Zoom 505
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Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: 100
Submitted 05/30/2008
at 08:28am
by mats
Ease of Use
:
6
Didn't have that much experience with racks of multi-effects before this so I did initially find it a bit of a work to set all parameters. Once you've done that it is pretty easy. But you can't dial anything playing live. Of course as it it is a multieffect you can preset 30 or something sounds which of course is handy.
The headphone output was pretty useless to me as the sound coming out is so radically different from what you get through and amp
Sound Quality
:
3
I use a modified Telecaster Custom and a 70's Fender Twin Reverb. Bought this a while after all my other pedals and my amp (Fender75). had been stolen so I couldn't cough up that much money. I was quite satisfied initally but after a while I noticed that this box seriously worsened the sound quality in virtually every setting.
As I nowadays mostly tend to look for effects that allow my guitars original sound to come through this thing is not for me.
I guess you could find one or two useful sounds.
Reliability
:
8
Used it for 5-6 years, haven't failed once.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them
Overall Rating
:
3
Been playing as an amateur for about 25 years.Play mainly rock, reggae and some jazz. The ZOOM was allright for me at a time when I couldn't afford "the real" thing so I guess it could be a useful and cheap alternative for beginners. For my part it has totally put me off multi-effects and digitalized sounds and I have continued to build up my effect chain witha MXR Comp, Ibanez FL301DX flanger, Lovepedal Overdrive, DC Demonizer, Cry Baby Wha, EB Volume pedal.
A few things missing still, but I'll get there...
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/05/2007
at 08:29pm
by Kalaab
Email: kalaab at gmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
8
The unit is labeled clearly enough to where you can figure it out as you go. I hadn't touched this unit in years and I was able to pick it right back up. The effects are easy to sort through and save.
Sound Quality
:
4
Well, in a word, lousy. The effects are generally alright, but I have very little use for a unit that supplies delay (for instance) without the ability to change how many repeats you get or how long the delay time is.
The presets sound fair, and if you don't mind sticking with what you're given, you can get some halfway decent sounds. For guitar, this is restrictive and severely limiting.
The modulation effects are lacking, again with no true control. The chorus is decent, if a little weak, but the flange is nice and thick. Phase is also weak, and sounds very thin and wimpy.
The distortions were nauseating. Nothing more to say.
The amp simulation is lousy, as well as the acoustic simulator. Compared to today's multi-FX units, this thing is a dinosaur, so I didn't especially expect a real-sounding acoustic emulator. The compressors are surprisingly good, but again a lack of control is the downfall fo this unit. The hallmark of a good amp sim is the ability to hook directly to a mixer and record with some degree of realism, which unfortunately is not the case for the Zoom 505.
The pitch shifting functions are the saving grace on this unit. They're really quite cool, and you get a decent amount of flexability. You can get perfect fifths, octave low, octave high, or octave low and high. I was able to cop a reasonably good 12-string sound out of it, which was neat.
This unit was *just* flexible enough to be used as a vocal processor for live applications. I snagged a couple of good patches for my vocals on a psychedelic folk show I'm doing, so I can't totally knock the unit.
Reliability
:
10
Well, I've had this unit for over 10 years, so I have to commend Zoom on making a good, long-lasting product. It sat on a shelf for the last 7 years, and I pulled it out on a whim the other day. With a new set of batteries, this baby was just fine. Nice work, Zoom.
Customer Support
:
8
Never needed 'em. Should say something...
Overall Rating
:
6
If you don't expect miracles, this unit can be used for very limited applications. All of the effects are decent but totally canned, so their window of application is pretty tiny. However, I liked what I heard on a few of them, so it was worth having.
As I said, I got this unit about 10 years ago, and it's served its purpose for that long. With the number-crunching power of the new multi-FX units (The Digitech RP series in particular), there is not much use for this product, and you'd be much better off going with something else. However, if you can snag this guy in a bargain bin, you may come across one or two presets that tickle your fancy.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/16/2007
at 10:36am
by Prophet
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use, no need for a manual.
Sound Quality
:
6
You can't get simular sounds of the artist, this is a low cost product.
The excellent thing is that you can use Phaser with Chorus or Flanger. Chorus and Phaser are cool, Flanger is OK, Pith and double mods are catastrophic. Compressor sounds very cool but it also creates loads of ear damaging noise. The distrosions are all ok expect for metal, that one is really crap. DT dist has a cool sound but creates a lot of noise even if you don't play, just like having a electrical problem. Rhytm distorsion is much better then anything i heard in all the multiefects. YOu can play cleans on hi gain things on it. Even with a lot of gain all the noise sounds very warm and valve like. Lead dist is also ok but it sqeells even more then all the others. This unit is impossible to use at koncerts or even rehersals. Can't get good sound with out beeing really NOIZY - this one is for home use only.
Reliability
:
6
It's simple, doesen't create much problems or fails often.
Using this sqeel machine on a gig is a great way to ruin your band chances to make it someday.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
7
This thing is good for beginers. The good thing about it is that oyu can get some really magical sounds combining chorus and phaser.
It doesen't matter what gear you use.
I wish other more expensive multiefects would have a feature with such good rhytm distorsions and a combination of suing chorus and phaser at once.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/15/2007
at 12:50pm
by ybn
Ease of Use
:
8
Quite easy.
Sound Quality
:
1
This thing sound sucks. Really. The distortions are the worst i've ever heard. the moudulations suck too. the wah has too much trebele boost. the only ok effect is the delay. Sold it..
Reliability
:
6
It's made of plastic. other than that it's fine.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
1
this thing can't make one decent sound, and even if you find one - the bypass of this pedal is HORRIBLE, so I won't keep it in the chain even for one song.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: GBP 75
Submitted 02/14/2007
at 07:34pm
by Kimbara
Ease of Use
:
9
Once you get your head around how the various controls work, setting the pedal up for your own patches isn't a problem. The display is a good size, and it's all pretty logical, IMO. The manual is just a sheet of A3, but it covers the basics OK - I guess that says it all, really!
Getting a good sound out of it is pretty easy, unlike some other multiFX I could mention. It's great to use live - set up the patches you want in sensible memory locations relative to each other, and there's next to nothing to go wrong.
Sound Quality
:
8
I don't generally try to sound like anyone else, but you can get a good range of tones out of this unit that cover most of the bases.
Like most multiFX units I've used, it seems to major on distortion/overdrive FX - but the good news is that some of these are really pretty good, especially if you lay back off maximum on the input. The acoutic emulation may not sound much like a real acoustic, but I've gotten good mileage out of that tone for certain songs with my Strat copy.
Other high points are the modulation FX - chorus is warm and rich, the flanger's well useable, and the phaser will give a slightly thin tone that I find quite attractive.
The pitch mod FX are not particularly useable in a musical sense - the high octave isn't spot-on, which makes things painful, the low octave sounds OK, the fifth etc. settings are better, but limited in practice as it's not an intelligent harmonizer.
The wahs are better than nothing, and I've gigged with them, but there's no real richness there. The cab emulations don't really do what it says on the tin. The gate is not too bad as long as you tweak it right. The echoes are clean and what you'd expect from a digital unit, and the reverbs suit guitar well (they're a bit too "springy" for use on vocals etc., which my 505 has done when patched into a PA in extremis - probably no worse than the built-in reverbs on many an old pub PA out there, though).
Where all the FX except the distortions fall down is their lack of tweakability (which I think was improved in the Mk II version) - but that's the downside of a simple low-cost unit like this.
I've used it with an electro-acoustic and a Strat copy through a variety of amps. With the right amount of tweaking, it did both guitars proud.
A big minus point is that especially with some of the FX, this unit can be NOISY - the gate will help a bit, as will tweaking the amp tone controls. The main culprit seems to be the preamp section - the compressor/limiter is useful, but at the cost of introducing noise right at the start of the FX chain on some settings, and the gain on the distortiomn FX obviously makes this worse. I wouldn't say it's any noisier than the chain of discrete FX pedals you'd have to put together in order to equal it's functions, though! It's OK live generally, but you wouldn't want to record with it (unless you were after seashore-type sound effects, or even the occasional waterfall).
Reliability
:
10
Never really had a problem with it. The big bright LED display eats PP9s, so you probably wouldn't want to rely on battery power for a gig. It's been used without a backup in pub gigs plenty of times, and has survived the odd beer with a shake and a chance to dry out. After about 8 years (I think), the switches and everything else still work fine. With a bit of a clean-up, I could probably pass it off as new.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed it, so no opinion. It was cheap to buy. I suspect it would be cheaper to get another than get someone to repair it.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play anything from jazz to pop covers to experimental, and have done so for over 30 years.
I bought it as I'd had all my FX pedals and amps ripped off years ago and was broke, so it covered quite a few bases in terms of getting me up and running again for very little money indeed.
It's given me an enormous amount of pleasure over the years, now I look back on it.
I ended up customizing it - if you plug a wah/swell-type pedal connection into the control input on the back, you can control volume, wah and pitch (Zoom sell a pedal for this, but I just rigged up my own with an old broken wah unit). If you rig up an external oscillator and plug it into that input, you then have modulation effects that it lacks - auto-wah, tremolo and vibrato.
In the course of rigging all this up, I discovered that if you short the live control input line to earth, the pedal ramps down then up again over about half a second. So I rigged up my own "electric plectrum" - covered a standard plastic plectrum with tinfoil and took a lead from it to the control signal connector. Provided the strings on the guitar are earthed (they should be), then you have access to plectrum-triggered swell, wah and pitch effects - great fun!
(Disclaimer: You can electrocute yourself playing around with this stuff if you don't know what you're doing - You have been warned! I did this, but that doesn't mean I'm recommending that anyone else do it.)
I now have a PODXT Live, but I think this little Zoom will still see use on those occasions when I want to take along some FX but not the whole rig, especially into situations where gear can come to harm or be ripped off. Funnily enough, although I'm aware that the Live is capable of many more subtleties etc. than the 505, some of the distortion units on the 505 give those on the Live a fair run for their money!
It has character despite its flaws, and it's very cheap for what it can do - what more do you need to know? If it were stiolen or lost, I'm not sure I'd replace it, though - if I was looking for another knockabout unit to take over what will now be its role, I'd probably check out what else is available, or maybe get the Mk II instead. On the other hand, I haven't checked out the second-hand prices for the 505, so just replacing like with like might be a no-brainer.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: AUS 65 USED
Submitted 11/08/2006
at 01:14am
by Highxzero
Ease of Use
:
10
The Zoom 505 is too easy to use, you can get some good tones out of it but i like analoge better than digital, the patches easy once you look a the manual a few times
Sound Quality
:
8
well im using a ibanez ex350 through a Marshall MG100DFX, it is a bit noisy at high levels of volume. you can get good eddie van halen tones like 'eruption' and some good metallica tones too
Reliability
:
6
i dont know, iv never used it at a gig only in practice, i would always have a backup if u used it
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never needed it
Overall Rating
:
9
i play rock, hard rock, and metal i have been playing for 5 years now. i own a digitech grunge pedal and a marshall mini amp
Overall Rating - i think it is good but you should go analoge
digital tones are not that good
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: USD 30 USED
Submitted 09/02/2006
at 09:25pm
by Ricky Cox
Email: rickyacox05 at netscape<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
7
The Zoom 505 is a poor man's mult-effects pedal. Within this unit is some pretty good stuff. I got mine used and borrowed a manuel from a music shop put it on a copier machine because it has some surprises otherwise. It is FAIRLY easy to edit and get the right sounds out of it. After a little time of use, it becomes easy to edit.
Sound Quality
:
7
The sound quality of the Zoom 505 is assorted. Some are not very usuable in my opinion. Some are worth the unit alone. My favorites are step!& lead (distortion) It is a second unit to supplement my Digitech multi-processor. I use it with a tranformer (AC) The OD kind of "clippy" the blues too dark, setting the pitch at a certain setting sounds like a 12 string; pretty cool. People talk about finding the holy grail. I think you can take 2 separate units and brands and blend them and find the holy grail sounds and tones.
pretty cool. but with trial and error, baby steps.
Reliability
:
7
I would not gig with the Zoom 505 without a back-up.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
7
In a pedal board, this is worthy to be included for the step phaser alone!! The lead (distortion) really rocks!! The noise reduction ZNR is ok. I do have the FP02 expression pedal and it works well with the pitch bend and wah. The auto-wah is not bad either. I am very tempted to try the G1 made by Zoom. The 32 bit processor. I think the FP02 works with it also.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: USD 30 USED
Submitted 07/31/2006
at 11:48pm
by deadite99
Ease of Use
:
10
First let it be known that i am not a touring musician just a humble hobbiest.With that said i had no problems figureing out how to use my zoom505 even though i bought it from a pawn shop with no manual.Editing the patches on it was very simple right off the bat as well as useing the built in tuner,you just press down on both pedals at the same time and blam your there.The zoom505 was a no brainer to learn to use.
Sound Quality
:
8
I play a lot of metal and rock,from slayer to pink floyd and i can usualy get all the sounds i need out of it.For floyd and the more psycodelic music i like my zoom505 has a flanger,phaser and a cool step feature that sounds very spacey.As far as metal goes i can usualy get most of the distortion sounds i need but not all.I can get a good slayer sound with it using the optional expresion pedal with the wah feature.I use a (B.C.Rich warlock and mockingbird)wich runs through eather my (Digitech Metal master) or my (Digitech Death metal pedal)wich then runs through my zoom505 and into two (Ibanez tone blaster 25 watt amps.All that takes care of the rest of the distortion quite well.Overall the sound quality is pretty good.
Reliability
:
9
So far i've had no real problems with it other than the buttons sticking on it once but a little air in a can fixed that right up.I bought it about five years ago used from a pawn shop and its still going strong to this day. If i had a gig to go to I would be confident in not bringing a backup.The batteries go pretty quick on it but its rare that i use batteries,i normaly have it pluged into my (one spot) plug adapter.I've never had a problem with the pedals when cycling through pathes that i can think of.
Customer Support
:
5
I cant say ive ever had to use customer support yet but if you go to zooms website its quite easy to download manuals and other info.Ill give it a five for now.
Overall Rating
:
9
Like I said before I play alot of metal like slayer,metallica, megadeth,etc and alot of rock pink floyd,black sabbath,etc and the zoom505 is a good match for a lot of diferent styles.Im also in the process of buying a second one for my bass setup wich consists of a (Ibanez soundgear bass)a (Boss v-wah)and a(Fender rumbble 25 watt amp)and at the moment a(zoom506 2 bass efects pedal).The 506 2 has a lot in the way of clean tones but not so much in the distortion department.Im a big fan of Jason newsted and his style of playing wich involvse a lot of cutting distortion through a wah pedal,useing the zoom 505 i already have and my v-wah i can easly pull of anesthesia-pulling teeth,For whom the bell tolls,etc.If this pedal was ever lost,stolen or broken I would definetly buy another,its just worth it.its especialy good for your musician on a budget,you get almost $1,000 worth of pedals and stompboxes for around $50 brand new.It may not be the best multieffects pedal in the world but it works for me.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: (10 dollar digeredoo) used
Submitted 06/10/2006
at 07:26pm
by Mr.NutBar
Ease of Use
:
5
The ease of use is a bit finicky. Its not as easy to use as my Behringer X V-Amp (and that is hard to get used to when it comes to effects) because of what you have to go through to edit something. Once you get the hang of things, its not bad at all. As any new piece of multi fx gear, it requires you to learn a bit.
Sound Quality
:
7
The distortion sounds kinda harsh but Im talking digital harsh, not over trebled harsh. Mind you Im talking about the loads of gain settings. Others sounds really nice. One setting on here really livens up the tone and I really like that. Doesn't distort or add much in the way of effects, it just makes a clean guitar even nicer.
Reliability
:
7
I've had it for a few hours and I gotta say, no issues with it so far. Patch switching is easy, big pedals on either side so you dont end up hitting the wrong thing. Also the switching doesn't take that long at all. Not that I would ever use it live because its just something to have fun with. I still run with a Behringer X V-Amp and Im going to pair the two together to see what odd sounds I can get.
Customer Support
:
6
I gave it a 6 for customer support (as seen right there). They had the manual online for anyone who happend to buy an old one. I have no complaints or problems to call them up about but if anything happend, Im sure Id open it up and mess around with it like the weird fellow I am. I did trade a ten dollar digeredoo for it anyway.
Overall Rating
:
7
Could use more features like better floor board support and not just a single pedal switch or expression. It gets different sounds and different sounds have different uses. Overall, its pretty damn fun. If it was stolen, Id beat whoever stole it then steal a piece of his gear as a lesson(of course Id get my 505 back first). As listed, you saw I have the X V-Amp. I play metal and this thing is fine for lots of things other than metal. I love to experiment and thats what this lets me do.
Overall, the reason I got it, I had a digeredoo that I bought for 10 bucks and couldnt play and was offered as a trade for this. Id say I made the right choice.
Product: Zoom 505
Price Paid: 60.000 (Chilean peso)
Submitted 04/03/2006
at 05:58pm
by Peter
Ease of Use
:
9
I got this pedal for about 6 years, it's very easy to use, just u have to read the roadtrip map ( manual ), it's not hard at all, but sometimes you dont know whats is this efect for??? but c'mon if you are looking for a cheap multieffect pedal and its going to be your 1st one, give it a try it wont let you down.
Sound Quality
:
8
Well, i must be honest as it was my 1st guitar toy, i was amazed of the number of effects that you can make, good solo patches, good acoustics sound, with reverb, delay, flanger...Its true what some people say about high gain distortion, the noisy little buzzzzzzzzzz that the amps spits when you are not playing, that noise....well its not a big deal considering how cheap is this little black machine. Now i got more experience and i realized that now its a toy..not a multi effect processor pedal, why?? cos im playing "muse" and i tried a millions time trying to "clone" matt's effects, with a few y got lucky, but i still can't reach that quality of sound and a 100% match. The 505 still can give a good fight against the new breed of pedals, specially when playing blues, and classic rock!!!
Reliability
:
9
I got mine for about 9 years, still working fine. You just have to treat it good...like any electrical device.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never tried to contact them, no problems at all
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Well...i said that the 505 is great for begginers, and still can be used for more advanced guitar players...Its cheap, it's reliable, a lot of effects to combine, with some practise you can make amazing effects. If its used with the expresion pedal, you can squeeze a little more of it!!!
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