I'm quite happy with the Alexander delays - using a Quadrant on the small board and a History Lesson on the larger one.
Four presets is exactly enough for me, especially given tap tempo & a voltage pedal to sweep between two sets of settings in each preset.
First preset is a crisp doubler with just a hint of modulation (pedal down turns this into a straight, slightly gritty slapback)
Second preset is a single repeat for lead lines: either warm / medium length / almost subliminal, or brighter / longer / more noticeable
Third preset is pristine rhythmic digital delay, with the pedal varying the amount of regen from just a few to nearly infinite repeats
The last is classic dirty-analog flyaway echo, here the pedal sweeps pitch/time (at max delay, it also rolls back the regen a bit, for a natural trailoff).
Both delays' knobs have a second set of functions so you actually have eight controls, all stored as part of a preset.
Control pedal can be assigned in each preset to any knob functions - just one, or a couple, or all.
Both delays also feature an adjustable spillover function assignable to any presets where you want.
The two pedals behave a lot alike - while the Hist Lesson offers a few extra modes & capabilities, tweaking either box is much the same.
[These can store/recall 12 presets via MIDI, but I only use MIDI in my rack rig; that pedalboard is just program change & two control pedals, no stompboxes.]