The Behringer EQ700 gives you immense tone-sculpting control with its 7-band graphic equalizer, letting you boost or attenuate frequencies from 100Hz to 6.4kHz for any guitar or bass. Whether you need more low-end thump, sizzling highs or to eliminate feedback, the EQ700 helps you craft your ideal tone. Its low-noise circuitry ensures your core tone remains pristine, with none of the unwanted noise that can muddy your sound. When bypassed, it utilizes a hard relay bypass that keeps your signal path uncolored. The EQ700's durable metal construction is built to last through countless gigs. Power it with a 9V battery or an optional 9V DC power supply.
Sculpt Your Sound With 7 Fully Adjustable EQ Bands
Having trouble hearing your guitar cut through the mix? Losing clarity and definition? With 7 bands of equalization, the EQ700 gives you immense precision over your guitar's frequency response. Boost or attenuate bands centered at 100Hz, 200Hz, 400Hz, 800Hz, 1.6kHz, 3.2kHz and 6.4kHz to target specific trouble spots. Cutting frequencies around 200-400Hz can tighten up a muddy acoustic guitar tone. A boost around 1.6-3.2kHz can help your guitar cut through a dense mix. Reduce harsh, thin tones by attenuating 6.4kHz. Whatever tonal remedy you need, the EQ700 puts the solution at your fingertips.
Low-Noise Circuitry Keeps Your Tone Pure
An equalizer is only as good as the clarity it provides. The EQ700 utilizes low-noise circuitry to ensure you get pristine tone shaping without the unwanted noise that can ruin your core guitar tone. Experience the transparency and accuracy essential to crafting your ideal sound. Whether you need a subtle nudge or more extreme shaping, you can boost and cut frequencies with confidence, knowing the EQ700 won't muddy up your signal.
Hard Bypass Leaves Your Tone Uncolored
When you want to pass your guitar signal through unaltered, the EQ700 provides a hard relay bypass that keeps your tone pure and uncolored. The bypass utilizes a mechanical switch rather than an electronic buffer, completely removing the EQ circuitry from the signal path when disengaged. You get the transparent sound of your guitar or other instrument, unaffected by any electronic coloring.