Br1600cd
These units are great for what they do - record multiple tracks easily, quickly and with pretty decnt quality.
I started with four-track tapes and graduated eventually to DAWs. I still do a lot of DAW recording and editing, but the BR1600 is just plain fun to use. There are BOSS effects to use for guitar, bass vocals and mix downs, and drum tracks to toss in the song as you choose. I hate it when recording equipment doesn't include phantom power. You have to go some other route, drag out some more equipment and cables to deal with it. Not with the BR1600! Eight mics at a time if you want and with phantom power so you can use your best mics!
Editing is, well, compared to DAWs, a drag on these machines, though it is possible and I've done it, it's limited. My standards are low by some opinions, but completely adequate in mine. Don't get me wrong - I don't like cheesy, sloppy recordings, but I don't spend 100 hours on four measures of a bass line to get it perfect either (my bass-player friend does that. Drives me nuts, just do your best and let's move on!).
I did an indie CD a year ago that included four songs done completely on the 1600 with bass, keys, multiple guitars and vocals. They sound good to the perfectionist and great to the casual listener (and me! That's why I do it.).
So, yeah, for the money I think they can't be beat. Plus the learning curve is no where like professional recording and editing software. The BOSS units are fun and sound pretty dang good, too!
Pablo