Behringer BXL3000A Ultrabass Bass Combo Amplifier (300 Watts, 1x15 in.)

No longer available at zZounds
Designed for bassists looking for more power than a standard practice amp, this 300-watt combo packs a lot of punch into a amp that's still portable.

When a stack is too high and a practice amp just doesn't cut it, then this truly affordable wedge-shaped Bass Workstation with a powerful 15 in. Hard Attack aluminum-cone speaker is exactly right! With 300 watts of output horse power, your performance will never run out of breath. And it's fully loaded: one clean and one distortion channel with full control, a 7-band EQ with a revolutionary "See-What-You-Play" FBQ frequency indicator that immediately shows you which bass frequency corresponds with which fader on your EQ to allow you instant sound shaping, a switchable Ultrabass subharmonics processor and a compressor with adjustable threshold are just a few of the feature highlights. A musical limiter guarantees playing without distortion on the clean channel even at the highest volume levels, plus they've included a dual footswitch for channel select. Using external FX units is easy with the dedicated FX insert, and you can use the separate headphone output whenever you need to keep your music just to yourself.

Audio Inputs:
- Instrument input: 1/4" TS
- Input Impedance: 250k Ohm
- CD Input: RCA
- Input Impedance: 40k Ohm
- FX INSERT RETURN: 1/4" TS
- Input impedance: 50k Ohm

Audio Outputs:
- Phones Out: 1/4" TRS stereo
- Direct Out: XLR
- Output impedance: 500 Ohm
- Line Out: 1/4" TS
- Output impedance: 100 Ohm
- FX Insert Send: 1/4" TS
- Output impedance: 2.2k Ohm

System Specifications:
- Power amp output: 300 watts @ 4 Ohm

Loudspeakers:
- Type: 15 in. aluminum-cone
- Impedance: BUGERA Hard Attack Series
- Model: 4 Ohm
- Power handling: 200 W

Power Supply:
- Mains voltage: USA/Canada 120 V~, 60 Hz
- Mains voltage: Europe/U.K./Australia 230 V~, 50 Hz
- Mains voltage: Japan 100 V~, 50 - 60 Hz
- Mains voltage: China/Korea 220 V~, 50 Hz
- Mains voltage: General export model 120/230 V~, 50 - 60 Hz
- Power consumption: max. 350 Watts
- Fuses 100 - 120 V~: T 6.3 A H 250 V
- Fuses 200 - 240 V~: T 3.15 A H 250 V
- Mains connection: Standard IEC receptacle

Dimensions/Weight:
- Dimensions (H x W x D): 24" x 18.4" x 16.5"
- Weight: 60.5 lbs

For support or warranty questions, please contact the manufacturer:
Web: https://www.behringer.com/service.html

Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars. (43 ratings)
Submitted January 30, 2007 by a customer from gmail.com

"Honesty and Expectations"

Overall: 3.5 out of 5 stars
(see rating details)
Verified Customer zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
I will be satisfied with this product until it breaks, whenever that shall be. I have no illusions of permanence in any piece of musical equipment, especially amps, and among them especially Behringer. But time will tell: perhaps I am being unnecessarily pessimistic and it will keep on tickin' for a good while. Regardless, in the meantime I have a great practice room amp for the cash with plenty of features and genuine utility, and it didn't break the bank. What more can you ask?

Sound
I give it a seven whereas most units in the pricerange would get a four or five at best. It will not compete at all with a $1000+ rig, but Behringer knows that and they're not trying to fill that niche. They receive stiff competition from Ashdown - I'll let you make your own decision there. Suffice it enough to say that Ashdown and Behringer both make excellent low-cost bass amplifiers, and let your nose lead where it will.

Features
And here it shines. It has a built-in seven-band equalizer, footswitchable channels with separate master tone controls and footswitchable subharmonic generator, built-in compressor (though it acts more like a high-powered limiter than a compressor, kind of a nit-pick), FX loop, headphone-out, the works. The subharmonic generator is neat for play but not particularly serious. The 7-band EQ is incalculably valuable in shaping tone and is quite effective with +/- 12db of sweep. The compressor is great read more at leveling out volume from inexpensive basses which often have poorly balanced pickups, which is probably a concern if you're buying a Behringer bass amp. Just being honest, people don't buy Behringer seeking top-of-the-line and that says something about the quality of the instrument they will probably be putting through it. One neat feature of questionable necessity is that the 7-band EQ have LED lights on the end that can, at the touch of a button, be turned into an instant visualizer to show what frequencies are being played when you hit a string. While I find this to be unnecessary, I can only imagine how incredible this would be to a starting player, as it gives you an instant leg-up in trying to EQ the sound you want - just hit the note you're looking to boost and see it played out on the EQ. It fades between them to indicate where the strongest frequencies are present, so a standard A would light up very brightly on the knob closest to 440hz while the others around it would be dimmer as they represent the harmonics. Pretty nifty for beginners, or for a bit of stage effect. All-in-all, feature city and they're mostly great. The EQ is just awesome.

Ease of Use
Gotta rank it high, here, too. The manual is very thorough in explaining the features, and they're all very intuitive. My buddy just started playing bass and I hooked him up through this - he still can't play yet, but he's got a tone he likes thanks to the ease of use of this amp.

Quality
Caveat: It's Behringer. Up-front, quality that makes you wonder why the hell anyone else makes any money; six months to two years later, makes you wonder why you never bothered registering the warranty. Time will tell. Everything seems fine, but I don't have high hopes for the longevity of this amplifier given my experience with Behringer equipment in the past. If I'm wrong, I'll be delighted; if not, a few years out of an inexpensive practice-space amp (not a practice amp, but an amp that can be heard along with drums and cranked guitar) is fine in my book.

Value
It only suffers here by the fact that Ashdown makes a similar amp. I got a cosmetic-blemish unit for a substantial discount, so it was a no-brainer, but at the asking price it's only about $50 off of an arguably more reliable/better quality amp. Tonally, this competes well with anything under $600, in my opinion, it's just a question of longevity. Place your bets.

Manufacturer Support
Behringer has terrible customer support. I have had no good experiences and three bad experiences with their CS.

The Wow Factor
I think it looks pretty classy. Big Behringer logo doesn't add to the stage appeal, but the aluminum cone 15" speaker is kickin' and overall the looks of the unit are solid, if utilitarian.

Musical Background:
Active Musician

Musical Style:
Depends on my mood, really
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