This review was carried out by our friend, engineer and producer Shelby Logan Warne at her studio Sensible Music in King’s Cross, London. Shelby set up a controlled shootout to really hear how different 1176 units behave when pushed hard and when used more subtly. Same performance, same signal path, identical gain reduction — the only variable was which 1176 was in circuit. The results proved just how individual these compressors are, even when they share the same model name.
The performance featured Leoni Jane Kennedy, a Blackpool-born, London-based singer-songwriter and guitarist. Her song “Ammunition” was chosen for the session, delivered live on voice and acoustic guitar. With a soulful voice and intricate guitar style, Leoni is an accomplished artist whose playing and singing gave the compressors plenty of dynamic material to chew on.
If you have used an 1176, you already know the cliché, no two units sound the same. We put that to the test with six flavours side by side, from vintage UREI silverface and blackface units to modern Warm Audio recreations and a DIY Hairball. Same performance, same signal path, matched gain reduction, then both “smashed” and “sensible” settings. The differences were not subtle.
The Line-up
- UREI 1176LN Rev H (Silverface)
- UREI 1176LN Rev G
- Warm Audio WA76-A (Blue Stripe)
- Warm Audio WA76-D2
- Warm Audio WA76
- Hairball Audio 1176 Rev A (Blue Stripe)
Session Setup
- Source: “Ammunition” performed live by Leoni Jane Kennedy, singing and playing acoustic guitar
- Mics: A body-mounted acoustic mic aimed near the 12th fret, plus a Warm Audio WA8000 on vocal
- Preamp and routing: SSL console channels for clean, transformerless gain, guitar on channel 2, vocal on channel 3, summed to channel 4 for a single feed
- Dry reference: Direct out from channel 4 to Logic as the no-compressor control
- Parallel split: Patchbay parallels feeding identical input level to every 1176, so we could hot-switch between units
We started with aggressive “smashed” settings to expose personality, then rolled back to realistic, peak-taming compression and level-matched by ear while watching similar VU needle movement.
First Listen: Driving Them Hard
UREI Rev G vs Rev H
- Rev G (black panel): Open and crisp, with a pleasing saturation that felt harmonically tidy.
- Rev H (silverface): Surprisingly dirtier in our shootout, breaking up quicker with an obvious crunch in the mids. Reputation says the H can be cleaner and brighter, however older units live many lives. Recaps, resistor drift and amplifier swaps mean each original is its own story.
Warm Audio WA76-A vs Hairball Rev A (Blue Stripes)
- Warm Audio WA76-A: More “sparkle” on top, more sub-energy getting through, a sense of openness even when pinned.
- Hairball Rev A: Thicker low-mid saturation, a touch woolly in comparison, and a noticeably higher noise floor. It also needed more makeup gain to land at the same level, and its VU wanted constant recalibration. Charming, vibey, and gritty, although less extended above 11–12 kHz.
Warm Audio WA76 vs WA76-D2 Both showed similar gain reduction on the meters, around 10 to 20 dB when pushed, yet the tone was not identical. The WA76 “smooshed” more and felt a little denser. The WA76-D2 held the image together with a smoother midrange. It genuinely felt like two flavours from the same family.
Big takeaway at “stun”: Every unit flattened transients in its own way. The VU needles might match, yet the harmonic behaviour and EQ tilt were wildly different.
Real-World Settings: Just Catching Peaks
We backed off input to let the compressors do what most of us want on live vocal and acoustic, catch peaks, add glue, stay musical.
UREI Rev G Effortlessly classy. With lighter hits it warmed the vocal in a way that felt like a finished record. Peaks were tamed without losing air.
UREI Rev H When backed down it behaved, yet still wore a raspy midrange edge. Not broken, just its vibe. If you like attitude on an acoustic singer-songwriter take, this has a colour.
Warm Audio WA76-A (Blue Stripe) The surprise star for clarity at sensible settings. Present, airy, and controlled without feeling squeezed. It did the “blue stripe lift” in a very usable, modern way.
Warm Audio WA76 A touch more midrange push and earlier saturation compared with the D2. On bass or rock vocals this will be your friend. On our acoustic and voice, still tasteful once the input was trimmed.
Warm Audio WA76-D2 Same family tone as the WA76, just a shade smoother. If you want the 1176 grip with less obvious hair in the mids, this found that spot.
Hairball Rev A Still noisy compared to the others and needed more gain to compete, however when you wanted a buttered top end and chewy midrange, it delivered a cool, vintage-adjacent thickness.
What We Heard, In Plain Language
- Meters lie. Two units showing 10 to 12 dB of reduction can sound completely different. Use your ears, not your eyes.
- Top end. WA76-A was the sparkliest of the blue stripes. Hairball softened the last octave, which can be flattering.
- Low end. WA76-A let more sub through than the Hairball. Useful when you want body from an acoustic or a chesty vocal.
- Midrange. WA76 and WA76-D2 are siblings, the D2 smoother in the mids, the WA76 hairier. Rev H brought crunch, Rev G brought polish.
- Noise and practicality. The Hairball’s higher noise floor and drifting VU make it more of a character choice. The Warm units were consistent and easy to handle.
- Vintage variance is real. Old UREIs have lived, and many have been serviced differently. Expect personality, not uniformity.
Suggested Use-Cases
- UREI Rev G: Classy vocal levelling, natural acoustic control, places where you want warmth without haze.
- UREI Rev H: Edge and excitement on instruments, bold parallel smash, rock acoustic that can take some grit.
- WA76-A (Blue Stripe): Lead vocals needing present air and controlled peaks, detailed acoustic guitars, pop and acoustic singer-songwriter.
- WA76: Bass guitar saturation, gritty rock vocals, parallel crush when you want density.
- WA76-D2: General purpose 1176 duties where you want grip and smooth mids, stereo projects in linked mode.
- Hairball Rev A: Character compression, vibey parallel, sources that benefit from buttery highs and chewy midrange.
Method Notes for Your Own Shootout
- Split one performance to every unit in parallel so the input is identical.
- Start “smashed” to reveal character quickly, then back down to the musical zone.
- Level-match by ear, then glance at the meters. Close VU readings do not guarantee similar sound.
- Print a dry reference and A/B constantly.
- Take notes on EQ tilt, saturation onset, noise, and release feel. That is what you will actually mix with.
Final Thoughts
Across six boxes wearing the same badge, we heard six distinct personalities. The UREI units reminded us why they’re the benchmark — each a one-off with its own quirks and charm. The Warm Audio units felt like calibrated, reliable takes on the classics, each with a clear identity. The Hairball brought colour and attitude, a brilliant wild card when you want grit.
It is a buffet where every spring roll looks identical and every bite tastes different. Choose the one that suits the song, and enjoy the variety.
If you have your own 1176 comparisons or favourite pairings, share them. We would love to hear what you are hearing.
Huge thanks to Shelby Logan Warne for hosting this shootout at Sensible Music in King’s Cross, and to Leoni Jane Kennedy for the stunning performance of her song “Ammunition.”



