Controls
- Model Switch
- Switching this reconfigures the virtual circuitry inside Echo Park. You get three of the most desired delay sounds on the planet.
- Tape - This gives you darker tone with each repeat just like a vintage tape-based echo. And you never have to change tapes!
- Digital - This gives you straight up echoes, with crystal clear digital fidelity.
- Analog - Designed to give you a vintage analog “bucket brigade†delay sound, with its classic warmth and warble.
- Trails Switch
- Set this on to keep Echo Park’s processing engaged while in bypass, so your echoes smoothly trail away when you kick the effect off.
- Mix
- Turn the knob up (clockwise) for louder echoes, or down for quieter ones.
- Repeat
- You get 1 repeat at the minimum setting, and infinite repeats that swirl around when the knob is all the way up.
- Time
- This knob gives you a range of spacings for your echoes from 53 milliseconds (close together) through 2.2 seconds (way far apart). You can use Tap Tempo to reach Echo Park’s maximum time of 2.5 seconds.
- Mod
- Turn this knob up to get some delicious stereo modulation on your echoes. Each model has its own type of stereo modulation:
- Analog has Vibrato
- Digital has Chorus
- Tape has Wow & Flutter
- Function Control Knob
- Normal - your taps are treated as quarter notes, so you hear your echoes coming back at the same speed you tapped the footswitch.
- Tap eighth note triplet - This setting lets you tap quarter notes, while the echoes come back doing 8th note triplets. Sweet!
- Tap dotted eighth note - You tap quarter notes, your echoes come back as dotted 8th notes.
- Slap - This is the place for a speedy slap back echo. The Time knob’s range is automagically changed to be 10 to 150 milliseconds. You can Tap Tempo quarter notes, and get 16th note echoes.
- Swell - This adds an auto volume swell along with your echoes. Dreamy.
- Sweep - Add this sweeping filter to the feedback loop of your echoes and you’ll be glad you did!
- Ducking - The volume of your echoes is “ducked†(reduced) while you’re playing, and increases when you stop. This is handy to avoid mud-tone.
- Multi 1 - Uses multiple delay “taps†to give you a rhythmic pattern of echoes.
- Multi 2 - Another multi-tap rhythmic variation.
- Ping Pong - Alternating left and right taps
- Reverse - Just like the backwards tape tricks on our favorite albums, this flips your input signal around and sends it back to you in reverse. Use it live, and folks are sure to be impressed.
- Tap Tempo
- Put your foot to work and get your echoes in the groove! Using the innovative ToneCoreâ„¢ double-action footswitch, you can tap a couple times and have your echoes match your tempo. Whether the effect is active or bypassed, you can tap the footswitch lightly to set delay time. Your first two taps establish the tempo and any additional taps will be averaged in.
Any time the Tap Tempo switch is used to alter the delay, the tapped value overrides the current setting of the Time knob. Whenever the Time knob is turned, it overrides the last value entered with the Tap Tempo switch. Echo Park’s indicator light flashes the tempo in green when the effect is ON and amber when the effect is OFF.
Information
Line 6
Based on the award-winning DL4 Delay Modeler, Echo Park is loaded with unbelievable sounding models including Analog, Tape, and Digital Delay. Different delay patterns such as slap, ping pong, swell, and sweep can be adjusted with the twist of a knob, and the Mod dial can be tweaked for even more variations. Also features Tap Tempo and stereo ins and outs.
Video
(2007-10-26) CHATREEO TEST LINE6 ECHO PARK DELAY EFFECT by Chatreeo
(2007-10-26) Line 6 Echo Park Demo I by ShortScale.org Gear Demos
(2007-10-26) Line 6 Echo Park Demo II by ShortScale.org Gear Demos
(2007-10-26) Line 6 Echo Park Demo I by MadeByMike
(2007-10-26) Line 6 Echo Park Demo II by MadeByMike
(2008-10-28) line 6 echo park demo by whrock
(2012-07-21) Line 6 Echo Park by Shnobel Tone
(2012-07-22) line 6 Echo Park vs Line 6 DL4 by Shnobel Tone
(2012-07-23) Line 6 Echo Park vs Echo Pro by Shnobel Tone
(2012-07-24) Line 6 Echo Park vs Tc Electronic Flashback by Shnobel Tone
(2012-07-24) Boss DD-20 vs Line 6 Echo Park by Shnobel Tone
(2012-07-25) Eventide Timefactor vs Line 6 Echo Park by Shnobel Tone
(2012-07-25) Line 6 Echo Park vs Tc Electronic 2290 by Shnobel Tone
(2015-09-17) Line 6 Echo Park Delay by reverbmarket
(2018-01-08) Line 6 Echo Park & Boss Tera Echo | Pedal Friends 3 by Pedal Friends
(2018-02-21) Delay Blind Comparison: Line 6 Echo Park vs. Electro Harmonix Deluxe Memory Man by Delay Dude
(2018-06-27) Electro Harmonix Deluxe Memory Man vs. Line 6 Echo Park - Delay Comparison by Delay Dude
(2018-11-14) Blind Digital Delay Comparison: Line 6 Echo Park vs. Akai Headrush by Delay Dude
(2021-01-12) Line6 Echo Park vs. Ibanez DE7 by Delay Dude
(2021-02-03) Akai Headrush vs. Line6 Echo Park by Delay Dude
Reviews
myFXDB user reviews
2 reviews, average score of
| Date | User | Version | Score | Positive | Negative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014-06-22 | deathlessramz | 9/10 | ... | ... |
Specifications
- Time knob ranges:
- Normal = 53ms to 2235ms
8th-note triplet = 18ms to 745ms
8th-note dotted = 40ms to 1676ms
Slap = 10ms to 150ms- Tap Tempo ranges:
- Normal = 40ms to 2500ms
8th-note triplet = 13ms to 833ms
8th-note dotted = 30ms to 1875ms
Slap = 10ms to 625ms- Power Requirements
- Single 9-Volt Battery, or Line 6 DC-1 9-Volt DC Power Supply
- Size
- 3.375" (W) x Depth 5.625" (D) x 2.875" (H)
- Weight
- 2lbs 4oz

