and power up again. lotsa fun without a power switch
supplied software does not work with mac. there on-line download does not work either.
only one of the 2 processors delays will sync to midi properly. and with the one that works, it doesnot indicate it the way it is supposed to. oh yeah and it's sync is intermittent.

Customer Support : 1
customer support sux. i emailed them and got no reply

Overall Rating : 1
the mx200 is a pile of you know what. i'll be taking this one back to the music store. thank the gods they have a 1 month return policy.
hopefully a tc electronic m350 will fair better.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: USD 180
Submitted 01/08/2008 at 09:32am by josh

Ease of Use : 3
* How easy is it to get a good sound out of it?

i use the unit almost exclusively for delay and reverb. the reverbs are great, from minimal to massive. the delays are generally ok but here are my major gripes with the unit. first, the internal clock is not stable. when using "tap tempo" it drifts out of sync fairly quickly. i prefer to use the midi clocking but here's gripe #2; the internal clock seems to be constantly adjusting the delay time to be in sync with the midi clock. this is good because it DOES stay in sync, however whenever the clock is adjusted it causes clicking sounds which are of course introduced into the delay creating a horrible racket of clicks on the output. and finally gripe #3; the output is noisy, tons of hiss unless the input level is dept down very low.


* How about Editing patches?

not bad, it would be nice if they used some sort of logical delay time values like (1, 4, 8, 16 etc) when syncing to midi, instead you are stuck with bizarre values like 38 that you can never remember.

* How is the manual for it (if there is one)?

it's pretty good, unfortunately i have to use it a lot.

* Do you know the firmware revision number? Has your unit been upgraded?

no and not sure.

Sound Quality : 3
* Are certain effects (distortion, chorus, ...) very good? Very bad?

as i mentioned above, the delays are pretty much not syncable to a clock source, which almost entirely ruins the whole thing for me. the reverbs are nice for a $200 unit. the pitch shifter doesn't work on short transient sounds like drums.

* What setup (i.e. what guitars and amps) are you using this with?

i use this as a reverb/delay unit for an alesis ion in my studio.

* Is it noisy? On what settings?

yes, it's very noisy.

* Are the effects weak or do they always sound great?

if this thing would sync to midi keep a constant time when using "tap tempo" i'd be writing a glowing review.

* What amp are you using it with?

amps are for guitar players, why does everyone assume you're a guitar player?

Reliability : 3
* Can you depend on it?

to be a total PITA when using delay, absolutely!

* Would you use it on a gig without a backup?

i wouldn't gig with it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 2
* What style of music do you play? Is this a good match?

electronic, industrial, prog house, trance....

it would be a great match if the delay worked properly.

* If it were stolen or lost, would you buy it again or get something else?

i'd buy a TC.

* what do you love about it? What do you hate? What is your favorite feature?

i love the reverbs. i hate the delay and noise.

* Did you compare it to other products? Which ones? Why did you choose this one?

i chose it because it had the vst option, which i later found out wouldn't work on my OS anyways. a month later TC came out with the VST option and i wished i had the TC since.

* Anything you wish it had?

a stable clock.

* Does it help you make music, or does it get in the way?

a little of both. i won't record it, but it works for writing.



Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: USD 200.
Submitted 06/25/2007 at 03:45pm by Jack L. Eppert
Email: jlebpe<at>verizon dot net

Ease of Use : 8

Sound Quality : 8

Reliability : 2
This is a follow up to the previous review. The unit failed again in the same manner as before. The repair dept had it for three weeks and sent it back not finding anything. The suggest keeping it powered up all the time using a supressor. If you can find a unit with the same features as this model of Lexicon I'd stay away from this one, at least for PA applications.

Customer Support : 3
I would have expected them to replace the unit just to protect their reputation. If we pay $200. for it they must get the mother board for considerably less.

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: USD 200
Submitted 06/03/2007 at 12:18pm by Jack L. Eppert
Email: jlebpe at verizon<dot>net

Ease of Use : 7
Not being a musician I found I had to find more expanded explinations of the functions included in the unit.

Sound Quality : 9
I have had no complaints from the musicians I work with in a contemporary worship setting.

Reliability : 4
This is the point of the review. I experienced a software lock-up making the processor unusable. The displays just flashed uncontrollibly and no settings could be adjusted. The analog audio output from the unit was "interesting" at best. Lexicon support gave me a software reset procedure not shown in their manual that appaered to clear up the problem. After four weeks of operation the lock-up re-occurred and now has become a hard problem.

Customer Support : 8
Support was quick to email me the above mentioned reset procedure. After that I had no audio output from channel 2 so I requested they look at it. Within 4 hours I had an RA number. Within three days of their receiving it at an authorised repair facility I had a call from the tech saying they could not recreate the failure. They tested it for an additional week and then returned it to me. I have contacted them about this problem again and expect to get the same quality of support, but I'm out of luck without a spare unit. For the cost of the processor I would have hoped that they would have just replaced the unit. We'll see what happens.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
The Jury is out on this. It depends on the additional support I get.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/08/2007 at 05:31am by ff

Ease of Use : 8
Easy if you take time to mess around w/ everything on it, yet MUCh easier than the TC Electronics G-Major. But also the G-Major has many more options.

Sound Quality : 8
Effects are good, but not as good as the G-Major. Great price tho, and also MUCH easier to edit/adjust the effects compared to the nightmare G-Major. Just depend son what you like the most. Only other thing is you can only have I think 2 or so effects on at the same time only which isn't as good. Just depends what you use it for.

Reliability : 8
Yeah probably as long as you don't toss it across the room or something.

Customer Support : No Opinion
?

Overall Rating : 8
Greatunit for effects but limited on a few things.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: USD 200
Submitted 04/21/2007 at 12:05pm by Mark Robison

Ease of Use : 9
I play bass guitar and for me, one of the MX200's best features is the straight-forward, almost analog pedal-like controls that make it easy to dial in during live use. I also like how you can have two different or even two of the same effects at the same time and you can store the settings, including mix, bypass, and routing for each patch. Then there is the digital recording output and USB for studio use. Versatile, as a rack unit should be, yet as easy to use as a pedal!

There is no menu to have to scroll and page through and as someone else mentioned, there is no EQ to mess up your tone, just the effects, straight up. Also, the compressor is dbx design; nice touch!

Sound Quality : 9
I particularly like the chorus, which I find to be very transparent with my bass, yet can get real liquidy if I want it to, and the reverbs and delays are the best in this price range thanks to Lexicon quality (though Lex's higher end are going to still be better, but for a price). These suit me more than fine for bass guitar. Speaking of the delays, I like the fact that the Mod and Tape Delays work like an old analog, allowing you to do the "UFO landing/taking off" effect by turning the delay time knob!

It's been several years since I used a pitch-shifter and I was never satisfied with past efforts in this price range, but the MX200 is quite an improvement - not an Eventide, but still quite smooth and useful, much better than in the past.

The flanger and phaser, etc. modulation effects are basic, nothing special. I do wish the flange could do "zero-through" jet flanging, but you find that on more expensive designs...

I also find that I don't lose any bottom end with this unit, but I do use the effects loop on my SWR head and keep the mix at 1/2 to 3/4.

Sure there are better sounding analog pedal effects, but I wanted my mod, reverb and delay effects to be post preamp, so that meant rackmount for me. No other unit comes close in both sound and ergonomics. My bass is happy and so am I.

Reliability : 8
I keep mine in a rack, so I haven't had any problems, nor do I fear any down the road. The knobs and jacks are plastic, but in this price range, what unit doesn't employ plastic to cut costs?

I made myself a two-momentary button footswitch to control the bypass of each effect section from the floor and that is working well.

Seems to be a very reliable unit and I use it without a backup.

I dock two points due to plastic instead of metal jacks, but that is the norm for the price...

Customer Support : No Opinion
I haven't had to deal with Customer Support, but they do provide the user manual online as a downloadable pdf file.

Overall Rating : 9
I play gospel hymns at my church and outside of that, I play funk, rock, fusion, etc. I have played electric guitar for over 25 years and switched to bass two years ago.

My gear consists of: Warwick Corvette $$ 5-string; Warwick Corvette Standard 4-string fretless; Squire Vintage Modified Jazz bass with Bartolini pickups, Leo Quan bridge, and Hipshot D-Tuner; SWR Interstellar Overdrive preamp; SWR WorkingPro 700 head; SWR Goliath III 4X10 cabinet; Aphex Punch Factory compressor; Dunlop Crybaby Bass Wah; Boss AW-3 Dynamic Wah Filter; Boss OBD-3 Bass Overdrive; Samson PS9 Power Strip; Korg DTR-1000 rackmount tuner; Lexicon MX200.

The MX200 is a perfect fit for me and I love being able to dial it in like a pedal, with all the power of a Lexicon! Definitely worth the money and more!


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: Euros 220
Submitted 03/03/2007 at 05:47am by Hunter
Email: jaeger<at>klangforschungszentrum dot de

Ease of Use : 8

Easy. There are not many miracles. However as the display is small, you have to remember the different parameters you are editing, but it's easy, really is.

I plugged it in and it sounded stellar right away, this thing is simple and gorgeous.

Sound Quality : 10

For this price the quality you get is stunning. I had a Lexicon Replifex in earlier days, which is why I knew the reverbs and delays will be good, but I didn't expect this level of quality.

Now here's the deal: I bought this unit because someone recommended me to try a studio levels effect in the loop of my tube guitar amp (Bogner Shiva). I have not used the loop because with my other effects, I lost a lot of sound quality, punch and definition (and I am talking each 400 EUR T.Rex Delay and Reverbs). Using a studio level unit was the key to success. Actually, I think the Bogner sounds better with the Lexicon in the loop and on bypass than without.

This unit can easily give you enough versatility to do Gary Moore, Pink Floyd, RHCP etc kind of FX. The Plate Reverb as well as the Mod Delay are perfect, even used in Mono as I do.

I also like the modulation effects. The Tremolo is OK, the Chorus is very transparent.
Some of the FX can result in a bit of level drop which I can work around by adding the Compressor in FX block 2, use it in neutral position (1:1) and make up gain with poti 3.

As with any effect, less is more, and even a slight hint of short plate or a very low echo opens up the sound and makes it sit better in the mix.


Reliability : No Opinion
Just had it for 2 weeks.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 9

I would give it a 10 if it had variable output level stored in all programs and a remote tap tempo FS input.

Other than that this is a very good 9 - I would still give it a 9 if it was twice the price.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/04/2006 at 01:17pm by Digital Dave

Ease of Use : 7
Fairly intuitive and easy to use.

Sound Quality : 4
Here is the problem: The guitar and amp tone are fairly well preserved through the effects paths, which is a definite plus and something one expects from Lexicon. However, there is a very obvious signal drop off when switching between patches. You can hear one patch cutting out before the new patch is activated; and I???m not talking about a soft fade, more like a slower controlled cut. This is really annoying. I was looking to use this as a live digital effect for a guitar rig, and there is no way that I???m going to compromise an otherwise quality tone with a signal drop off when switching effects. Honestly, in this day and age, you???d think that Lexicon would have fixed that.

Reliability : No Opinion
No time to tell. I've had it 2 days and am taking right back to Guitar Center.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No time to tell. Same as above.

Overall Rating : 5
For a straight recording effect, this would probably work well. For a live guitar effect -and Lexicon is touting it as one - hell no! I would rather run without effects, and at least have a constant signal.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/21/2006 at 10:47am by Jeremy

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use. Laid out very nicely.

Sound Quality : 7
As a disclaimer, I need to mention that I only tested this in the effects loop of my amp so I have no opinion about using this device for vocal applications.

The reverbs are great. Very realistic and natural sounding. The delay is very good also. The detractor for me was the chorus effects. These 3 effects are the staple of my sound and I need all 3 to be very good but the chorus in this unit just didn't suit my needs. The chorus sounded too much like a flange. I could actually hear the out of phase like a flange. I tried for quite a while to find a chorus that I liked by changing all of the settings but in the end, I had to return it to MF. My cheap little Danelectro FAB chorus sounded much better. Who knows, the chorus may suit your taste and if so, this would be a great unit for you.

Reliability : No Opinion
No opinion.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
I play rock. All kinds. I've been playing for 20 years. I've recently been wanting to rack up my effects loop for the convenience of a rack but I still haven't found a rack effects unit that sounds as good as my analog pedals. Oh well, the search continues I guess. I think I'm going to try some TC gear next.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 05/28/2006 at 04:20pm by Sean Toohey
Email: Suburust<at>Yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 8
This thing sounds incredible (run in stereo with pong delay ohhhh my).
Editing patches is a breeze
Manual is sufficient,

Sound Quality : 10
Im running a Mexican srat with lace hot gold sensors,Graph tech nut, bridge replacement etc. into >dunlop wah,Guyatone st-2 compressor> boss e.Q 20,(Great pedal)>Danelectro cool cat,Dan echo>mx-200 into front of Vox Brian May,> Vox pathfinder (for now). Sorry about the rambling on but i love my gear (considering I researched the f... out of it and it serves me well)

The unit is not noisy at all. In fact i am running this in front of a Solid state and it sounds wonderful, I just cant use the Vox bm's distortion with it (bypass) but thats o.k.. Considering the unit has two delays you can use in sycronization(pong delay)Just call me The Edge. With my E.Q the mx-200 and my cheap vox's I can absolutely nail The Edge's tone and atmospherics (this morning i spot on got Yahweh from Atomic bomb album). The mx-200 has no distortion its srong points are definately Reverb and delay. Unit has other sounds that are truly decent but not great. I do like the fact I dont have to spend $100 or more on an effect(Pitch shift, Rotary) i would only use once a year anyway.

Reliability : No Opinion
I have had it for a week
I have heard that Lexicon's software (included for use with Mx-200"s, usb into computer)is a weak point, i have read also their customer support is lacking but this is not first hand knowledge. No Problems personally and the unit seems solidly Built. IMPORTANT! there is no on off switch on the unit
all I know is that I killed the power by switching off my powerstrip and I lost all my Atomic Bomb presets boo hoo. Now I just unhook the adaptor from the back and savor the God awful sound>

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I almost bought the Line Six Verbzilla and i glad i did not. The verbzilla might sound great i dont know but i cant imagine reverbs sounding much beter than the ones Lexicon offers and I dontlike effects named after cheaply made sciece fiction movies. You can use 2 effecta at once, pair reverbs, pair delays, whatever your heart desires. if your looking for lush, did I say lush atmosphere without sounding fake (Control your wet/ mix)well run this piece in stereo or with three amps as i do sometimes and welcome to sonic ear candy, heaven sometimes I add a slight amount of distortion for bite(the Edge)and because it just sounds too ffffing pretty without it. If you dont want to spend a lot on a top quality reverb/delay for whatever your reasons $200 and your set for life (Although i might move up the lexicon food chain some day). I recently got the mx-200 for my birthday I opened it up, plugged it in and it sounded amazing . Is there anything worse than waiting a week for new gear you took a chance on over the internet and it absolutely sucks (zoom 50511) but what did i expect for a $60 multieffect Anyway lol. I could not be happier with my mx-200. P.s sorry about the obnoxious length of my gear list and overall review> peace


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: US $149.99
Submitted 02/27/2006 at 09:56am by RetroTones

Ease of Use : 9
Quite easy to use. Dual engines - both of which can run full reverb simultaneously. *** One caveat: The MX-Edit USB controller software will not run or even install on anything except Windows XP-SP2. It will NOT work on XP-SP1. Call Lexicon. It's a fact. Very nice small manual. Requires analog audio or SPDIF connections. The USB line (not included) provides for PC control only. External power supply included.

Sound Quality : 9
Used in fine quality personal studio via S/PDIF. Totally quiet. Excellent sound. Far superior to the noisy but similarly named (discontinued) MPX-200 (a marketing faux pas if I ever saw one). Since reverb is typically heard much less in today's music than it was 10~20 years ago, this model should do very nicely.

Reliability : 8
Made in the USA - a welcome change. Solid steel housing with .125" thick aluminum faceplate. Very well made, machined, and screened. I expect few problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never needed so...

Overall Rating : 10
Reverb quality is dramatically improved over recent low-end Lexicons. Much better IMHO than the TC Electronic M300. The USB control if very helpful.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: US $165.00
Submitted 01/18/2006 at 06:08pm by Threeoclockjack
Email: fix1 at prodigy<dot>net

Ease of Use : 10
It's extremely user friendly. I absolutely love it. Great for guitar racks. I don't have the patience or time to scroll through endless menus to program effects, any more. This unit solved this issue. Pick the effect and dial it in with the knobs. Totally kick ass!

Sound Quality : 9
The sound is excellent with this unit. I use it in my guitar rack. Very ballsy. I have had an endless revolving door of Alesis and Digitech multiFX units and they all either sounded weak, metallic or thin. When I plugged the MX200 in, it totally blew me away. My main guitars are a Les Paul Studio and an original ESP M1. My rack consists of a Furman Rack Rider power conditioner, ADA MP1 Preamp, Lexicon MX200 and a BBE 461 Sonic Maximizer. Power amp is a 6L6 all tube Peavey Classic 60. Cab is a custom 2x12 loaded with Celestion G12K-85s. One of the nice things about the Lexicon is that it's straight effects - no EQ to mess with your sound. Set your preamp and guitar EQ and away you go - no additional coloration.

Reliability : No Opinion
It seems pretty reliable. I wouldn't gig with out a back up. I've still got an old '87 Digitech door stop I could use if I absolutely had to.

Customer Support : No Opinion
It's a new unit and I just bought it a week ago, so I don't have any opinions on this.

Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing guitar for almost 20 years - mostly hard rock and heavy metal though I do occasionally stray into other genres. I LOVE this unit. I'd definitely get another one of these units. It most definitely helps me make music by being unobtrusive and not having to spend 8 hours a day for three weeks tweaking and programming it. I've had an ungodly amount of gear over the years and this is one that really stands out for me. This Lexicon rocks. It does exactly what I want it to and it's very guitar friendly. If you are looking for a multi effects box to add to your guitar rig, for the money, you can't go wrong.


Product: Lexicon mx200
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 07/22/2005 at 06:57pm by sean

Ease of Use : 9
Pretty easy to get a good sound out of it. comes with some cool factory presets. Very easy to get the sound you want out of it. All knobs instead of lame buttons.

Sound Quality : 8
I am using a ampeg v140ch head with a fender no name cab. Esp ec-1000. Also have a bbe 362 in wiht the mx200, wiht a boss eq stomp box. Sounds are super clean. No apperent hum that i can hear. Only problem I have is that when i change patches there is a huge seem. FOr live use you have to tweak the midi parameters with expression pedals to change effects.

Reliability : No Opinion
It is all aluminum so i can't too many bad things happening to it. Seem sturdy

Customer Support : 1
This i have to honestly say is upsetting. I called there asking a question about patch change seems, and they jsut kept replying with "ohh i donno about that man" they didnt' seem to know their product very well.

Overall Rating : No Opinion

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