Behringer RD-6-SR




Weight: 900 g
Dimensions: 30.5 x 16.5 x 5.6 cm; 900 Grams
Model: RD-6-SR
Colour: Silver
Pack Quantity: 1
Colour: Silver
Origin: – China
Quantity: 1

22 Responses

  1. SamualRunyan says:

     United States

    This product is affordable easy to use and very functional for my purposes. It’s a classy analogy machine.

  2. ToryJ06vkregc says:

     Canada

    The TR606 was my first drum machine. When this became available at the price point it was at, it was a no brainer for me. A lot of fun can be had in step sequencing this unit. Additional distortion effects add to the sonic possibilities.

  3. VallieBourque says:

     United States

    Muy contento con la compra! el aparato funciona a la perfeccin y la aplicacin de escritorio es muy completa, puedo sincronizar el RD-6 con otros synths o con mi DAW.

  4. BetteCheongCheo says:

     Spai

    Todo el espritu de la TR-606 y sus sonidos por una pequea parte de su precio de segunda mano. Adems aade el clap de la Boss DR-110 y un efecto de distorsin. A pesar de que es muy bsica (es fiel al modelo original) es muy divertida y fcil de manejar. Combina perfectamente con TD-3, tambin de Behringer, o con la TB-03 de Roland, por ejemplo.

  5. AlbertValente says:

     Germany

    War ein Warehouse Kauf mit zustzlichen 10% Rabatt – habe 96,61 fr “Gebraucht – Wie neu” statt der blichen 119 fr ein Neugert gezahlt. Samstag spt abends bestellt, blitzschnell frhmorgens am Montag erhalten. Verpackt sehr knapp ohne Originalverpackung in Karton, mit Netzteil und Anleitung mit Sticker draufgelegt. Das Gert selbst hat rechts hinten einen Riss oder Bruch im Gehuse, Ober- und Unterteil weisen einen durchgehenden Spalt auf, die Kiste ist verzogen und wackelt daher, der Temporegler hat einen Kratzer. Macht alles gar nichts, denn alles funktioniert bestens – Regler, Tasten, LED – und ich gebe die Behringer RD-6 auf gar keinen Fall wieder her, weil sie so einfach zu bedienen ist und vor allem der Sound 1a ist. Bisschen Papier unter den einen Gummifu, dann wackelt nix mehr. Wegen der unzureichenden, ungepolsterten Verpackung die ja auf der (allerdings flotten) Reise aus Prag nach Hamburg den Bruch usw. verursacht haben knnte, ziehe ich einen Stern ab.

  6. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I don’t, I understand what Behringer are doing, making music more attainable.

    Once you get your head around how to program this and maybe the TD-3 you can spend all day twiddling your knobs. I have and I’ve eaten a sandwich at the same time.

    Ultimately if you want to spend hundreds for the same kind of machine, carry on, I’ll be smiling because my kit was cheaper.

  7. MaryannNovak says:

     United Kingdom

    A brilliant drum machine or Rythm designer as behringer describes it, massive TR 808 sound with added bells and whistles

  8. Mariel8506 says:

     United Kingdom

    Amazing product for the money full stop avoid the naesayers think for yourself do your research and buy it if its for you. I was not disappointed.

  9. Anonymous says:

     Italy

    Semplice da usare e da collegare, non servano daw per usarla

  10. Miles Brignall and nRebecca Smithers says:

     United Kingdom

    My original TR-606 died in the 90’s and Behringer’s clone is virtually identical sounding and looking and in operation. It also addionally has a clap sound, MIDI, individual outputs for all of the sounds and a distortion circuit that the original lacked. Very easy to operate….only in song mode are you likely to need to refer to the manual. 16 step patterns and 32 pattern memories are the same as the original but stingy by today’s standards. Another opportunity missed was to make the accenting global like the original rather than the more modern per step…and it would have been great to have had instrument tuning and decay…maybe in a future firmware update Behringer…or is it done already and I’ve missed it? Great sounds, great value, so easy to use….I have two!!!

  11. SharronSharkey says:

     Spai

    Componentes de bastante calidad y sonido muy bueno. Y adems trae alguna mejora respecto al original

  12. Skye91Qeuhfosup says:

     United Kingdom

    This is my first synthesizer and I’m not a very experienced musician. Even with my lack of know how I think I had pretty much got the hang of this after two 45 minute sessions of experimentation following the instructions, watching a few YouTube videos, and just playing.

  13. Anonymous says:

     Canada

    First, thanks to Cosmo Music for the excellent service and free toque!

    The Behringer RD-6 is exactly what one wants in a reissued vintage drum machine. As someone who owns several original Roland machines including the 707, DR-55 and DR-110, I can tell you that they nailed the sound and functionality. Even the form factor is spot-on. I’m exceptionally happy with my purchase.

    Very excited to follow it up with a RD-9! (Hope Santa is listening)

    Perfect recreation of the original, very satisfying.

  14. Preety says:

     Canada

    The Behringer RD-6 is a clone of the Roland TR-606 with the following additions: Individual line outputs of each instrument, a vintage hand clap sound, and a distortion setting. Everything in common with the original is every bit as good as the original. Most of my studio is Behringer, and I haven’t had a single issue with their equipment!

  15. Anonymous says:

     France

    Fidle l’originale, cette boite rythme est simple d’utilisation. Elle complte ma collection d’instruments analogique et numrique.

  16. [email protected] cpcable says:

     United Kingdom

    Great little replica of the TR606, great sounding. Nice price as the original is several times more and with MIDI and distortion.

  17. SonjaHLDHyaluv says:

     United Kingdom

    It’s far, far better than the original 1981 Roland & it’s as good as Rolands new boutique TR. Seriously.
    However it’s less than half price & fully analogue. Sounds analogue.
    IMO it sounds better than the new & old Roland.
    Behringer have created an excellent simple drummer.
    Build quality is fine, pretty good. I use it all the time. Without issue.
    For 95-120 (prices fluctuate) it’s the bargain programmable sequencing drum machine we’ve been waiting for.
    I paid 97 for a red. New!

  18. Anonymous says:

     Germany

    Super...gut für das Geld

  19. HeikeDigiovanni says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 3 From Our UsersClassic sounds for the cost of a nice dinner in a posh restaurant. Yes, you can get similar sounds from software etc., but there is something about the tactility of hardware that gets to me. The only negative for me is the lack of battery/USB power options. Other than that, I love it!

  20. GrazynaIqc says:

     United Kingdom

    Excellent machine. Nice size, weight, accessible & intuitive to use.
    Excellent solid build quality.
    Great sound quality. Thumping bass. Sounds just like a Roland.
    After just 30 minutes I became very competent using the machine.
    Glad I bought this. I considered loads of similar priced machines around 250-300 & this was a great choice.
    I cannot think of any flaws.
    I don’t use DAW, I prefer hardware.
    This has become my favourite drum machine & over the years I’ve had several.

  21. Anonymous says:

     Spai

    Golden Review Award: 4 From Our UsersEl diseo es bastante fiel a la mtica Roland TR-808 de 1980, pero con bastantes mejoras en su accesibilidad al aadir ms botones y una pantalla numrica. La construccin es bastante buena para los estndares a los que estamos acostumbrados en la actualidad. Los botones dan buena sensacin tctil y responden bien.

    Entre los aspectos negativos cabe destacar que cojeaba sensiblemente en una superficie completamente lisa, y tuve que calzar uno de los tacos con papel. Otro punto negativo, bastante irritante, es la mala costumbre de Amazon de no empaquetar los productos que ya vienen con caja propia, dejando ver a todo el mundo lo que has comprado y, estropendote la caja con varias pegatinas con los datos de envo que resultan imposibles de quitar sin daar la caja original del producto. La caja vena algo sucia, mojada y rasgada por su parte inferior.

  22. SummerConnal says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 6 From Our UsersI have one of these. It’s chunky. The RD-8 is a sonic clone of the old Roland TR-808 drum machine; it has a single set of 808-inspired sounds that are apparently generated with analogue circuitry. If you’re after a general-purpose drum machine it’s an eccentric choice, but if you really like the sound of the 808 – I do – it’s terrific. If you have the space.

    Build-quality wise it feels well-made. None of the knobs or outputs feel loose. The base is metal but I can’t tell if the top plate is metal or plastic; the plastic end plates are tough enough to carry the weight of the rest of the unit.

    As with the original 808 the sounds are obviously synthetic but hard as nails, including a famously bassy kick, a fizzy-but-not-insubstantial snare, fizzy hi-hats, a relatively realistic handclap, some toms that fill out the gaps between the kick and hi-hats etc. All of the sounds are tweakable although it’s a shame you can’t alter the snare drum’s decay (at least not without running it through the compressor).

    I don’t have an 808 so I can’t A-B the RD-8, but from what I have read and heard on Youtube it’s sonically the spitting image of the original, although the cowbell is tuned differently. On its own merits the RD-8 sounds fizzy but tough; the only drawback is that the kick drum is so deep it vanishes on poor-quality speakers, and it’s hard to mix it without it swamping the rest of the bass, but that’s apparently true of the original 808 as well.

    Physically the RD-8 has eight balanced 1/4″ outputs, which is handy if you have some outboard effects or plan to run it through a multi-channel audio interface. There are three trigger outputs that draw trigger pulses from the cowbell, accent, and one of the other sounds; I can’t remember the third. I can confirm that the trigger output will drive the Korg Volca units. I have run my RD-8 in parallel with a Volca Sample and a simple every-other-note pattern keeps the Volca Sample in time.

    The RD-8 adds a bunch of features to the 808. There’s a built-in switchable low-pass / high-pass resonant filter, which can be sequenced, plus a compressor, which you have to tweak manually. They can be assigned to individual parts although sadly the effects aren’t applied to the individual outputs. Presumably Behringer expects you to use outboard effects instead. The filter is perfect for cheesy late-1990s house build-ups.

    There are random and probability-based sequencing modes plus a polyrhythm feature that lets you shave beats from individual parts, so that e.g. the hi-hats loop every sixteen steps but the kick drum loops every fourteen steps. After playing around with this a bit I determined that it was good for rolling, jazzy fills. The sequencer transmits over standard MIDI and also USB-MIDI and unlike the Korg Volcas it has a rational arrangement whereby it uses one channel and spreads the notes over the keyboard, so there’s nothing to stop you using the probability and polyrhythm sequencing to drive other drum machines.

    You can set each pattern to be up to 64 steps, in which case the sixteen buttons on the front panel act as a sixteen-button window into the complete sequence. You can also set the step duration down to 1/32, so it’s relatively simple to make ticky-ticky hi-hat trills. There’s also a dedicated note repeat function that does much the same thing albeit that it involves diving into the menus.

    Interface-wise basic sequencing is easy once you remember to hit the record button; saving and copying patterns is surprisingly awkward (it involves alternating between the PATTERN and SAVE buttons a couple of times) but copying the first sixteen steps of a 32-step pattern to the second sixteen steps is easy, so perhaps the designer had an off day.

    In summary at the very least the RD-8 has a bunch of easily-tweakable 808 sounds and at best it’s a surprisingly complex rhythm creation machine that can drive other drum machines via MIDI, or audio clock and trigger out. The sonic character of the 808 is very distinctive, so if you use it all the time it will be fatiguing, but as with Behringer’s Model D Minimoog clone it pairs well with e.g. one of the Volca drum machines or a DAW, as a source of analogue sounds.

    An updated clone of the TR-808