
After you have your effect dialed in, you have the expression pedal which is very handy for adjusting the amount of reverb/delay, or flange, or even controlling the wah effect. There are two pedals, which let you toggle up and down between effects, and then a third to change from channel A to B. Some of the effects are not quite useable for my style (punk/some metal), but that is where the effect editing comes in handy. It comes with 40 factory preset effects, and then 40 more of the same, which you can modify and rename as you wish.

It powers on, and it will begin you at the default effect. You plug it in, and you have one input, and a left and right output. Setting this thing up (as you can imagine), is quite easy. Since then, it has been set on the backburner, as I have upgraded to single boss pedals, but it's still an excellent tool for jam sessions, or even home recording. It's been a few years since then, and I still have the trusty RP300. At the time, I was also fairly new to playing, so I can't say that my observations then were as educated as they may be now, but my initial reaction to the pedal was "****! This thing is nice!". I picked one up at the local shop ($220 at the time), came home, and loved it. Now, when I bought this thing, it was fairly new on the market, and it was making quite a buzz in my local area.

Product being reviewed- (Obviously) Digitech RP300 multi-effects processor
