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🎧 Elevate your sound game—pro audio quality in a pocket-sized powerhouse!
The Behringer UCA202 U-Control is a compact, ultra-low latency 2 In/2 Out USB audio interface designed for seamless analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog conversion. Featuring 48 kHz high-resolution converters, USB bus power, and plug-and-play compatibility with PC and Mac, it enables professional-quality recording and playback without complicated setup. Its versatile RCA and optical outputs plus dedicated headphone monitoring make it ideal for digitizing vinyl, recording instruments, or enhancing laptop audio with studio-grade fidelity—all at an unbeatable value.





| ASIN | B000KW2YEI |
| Audio Input | RCA |
| Best Sellers Rank | 171 in Musical Instruments & DJ ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments & DJ ) 1 in Digital Converters 11 in MIDI Controller |
| Brand | Behringer |
| Brand Name | Behringer |
| Compatible Devices | Devices with USB port |
| Compatible devices | Devices with USB port |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Connectivity technology | USB |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 3,874 Reviews |
| Frequency Response | 48 KHz |
| Frequency response | 48 KHz |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00689076269360, 04033653030465 |
| Included Components | Camera body |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 18.8D x 14.5W x 3.8H centimetres |
| Item Type Name | Interface |
| Item Weight | 0.22 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Behringer |
| Manufacturer Part Number | UCA202 |
| Maximum Sample Rate | 48 KHz |
| Model Number | UCA202 |
| Number of Channels | 2 |
| Number of channels | 2 |
| Operating System | Windows、MacOS |
| Product Warranty | 3 year manufacturer. |
| Supported Software | Windows, Mac OS X and Linux |
| Supported software | Windows, Mac OS X and Linux |
| UPC | 689076269360 689076361262 616268701988 723856175158 758399116054 989898856459 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
G**S
The Behringer UCA202 U Control simply gives great performance for the money
PS - 28 April 2014. In some of the reviews that I have read some of the correspondents have reported difficulty getting the Behringer UCA202 U Control to record in stereo and some are having difficulty adjusting the volume levels. Sometimes you have to adjust the sound settings in the control panel on a laptop or PC. You have to tell your computer to record in two channels instead of one for stereo. Go into the sounds window and select " Microphone 2 USB codec" with the device plugged in to a USB connexion. Select recording and advanced and set the device to 2 channel CD quality. I use Audacity software. You need to check that Audacity is recording in two channels for stereo recording rather than one channel for mono. You go into "Preferences" which is in the "Edit" menu and then set the USB recording device to stereo in the recording box. If you are having problems setting up the recording volumes then Audacity can be adjusted with the microphone slider which is on the tool bar. This works fine for me with a line level output from my amplifier - I do not use the phono pre-amp from my turntable kit when I record an LP or single. If this fails (or where you do not have a line output from your amp) you could try the headphone output which is usually located on the front of the amplifier. If you turn the amplifier volume control right down then it will attenuate the output level. Using a combination of the Audacity microphone slider and the headphone output you should be able to adjust the volume of the recording level to make sure the recording is loud enough but does not distort. In the view menu you can set Audacity to "show" clipping" . This will display a vertical red line on sections of the recording where the volume levels are too high and therefore the music will sound distorted - this is a very useful tool. I have never used a MAC PC but I would think that it has similar methods of controlling whether you record in stereo or not by using a sound control feature. I would guess that other types of recording software similar to Audacity need to be set up to record and playback in stereo or mono according to your choice. If the above does not work then you are faced with the possibility that some of your equipment is not working correctly from a physical point of view. You could check the connections have been fitted correctly or use alternative equipment to find out what has gone wrong. When set up correctly this product works really well; I am sure you will not be disappointed. Main text: I bought this brilliant device to "digitise" old LPs, which I buy in second hand shops, and archive old audio cassettes before they self destruct. I read all the reviews and I agree with most of them and decided to buy it even though it is of flimsy construction. It is not going to be used very often and I am careful with equipment so it should last years. It literally took me ten minutes to plug it into the line outputs of my amplifier and connect the device to a laptop, then cue up a Beatles 45 and digitise it with Audacity. Audacity is brilliant in my opinion and there is plenty of help text and Wikipedia information to get you going. I deleted the the Beatles 45 file as I just used it to test the recording levels. Next up was a Shadows LP "Rock on with the Shadows in Mono". Yes, you can buy this on CD but sometimes I like to play an ageing LP for old time's sake. I was pleasantly surprised with the results. I did not use Audacity to remove any surface noise from the record or clicks or pops; Hank's twanging drowns them out anyway. I played the digital recording back through the same amplifier and neither my wife nor I could hear any difference from the original: it sounded the same warts and all. At the end of the "first side" I felt compelled to jump up and turn the laptop er, record over. What more can I say about the sound quality? This was great stuff - the Shadows back in their 1960's glory, and you cannot damage the needle when you jive. One of the reviewers has complained about the the inability of the analogue converter to sample at 24 bit 96 KHz (24/96) as it is limited to 16 bit 48 KHz. This might affect you if you are mastering music and you want to keep the noise floor down when mixing lots of "takes". So, I take the point. For me, digitising old recordings at 16/44.1 or at red book CD standard is good enough. I fail to see how using a 24/96 sampling rate could improve the sound quality as I am only doing one "take". If you are only going to use this converter to digitise your records you can save yourself money and some disk space by buying this device. I have got plenty of external DACs, so I do not need to use this device for playback from a laptop or PC but I tested it just the same. The Toslink optical output works really well and so do the line outputs. The headphone amplifier is not so good but it is sufficient for my purposes. If you are on the road this device will probably perform better than your laptop's sound card or headphone output. The Behringer does not perform as well as the rinky dink DAC that I have got in my main HI-FI and I could not expect it to. But, it performs well compared to my other portable DACs. There is no Toslink input facility. Pros :- You can use a laptop for line output sources. You no longer have to use the line inputs of a desktop PC. You can connect it to a USB port on the front rather than fiddle about with connecting line outputs to the input connexions on the back of the PC. This is especially useful if your kit is under a desk. You can take your laptop to your HI-FI equipment rather than the other way round. There is no need to unplug your turntable or cassette player etc. and then plug it all back in again. It is small, very portable and very versatile - an ADC and DAC in one box! Cons: None really unless you are going to subject the device to hard and continuous use. In conclusion: Five stars for sonic performance and overall convenience; it is simply brilliant . But, it gets only three stars for build quality. The USB deck can now be given away.
J**G
Excellent external sound card for laptops
I bought this to act as an external sound card/digital-to-analogue-converter (DAC) to improve the sound output from a laptop. I have found it to be absolutely excellent and remarkable value for money! Without this device sound output from laptops tends to be very flat with no dynamic range (e.g. an audible difference between quiet and loud sounds). Music lacks depth and feeling. However, as soon as you plug in this device the sound output from the computer is transformed: it goes from being 2D to 3D; from car stereo to hi-fi: the difference in quality is remarkable! The device is about the size of a cassette, and has both RCA outputs (to connect to a hi-fi) and a headphone output. You simply plug it into the USB port on you computer... plug some output cables into the device.... and it just works! There is no annoying software to install, and it works on PCs and Macs (I use both) Sometimes you may need to go into control panel/audio devices and select the 'USB Audio Codec' to activate it, but it really is straightforward. (The device also has audio inputs for recording instruments, but I haven't used it in that function so can't comment on performance.) For the price it's performance is fantastic. I even gave one to my boss as a present and he absolutely loves it too! Compared to more expensive devices I expect a 90/10 rule applies - this device gives you 90% of the performance for 10% of the price. If you listen to music through your laptop/computer through headphones or a hi-fi and value good sound quality, I highly recommend this device! Advantages: - Excellent performance for the price - Transforms sound quality from laptops - Small size - Easy to use - No annoying software - Works on Macs and PCs Disadvantages: - Low price won't impress hi-fi snob friends
M**O
Good for the money but not quite perfect.
I have come back to PC music production after a while away and realised that Realtek chipsets on most motherboards, although better than they used to be,can't quite cut it, particularly in the latency department. I was loathed to spend £50+ on a proper pro sound card while I was tentatively returning to this hobby so this Behringer UCA202 seemed perfect. It arrived on time and well packed and straight out of the box its smaller than I expected, about the size of a cigarette packet. I plugged mine in a proper USB port (not a hub) and immediately installed and worked (Windows 8.1 and 10), no issues. A little light on the top tells you its on and you get the glow from the optical out too. I fed my 10 channel WharfdalePro mixer into it and connected it to the line in on my Logitech Z speakers. Not exactly a pro setup but entry level music making kit. I tested it with Cakewalk and Ableton and there was a noticeable improvement in latency when feeding stuff in and through the PC i.e. guitar and mic effects etc. Not 0 latency, in fact on my set-up probably still 10-20ms, I used the ASIO4ALL drivers which have mixed success with most people but they reported something like 11ms via Cakewalk. Previously I could achieve similar latency with my Realtek card but it would become unstable and break up and need resetting every 20mins. This didn't happen with the Behringer, it works flawlessly for hours on end and basically it does what I bought it for. Furthermore there's a little switch for monitoring directly so if you just want to echo the in to the out with 0 latency, you can do that but clearly it won't be going though any effects etc on the PC. I also played music from Google Play though the unit and I the is a noticeable improvement in clarity, so much so that I can actually hear stuff in the songs that I hadn't heard before and that is usually the mark of an great audio equipment. I listened through my Logitech speakers and some mid range over ear Sony headphones and in both cases the music was balanced and defined. If you're buying this only for music playback and don't care about music production, as most people will, its worth it for that alone. OK, so why the four stars...Well, I used this on headphones and it was superb, when I connected the line out to the Z speakers there was a noticeable whine, digital interference whine that alters when you move the mouse pointer or change stuff on the screen. That is very far from pro audio or high quality, it doesn't happen on my built in Realtek where I would expect more interference. Now this COULD be the crap cable I used or the positioning, I haven't tested it on ANYTHING else yet. I plan to test it on my proper AV unit in the lounge so I will report back if I notice any difference.
R**C
(1) As a cheap and really pretty decent USB DAC to play music at a decent ...
I am writing this review from the perspective of someone using it for some functionality in a domestic digital hifi system. This is a flexible piece of kit. Online reviews have identified to me that, apart from its professional recording/musician applications, it also has domestic hifi uses. (1) As a cheap and really pretty decent USB DAC to play music at a decent quality from your PC to your hifi (I haven't used this here) and (2) in order to provide an SPDIF TOSLINK optical digital output from a normal PC to go into another higher quality DAC. Online reviews have said this unit punches well above its weight in both these categories and has good analogue output measurements as well as lowish jitter in the digital domain. This apparently is because the manufacturer has bulk-bought a decent all in one chip that interfaces to USB and generates both a digital stream from this aswell as an analogue, and to boot the manufacturer has also implemented this all in one chip very expertly. So, what do I use it for? In my kitchen hifi I have a combined DAC/integrated amp powering bookshelf speakers. But the amp only takes SPDIF digital inputs and not USB direct from a PC. So I got this lovely little Behringer device which installs in win7 very easily as a soundcard (probably better to get their own drivers but windows does find some generic ones for you). In its properties in control panel in windows you have the choice to output 48khz or 44khz sample rate. I have run it at 44khz as I have been listening to 44khz redbook CD rips. What can I say it appears to correctly pass through an undamaged digital signal to my DAC/amp and it all sounds very nice indeed, like proper lossless digital audio, no hints of jitter or artefacts or any jiggery pokery with the digital material. I totally ignore the analogue inputs and outputs on this little device. It may be made of plastic but who cares, it does a low key but highly appreciated job at a very low price. If you need a USB->SPDIF soundcard/digital format converter for a PC, assuming you can live with the limited sample rates (44 and 48 khz) then I can's see how you would want to look much further than this for most day to day domestic audio uses.
W**R
Works great for cassette transfer!
Bought this for transferring tapes to digital format, worked great with audacity software, really happy with the results, simple to use, good value !
N**S
great all year round device - great sound in a budget
this is a 16bit/44Khz device... some may say "Nahh, this is too old by today standards, not 24 bit, not 192Khz" etc... Well, depends on the case. if you are not a professional musician and you want to do some sound work without breaking the budget then this is something you will not regret buying. If you open it inside you may think that you are ripped off because it has so few components. But the quality you get does not match the appearances... Connected it to my HIFI without any input and there is 0 hissing or noise. recorded with nothing at the input and there is also no noise. This device is really very quite, so it will not degrade whatever work you want to do..I have not observed any distortion or issues. The frequency response also implies that it does not ad any colour to the reproduced sound. I have been using it connected to my HIFI and listen to music from my laptop. i also have a BT adapter that sounds great but AB testing shows that this one sounds much better . I have used it to listen vinyl rips from Youtube and the result is still breath taking (given that a vinyl rip was uploaded to Youtube, it was compressed and then played back through this - but the vinyl rip is from AudioPhill - if you know what that means). Overall, a great all around device. Do not underestimate the quality of the 16bit/44Khz
O**E
Great for the price
I have one of these to connect the output from an old Behringer mixer into my laptop for Skype piano lessons. I've updated this review and changed the rating from 4 to 5 stars. The inputs into the mixer are an electric stage piano, a microphone and maybe a metronome, mp3 player etc if required. I can also connect up Bandlab which I have on the same laptop if i wish to either record or jam to drum loops etc. The audio output can't feed my 600 Ohm Beyer Dynamic headphones very successfully (which isn't a problem as you can't really expect it to) so i feed into into a separate mains powered headphone amp. It's okay with lower impedance headphones such as my 32 ohm Grados. I'd originally thought that this coloured the sound of my piano quite badly, but after a while figured that this was due to a wiring issue with the mixer which is why I've updated the review. Now it's fixed the sound quality is very good. Probably not up there with the much more expensive boutique or specialist type stuff (which I have owned) , but good enough for day to day use. I also like that it was very easy to set up, I don't remember having to upload any drivers etc and don't think that I've even seen it since that day as and I have it mounted with velcro underneath a desk behind my piano and it never needs any attention. I've never tried using it in my regular hifi, but reckon I'll have to give it a try sometime to see how it compares in a proper set up. If you're looking for a cheap DAC then give it a try.
L**T
Much better than expected
I have to admit I was not expecting very much from this piece of kit - given the price compared to other DACs on the market. What I found however was that this is a superb little gizmo that makes a crucial difference to my audio setup way beyond its price tag. My need was for a way to connect a laptop with 160GBytes of MP3 and FLAC files to an amplifier/hifi. The old way - using 3.5mm jacks and lead from a headphone socket - was proving lifeless, noisy and prone to cutting out. I plugged in the Behringer and waited only moments for the gizmo to install. Within a minute I had connected phono leads to the amp and was ready. One tweak to the driver used for output from MusicBee and all was done. The sound output was clear, full, wide and rich compared to the flat sound from the headphone socket. There was far less noise (and most of that was later traced to the transformer in the docking station of my Dell laptop). The amplifier used is a Cambridge Audio Topaz AM10 - known for showing up less-than-perfect input devices. The reason I got the Behringer over any other model was the presence of inputs as well as outputs. Not so happy here at first as USB audio drivers do not have input volume control - and clipping was present most of the time. In the end I used an old cassette deck paused in Record mode as a volume control, and the result was frankly stunning! I can now record vinyl without using one of those terrible USB turntables. You might need to source some attenuators if you don't have old hardware laying about. This device gets my full approval. For the money it is amazing, and if you are toying with the idea of trying a DAC then this has a lot to recommend it. With it my laptop has just become a legitimate 'audio separate'! 5 out of 5.
B**Y
Great usb audio interface
I had this item in my wishlist for a long time and finally bought it. Totally worth its price. I use it with Audio Technica M20x monitor headphones and it's a very good combination.
L**Y
Superb portability, instant recording on the go from a laptop, clean
review: Ultra-Low Latency 2 In/2 Out USB/Audio Interface with Digital Output Got this to do a quick and simple job recording vinyls to my laptop. Stereo L/R recording works. sample rate 48khz at 16bit res. Auto detected driver from win10. Matched it with free software Audacity. Initially had trouble recording stereo -- kept recording in mono. Ended up being windows not audacity . The trick for me was to CLOSE software (audacity) then open windows Sound manager -> Recording -> Mic properties -> Advanced -> pick a TWO CHANNEL recording format mode. For some strange reason when the driver auto installed, it picked ONE CHANNEL MONO recording only. And no matter what i did in Audacity, it would only record MONO. This trick allowed me to record in independent L / R channels. I was about to return this product as a defect until i realised this wasnt setup properly by default. Anyway, a few things about this product 1. nice clean simply recording -- i have no complaints. I wouldnt call this the most cleaning audio interface (like my steinberg box) but for the size and portability, its darn good. 2. headphone direct monitoring with no latency -- nice that it has this switch. very handy when youre trying to monitor the recording. 3. Also used as a DAC so you can OUtPUT to the audio interface to send the audio to external amp (via output RCA ) or just headphones from the unit 4. Headphone DAC has a small dial to control volume of headphone monitoring (nice!) for the price, portability, and function, this cannot be beat.
K**U
La perfecta navaja multiusos
Interfaz sencillo, de buen precio, pero potente en prestaciones. -Sampling de 48khz, superior a CD -Gran potencia de salida, bastante mas alta que una Focusrite. y menos ruido. -Entrada de linea para grabar de una fuente analógica. -Minijack para monitoreo con auriculares -No necesita drivers, ¡PLUG'N PLAY total! -¡Funciona hasta en mi telefono android! También en Raspberry y Linux -No pesa ni ocupa nada -Salida optica (Toslink) de regalo No puede falta en cualquier caja de herramientas.
C**K
Top little unit that works well other than windows like to default it to mono
It's a great little unit, sounds good and does the job it's designed for real well. It you are using it on windows, just check you sound settings for the device as microsoft seems to have decided that a stereo device should be set to mono as it's default, which is real weird as windows knows & tells you it's a stereo microphone but still decides to remix it down to mono if you don't change you sound settings. Other than the windows issues, I've had no problem with the hardware, it's been plugged and unplugged lots of times without an issues. I would happy by any of the Behringer 202 range again.
D**E
hervorragend
mit diesem audio interface können audiosignale ohne Verluste der Qualität und ohne Störungen über den USB-Anschluss auf den PC gebracht werden, der nicht über einen Audioeingang verfügt. Erkennung und Installation des Gerätes verlaufen problemlos und schnell im Hintergrund. Die Nutzung ist selbsterklärend. Alle Anschlüsse wirken hochwertig und verhalten sich auch so. absolute Kaufempfehlung
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