JONRAVEN
I think that you may have misinterrpreted JamesHE's point. At least in my eyes, you made a pretty big deal about a compressor that is not highly regarded in many circles at all, so he was just providing a different point of view to your gleaming review...
While I enjoyed his creative change of your nickname, I can see where since you haven't really posted much here, and don't know JamesHE's sense of humor that you would take offence. I don't think he meant anything by it.
But, I will make my recommendation. This comes from having used ALL of the Alesis processors. Any Behringer unit would beat the Nanocomp any day of the week. The Behringer Composer is going new for like $150 at some places and provides a much more usable compressor than the Nanocomp. Also, you gain an excellent Peak Limiter, and a decent enough "smart gate" (it doesn't seem that smart though...

) All in all, it is a very clean compressor that rivals compressors that cost up to 5 or 6 times as much.
Compared to the Nanocomp, the Behringer is a sweet deal. The Nanocomp is about what you would expect from a $100 compressor. The Composer is an absolute steal for only a little bit more.
I don't think I have ever run across a recording engineer anywhere that prefers either the Nanocomp, or the 3630. Both units tend to distort the sound a bit, add a lot of low end color, even when no compression is being done, and the make up gain on the units is horrible. I have found them to be very hard to set to get transparent compression, if not totally impossible to do so.
So, while you may like your Nanocomp friend, you are most certainly in a very small group of people that do. This may be because of limited experience with other units, or, a somewhat "unique" taste in compression. If it is the first, well, try out a Behringer Composer and hear what a decent mid level comp/limiter can do for your tracks. If it is the later, well, I don't know what to say. If you prefer the color and distortion it creates, then that is what you like.
Oh. One other thing. As my studio grows, I too keep a lot of the stuff that I originally had. But, I usually use the older units less and less. They become more of a "oh, I need another box for that 4th guitar track" type of thing....

Keeping them around does not neccessarily mean that I care for them, but rather that I might have a need for the unit in a few rare cases. Mostly, when I upgrade one thing, I find that many others need to be upgraded too. At some point, I suppose you wind up with a bunch of Class A rack gear and say enough is enough. It will be awhile before I am there though as better compressors cost in the thousands as opposed in the hundreds. But, their sound is certainly worth it if pritine, clean audio is your goal.
Ed Rei
Echo Star Studio
www.echostarstudio.com