So the Behringer TD-3 is definitely fun when you get the hang of it but it also misses the mark on a couple of features. First off I have never used a real TB-303 so I’m not comparing it to that. I’m just commenting on this as a unique piece of gear. First off this thing sounds great AND fat. I found that the square wave oscillator is almost always better sounding the then saw. The controls are very intuitive and really are just asking to be tweaked in a live take. I found that for my purposes it was more useful to set the accent, decay, envelope, & resonance at my desired levels and just tweak the filter cutoff. Speaking of the knobs, I have to take off a point for the decay knob. I can barely hear an envelope decay of the filter with this thing. It is VERY fast and I really couldn’t hear much difference between the completely closed and open values. This misses the mark even if it’s exactly modeled after the 303. Also I know Behringer were going after making a faithful recreation of the TB-303 but the method for inputting notes is very cumbersome. Apparently it is exactly as it is on the 303 but it is not intuitive at first use. You have to enter all your notes first and then enter their lengths & any rests. It’s not so bad after you get the hang of it but it leaves something to be desired compared to the modern Roland TB-3 which is a pretty great and intuitive sequencer. I take another point off the TB-3 for its horrendous USB MIDI. In short it is unusable. It creates a digital hum that of course you could mostly remove with notch filtering or something like iZotope RX but it should simply not be there. Standard din MIDI however does not have this problem and neither does analog sync. For the money the TD-3 delivers strong & powerful bass with pedigree. The various hardware color options make it fun finding the perfect counterpart to your studio or live setup. Honestly I hope to never part with mine and I truly have zero gear lust for a real 303. There may be flaws in comparison that I just have no concept of but I’ve recorded and jammed with the TD-3 and it simply is fun to use.Read full review
Verified purchase: No
It's really neat to play around with scales on it, the keyboard could be better but it's more for sequencing than live play. You can jam around on notes in Pitch mode-- Time mode was weird to figure out but generally makes enough sense to me. I imagine this would go really well with a drum machine but I don't have one at the moment-- Behringer is such a godtier company
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
Very neet analog synth very well made different from other modular synthesizers synth sound from old days
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
An inexpensive TB-303 clone
Verified purchase: Yes
fun.,
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
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