Head to head

RODECaster Pro vs Universal Audio Volt 1

A side-by-side look at RODECaster Pro and Universal Audio Volt 1 for podcasters: pricing, features, and where each one wins.

RODECaster Pro

The original all-in-one podcast console that redefined the category

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Universal Audio Volt 1

One channel of UA preamp character for solo creators

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Check price on Amazon

At a glance

RODECaster ProUniversal Audio Volt 1
Starting priceSee siteSee site
Free planNoNo
Free trialNoNo
Best forFour-person in-studio podcast productions that want a purpose-built console with independent headphone mixes for every guestSolo podcasters or vocalists who want UA preamp coloring and iOS compatibility in the smallest possible form factor

Key features

RODECaster Pro

  • 4 XLR mic inputs with Class A preamps and individual 48V phantom power
  • 4 independent headphone outputs with mix-minus
  • 8 programmable sound pads with 8 banks (64 total clips)
  • APHEX Aural Exciter, Big Bottom, compressor, noise gate, de-esser per channel
  • Bluetooth phone integration with automatic mix-minus
  • USB audio interface and microSD multitrack recording

Universal Audio Volt 1

  • 24-bit / 192 kHz converters
  • Vintage mic preamp mode (610 tube circuit-inspired)
  • USB 2.0 class-compliant, iOS compatible
  • 1 XLR/TRS/Hi-Z combo input with 48V phantom power
  • 1-in / 2-out signal path
  • Bus powered, compact desktop form factor

Pros and cons

RODECaster Pro

Pros

  • Four XLR inputs and four headphone outputs - full panel show in one device
  • Sound pads are production-ready without additional hardware
  • APHEX processing per channel included
  • Established ecosystem with deep tutorial and user community resources

Cons

  • Original preamps lack the gain of the Pro II Revolution design
  • Firmware updates have ended - the platform is mature, not evolving
  • RODECaster Pro II is the current model and the better long-term buy

Universal Audio Volt 1

Pros

  • Vintage mode analog character in a single-input box
  • Class-compliant iOS and Mac/Windows support
  • Extremely compact and bus-powered
  • Good headphone output for monitoring

Cons

  • Single input only - no co-host capability
  • USB 2.0, not USB-C
  • No MIDI I/O

The verdict

Choose RODECaster Pro if

Four-person in-studio podcast productions that want a purpose-built console with independent headphone mixes for every guest.

The original RODECaster Pro defined a product category. Four XLR inputs with individual phantom power and APHEX processing, four headphone outputs with independent mix-minus, eight sound pads for music and effects - everything a panel podcast needs in one device.…

Read the full RODECaster Pro review →

Choose Universal Audio Volt 1 if

Solo podcasters or vocalists who want UA preamp coloring and iOS compatibility in the smallest possible form factor.

If you're recording alone - one voice, one microphone - the Volt 1 covers the job with a preamp pedigree that most interfaces at this size can't match. The Vintage mode is the same 610-inspired circuit as the Volt 2.…

Read the full Universal Audio Volt 1 review →

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