To turn off power you have to unplug the power adapter from the power input jack located on the pedal itself; this is the standard way to turn off power on most pedals. What I do is plug these types of pedals into a power strip that has a switch on it.
The Lekato is really only comparable to the Boss RC1. They’re both simple single switch pedals. The boss doesn’t have a built in tuner, and only 12 minutes of recording time. The boss does have stereo ins and outs though. If you need that for your setup the Lekato doesn’t have that. It’s designed for a mono source like a guitar combo amp etc. The Lekato is about $40 cheaper
Nice playin' man! Love the Lekato - might have to get one!
Thanks 🙏 absolutely 👍🏻 if you have the means, pick one up
i wish i had run across you channel before I bought my legato at
Nice no nonsense video.
Oh dang…yeah that’s bad timing huh
Thanks for the review, very helpful 👍
Glad it was helpful!
Great video! When not in use how do you shut it off?
To turn off power you have to unplug the power adapter from the power input jack located on the pedal itself; this is the standard way to turn off power on most pedals. What I do is plug these types of pedals into a power strip that has a switch on it.
@kjzmusic Thanks bud!
How would I connect this pedal to a Linux PC. I tried and a u appeared on the pedal but I couldn't find the device on the pc.
you might need to check your USB settings, update the pedal's firmware, or try installing specific drivers for your Linux system
How does this compare with the Boss rc loop pedals? Any significant differences?
The Lekato is really only comparable to the Boss RC1. They’re both simple single switch pedals. The boss doesn’t have a built in tuner, and only 12 minutes of recording time. The boss does have stereo ins and outs though. If you need that for your setup the Lekato doesn’t have that. It’s designed for a mono source like a guitar combo amp etc. The Lekato is about $40 cheaper