Behringer EQ700
Ultimate Graphic 7-band Equalizer

Latest User Reviews
Decent Eq but sucks the tone out of my acoustic
For the price itâs a great pedal but you should expect your tone to feel a bit duller when you turn the pedal on with a flat eq setting. This. An be compensated but itâs not a transparent pedal.
Affordable and Functional Sound Shaping Tool
PROS
- When it comes to fulfilling its role as an equalizer, the EQ700 proves to be dependable.
- With each fader at 0, there is no loss of volume and no change in the sound of the guitar
- The plastic case seems robust enough
CONS
- One noticeable downside is the switch, which emits a less-than-reassuring click when engaged and feels somewhat cheap. While this might not impact its core functionality, it does affect the overall user experience.
- A minor but helpful addition would be a reference notch indicating when the faders are set at the neutral position (0).
- If intended for regular stomping during live performances, the EQ700 might raise reservations due to its plastic knobs and switch. However, if used primarily as an "always on" pedal, these concerns might not be as relevant.
It's an eq, what can I say
Very similar to the Boss GE7. The only downsides i can find is that there is no "notch" for the sliders at 0 dB like on the Boss, and the case is plastic. But for the price it'll do the job pretty darn well.
A very servicable EQ pedal
First off, this pedal does exactly what it says on the tin and im very happy with it for my studio use. The only thing letting this pedal down is its build quality. Its cheap plastic but you already know that.
I needed a cheap EQ pedal for studio use and this is it. I didnt need to play extra for a metal housing because i didnt need it. If you are planning to tour with this thing then maybe look somewhere else
Decent EQ
This pedal is very good value. It opens up a very wide range of tones and also acts as a great volume boost in front of your amp. I was able to get a much clearer tone out of my humbucking pick-ups and punch and definition to fuzz and overdrive pedals which I learned a lot from.
Good price, flimsy buttons.
I like the frequency band setup, but the buttons feel flimsy. I use it for gigging, connected in FX loop and it gets the job done for me.
Works great, but mind your gain staging
Good value for money, a little lacking in headroom. If you're running it further down the effects chain, I'd advise cutting over boosting. Plastic case wont take a kicking - don't kick it.
Good value quality/price
It is a little bit noisy, but just a little. Useless for recording, just OK for guitar, really handy when it comes to EQ a mic and rise their signal or a stompbox; something like that.
Great deal for the money. Dont let you cheat about the plastic cover, the thing is durable, even if you stomp on it like hell (I do and after 3 years still like new.
Can't better!
Very good!
For this amount, you can't find better EQ on market.
Plastic but still fantastic
This isn't a super durable design (all plastic) and doesn't feel the best to use.
HOWEVER
This is the cheapest 'real' EQ pedal that just works a charm, in the best way possible it has no 'sound' and just allows you to shape the tone how you like. I can't recommend it highly enough, the only thing is that if you are travelling a lot then you might want a more expensive one with a metal enclosure (that's probably double the price) just for the peace of mind.
Technical Data
- Manufactured by Behringer
- Released in 2005
- Average price : $30
- Floor / foot pedal
- 7 EQ tapes to refine your sound and remove feedback
- Wide frequency response from 100 Hz to 6.4 kHz with generous 15 dB boost / cut
- Status LED for effect activation and battery check
- Operation via 9-volt battery or Behringer PSU-SB DC power adapter (not included)
- Electronic on / off switch for silent switching
You may also like
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%
2023 100%