🎶 Elevate Your Tone with the Tube Monster!
The Behringer VT999 Vintage Tube Monster Overdrive Pedal is a high-quality guitar effects pedal featuring a real 12AX7 preamp tube, true-bypass switching, and a 3-band EQ. Designed for musicians seeking versatile sound options, it includes an integrated noise gate for a clean performance. Weighing just 3.53 pounds and measuring 8.66 x 6.77 x 2.4 inches, this pedal is perfect for both studio and live settings.
Manufacturer | Behringer USA |
Part Number | P0519 |
Item Weight | 3.53 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 8.66 x 6.77 x 2.4 inches |
Country of Origin | China |
Item model number | VT999 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Color | Gld/Blk |
Style | Distortion,Overdrive |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Voltage | 9 Volts |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Special Features | The VINTAGE TUBE MONSTER VT999 effects pedal has that full-tone roar of a tube engine under its hood, letting you take off with anything from warm blues overdrive to heavy distortion. This high-quality stomp box has the warm sound of a hand-selected 12AX7 vacuum tube. In addition, the VT999 offers an integrated and switchable noise gate with adjustable threshold that keeps your sound noise-free. A status LED is included, plus there is a true hard-wire bypass for ultimate signal integrity. |
Included Components | Classic Vacuum Tube Overdrive |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Warranty Description | Products are covered by behringer manufacturer's warranty within one year of the original date of purchase from an authorized behringer dealer. If your behringer product is still under warranty, you must obtain a return authorization (ra) number from behringer before sending your product to an authorized service center for warranty service. |
D**I
Little confused by the bad reviews
I’m not huge Behringer customer but of the items I’ve purchased, never had an issue and the sound quality is pretty much on par with all the more expensive items.This pedal is well built, fully featured for a wah pedal and sounds great once you dial in your preference, which is easy to do if you take your time and try the various combinations.The battery compartment is not an issue and is easy access and secure. I gotta question that one reviewers intelligence that they weren’t able to make it work. It’s just like most toddler’s toy that requires a 9V.It is a switchless wah so it activates as soon as you step into it and it deactivates if you take it back to its standard position. The reviewer complaining about that obvious hasn’t used a switchless wah or is just uncoordinated. Pretty easy to use and great for players who sit when they record, like I do.I’ve owned the Bad Horsie and the Dunlop switchless wah and they work and sounds great just like this one but for 2-3 times the price. For someone who doesn’t use the wah that much, likes to sit down and record with a wah and isn’t brand/status conscious, this is an awesome deal at $50.
T**Y
Good value
Pleasantly surprised at how precise the tuner is whether used with the bypass or connected to the tuner output on my combination (monitor). Also, would recommend getting a 9VDC power adapter otherwise batteries may become a problem.
D**D
Close, but no cigar
If you want a quick review of this pedal (the Behringer TM300) let's just say it might work for you but be prepared to send it back.I'm trying to sell a keyboard amplifier combo that has 65 W, with a 15 inch speaker and a horn tweeter (it's a Peavey KB-100). You can use it for keyboards, bass guitar, and vocals without changing anything about it. But because it's a solid-state amplifier from around 1990 it doesn't sound good with electric guitars. So I looked for a cheap pedal that would make the amplifier really howl.This Behringer pedal, like most Behringer pedals, is a clone of a more expensive pedal. I believe it's a copy of a Sans Amp GT-2, which costs typically close to $200. For around $25 it seems something that I should look into. It "changes" your amp into a Fender, Marshall, or Mesa Boogie. Since to get one of those amps would cost you probably over $1000, the $25 seemed reasonable.The controls on the Behringer pedal let you choose between the three makes of amplifier I mentioned above, and there is a mic position switch, and three varieties of drive. As well as this there's a volume control, bass and treble knobs, and a drive (distortion) knob, so you can dial in the exact sounds you like. I saw a YouTube demo of this pedal, and was very impressed.When I received this pedal I tried it out and the first thing I noticed was an intrusive hiss. There are several solutions to this, but I was worried that the prospective purchaser would find the hiss annoying, and of course I had no idea which instrument they wanted to use it with. So in the end I wrapped it up and UPS came with a label to send it back to Amazon for a full refund.I'd like to address some concerns that I see about Behringer pedals. The main criticism is that it costs too little "and it can't be any good." The electronics of today is different from those of yesterday. When you don't have any development costs to design circuits, and you already have market research from companies like Boss, pedals can be cheap.But the big cost saving in reproducing a pedal is modern assembly methods, particularly Surface Mount Technology (SMT). Because you don't need human hands to assemble circuits, components can be very small. Circuits are put together by machine from spools of components at the rate of tens of thousands parts an hour and automatically tested.Another issue with Behringer pedals is that "They're plastic, so they'll break." There is a video on YouTube of a guy trying to destroy his pedal by kicking it across the room, throwing it what looks like a metal statue, and standing with both legs on the pedal. It still works. Think about the remote control for your TV - you sit on it, then push it down into the couch, and your dog decides it is a new dog toy. But usually when it fails, it's not the case but the internal parts. I don't see anyone advocating metal cases.I was impressed by the thickness of the plastic of the pedal I had. I would use it to throw at the head of some dirty thief who stole my irreplaceable Squier Affinity Strat, and with the metal baseplate I'd use the pedal to hammer in nails. If you give it the slightest amount of respect it will last. If you're intent on apeing that bats*** guitarist and jump on it, remember he probably has a whole boxfull of pedals and a roadie to swap them.The only complain that affected me was installing the battery. Behringer uses this method in most of their stomp boxes, and it's not obvious how to do it. Where the pedal pivots on the case there are black lugs on either side. Use a ballpoint pen tip to push these in, one at a time, and when each one is completely pushed in you should use your third hand to push the foot switch cover up and away.Inside you can see the battery compartment with the connector for the nine-volt battery. Place the battery (that you supplied) into the compartment, connect it, and you're all set. This sounds worse than it actually is (especially if you have a third hand), but my advice is to get the Behringer power adapter. With the adapter you have the space in the pedal for the battery to hold whatever you want, and no indication that you have a secret compartment. Do you get my drift . . . drift . . . drift?I'm feeling a little guilty about returning this pedal - not because it was faulty (it was) but given a little more time and no prospective buyer to impress I might have been able to deal with the hiss. The amp I'm keeping is a solid-state Fender Princeton 65 (watts), and most people's verdict on this is that it's LOUD. I try to keep the volume down on it and also on my guitar. That means that the signal is not very loud, and so any extra noise from a pedal is noticeable.So, had I not been pressed for time, I should have experimented with volume levels, particularly with my guitar. Any pedal that hisses or hums is going to sound worse with a low signal. Another fix would have been a noise gate. That's a pedal that waits for a strong signal before it lets it on to your amp. Between songs your amp is silent, but when you play, a hiss or hum will sound from anything before the noise gate. Usually the guitar signal is so strong that it will drown out this extra noise.So this hasn't put me off Behringer pedals, and YouTube demos of the TM300 show it performs pretty well. If you're concerned about getting a clone, almost every company has produced a pedal based on the circuit of Ibanez's Tube Screamer under their own name. If you know exactly which make of amp you want to emulate you could use one of a range of Joyo pedals (JF-13 through 16) which reproduces the sound of one of the amps here (Fender, Marshall, Mesa Boogie, and on Joyo alone, Vox). These have only one company's sound but a greater range of controls, are made of metal (for what that's worth) and cost in the low end of the $30 range. Each of them has YouTube demos.But I guess I was spoiled by getting the $50ish Zoom G1oN Guitar Floor Multi-Effects Pedal, which has far more effects, many different amp sounds, and is completely silent. I think we'll see a Behringer competitor to the Zoom before too long, and I welcome the competition.
M**A
Love this!
Was in a pinch and needed an octive pedal because the boss one was sold out. This was very worth it! I cannot believe it's only $25. It's super durable and it functions how you'd want it too!! Love this thing
S**L
what it does, it does well.
I picked this up as a replacement for a stolen Crybaby, being a guitarist on a budget, the price appealed to me. I did my research, read reviews and watched youtube videos on the Hellbabe, and was convinced to try it. For 40 bucks, how could I go wrong ?It's not a bad pedal, not at all. It does what it says it does, but it's not without flaws. For example, the pedal itself does not have much range. The overall tone of the Hellbabe is fine, but the limited range of motion on the pedal itself severely limits your "sweep". There are mods that can be done which are beyond the scope of my review but if you Google "Behringer Hellbabe mods" you can find a few things you can do to improve the pedals range of motion and overall tone as well. I will probably try them, as really the only thing stopping me from giving this pedal more stars is these issues.The fact that you can dial in the frequency range is a nice touch, and for that alone this pedal is worth the price of admission. I also dig the fact that you can really fine tune the frequency response of the wah with the "Q" and the "Fine Tune" knobs. This gives you more control over the tone than your typical wah. The boost is kind of useless though, I do not notice much increase in volume even with the boost dialed all the way up. BUT, since I get my lead boost from a TS9 Tubescreamer, I can't really say that this is a problem for me. I didn't buy it for the boost feature, so I'm not upset that it doesn't do much for me.I also really like the whole "step on, step off" feature. One thing I didn't care for about my Crybaby is having to rock the pedal all the way forward and then press down to engage the wah, since the wah was activated that way, rocking it back usually caused me to start sweeping in reverse and it sounded funky. With this, I step on it, do my thing and step off and it's out of the signal path. Speaking of that, I haven't noticed any "tone suck", like some users have mentioned. When it's off my tone is my tone, and when it's on, it does what I need it to do then gets out of the way.It is supposed to model the Dunlop "Crybaby from Hell" wah that Dime was famous for using. It does a respectable job BUT if you place this unit next to an actual Crybaby from Hell and A/B the two, the Crybaby from Hell is clearly the better of the two. It has a more pronounced sweep and a more aggressive mid-range "honk" that really helps it cut through a wall of guitars. As I understand it, some of the mods you can find online for the Hellbabe can change that and bring it closer to Dime-time, but as I haven't done these yet, and I am reviewing a out of the box as it is product and not a modified one, what it CAN do with some help is not relevant. What is relevant is what it does "as it is". But the Dime wah is also about 4X the price of the Hellbabe, so the fact that it doesn't exactly hold up next to what its supposed to be emulating can be forgiven. At least in my opinion.Behringer gets knocked around for it's build quality, but I don't see why. Yes, this thing is injection molded plastic, but it feels very sturdy. It couldn't stand up to being jumped on, but since that doesn't seem likely to happen I am not the least worried. I own a few other Behringer pedals, and haven't had any problems with them in the quality department either.The Hellbabe has earned a spot on my modest pedalboard, at least until I can find a better replacement that won't wreck my wallet. Even then, I will keep this around as a backup wah. Too many guitarists buy gear with their eyes not with their ears. Maybe that's why Behringers' company slogan is "just listen" ?
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