6/4/2019
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Details about Behringer UCA202 U-Control 2in/2 out USB/Audio Interface w/ Digital Output. Authorized USA Dealer - 3 Year Warranty. 4.6 average based on 97 product ratings. First of all I recommend installing the native Behringer drivers for this device, because they will give you improved sound and proper.

  1. Behringer Uca200 Driver Windows 10
  2. Behringer Uca202 Driver Windows 10
DriverDriver
  1. 9 seconds) I can't find the drivers for my U-control UCA200 USB soundcard. I found them before on one of Behringer's sites can anyone help?
  2. Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Behringer U-Control UCA222. Good for the price, but in windows 10 you need to install line-in drivers (ask.

Behringer Uca200 Driver Windows 10

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Behringer Uca202 Driver Windows 10

Rated 4 out of 5 by Anonymous from Very Useful Tool - Does What It ClaimsI have a lot of audio interfaces, all nominally better than this one. I purchased it for a specific purpose - to use for making acoustic measurements with an older laptop computer that I keep in my shop. I needed a stereo line level interface that worked with RightMark Audio Analyzer @ and a few other measurement programs that I had, and that I could tuck out of the way rather than haul out a rack mount box. Given what I was measuring, I didn't need ultra low noise or distortion. The laptop's built-in audio interface worked, but it was only mic level and mono. The UCA-202 looked like it would work for me and the price was right, so I gave it a try.Like it says, you just plug it in. Windows XP (I don't have any Vista machines) recognized it, set up a driver, and that was it. It records, it plays, and it gets out of the way when it's unplugged. It does use a pretty low nominal operating level, I guess what would colloquially be called minus ten. More precisely, +8 dBu in gives a full scale (0 dBFS) digital level. This is typical of a lot of portable devices (such as pocket flash memory recorders) these days, so I have a set of 15 dB in-line pads that I can use with it when I'm working with professional gear that I want to run at a higher operating level. Since I don't use it for straightforward recording applications, I don't have need for the monitor switch and headphone jack, but they're convenient features if you're recording your voice or an instrument and want to hear yourself through headphones. Having a direct, switchable signal path from input to output means you don't have to monitor through the computer, with its inherent latency (delay). I did initially get into trouble because of that monitor switch, though. RightMark works by generating a test signal, sending it through the device you're testing, and then recording what comes back from the device. When I first tried it with RightMark, I inadvertently had the monitor switch on, and the program got confused when hearing its output directly. It went into a feedback condition which made it very difficult to set the level properly and gave erroneous measurement results. Once I recognized what was happening and switched off the monitor, all was well.The interchannel crosstalk could be a little better, but it's fine for stereo recording or transferring vinyl records (which have even more crosstalk). Those are really my only quibbles. It would be nice if it was in a metal case, had 1/4 phone jacks or XLR connectors, and ran at 24 bits and 96 kHz sample rate, but heck, it's only $, and it outperforms built-in sound cards that I have in any of my computers. Before I had the UCA202, I helped a friend set up a workstation for transferring his large record and tape connection to digital format. He was using a laptop computer that he carried between his house to his work studio (an outbuilding) and was always getting the audio input and output cables mixed up when plugging them into the computer. I brought over the UCA202 to show him, and he bought one straight away. He liked that he only had to plug in one cable between the audio system and the laptop computer. This might not seem like a big deal to someone who understands computers and audio, but to this musician/folklorist, $ was a small investment to save him from head-scratching.USB turntables are popular among folks who want to digitize vinyl, but if you already have a turntable and receiver with a phono preamp (or pick one up at a yard sale), the UCA202 is a good alternative. My friend is using Spin It Again @ and it works just fine.For general purpose non-critical audio work, this is a fine product. It's so simple, it'll probably still work long after it outgrows its usefulness.