Rating: Summary: Pure Garbage Review: I bought this unit because of its cool display. And I have to give it that--it has a great display and great sound. It supports surround sound and DBBS. It can also recharge batteries. The problem is that everything else is pure garbage. You can't listen to quiet music--there is no volume setting between "mute" and "too loud." It take about 90 second to read a disc. The hiss while jogging is pretty bad, and there isn't even a belt clip!After opening the box, it cut off at the end of the first song I played. As it started to play the next song, it froze. Yes froze, just like a Windows computer. I couldn't stop it or anything. I opened the cover, removed the CD, and it still kept spinning. I had to remove the batteries to reset it. I've been listening to it play three songs as I wrote this review, and it cut off before the end of all of them. This is going back tomorrow. Heck, this one might be going back yet tonight.
Rating: Summary: Worst purchase ever Review: I didn't buy this item from Amazon, but I thought it was important for me to add to the reviews listed here. I wish I had read them before I bought this CD player. The first thing I noticed about this item was the poor sound quality and the lack of continuous play between audio CD tracks (gaps between tracks are nuisance on live recordings). The mp3 playback is terrible; it skips and jumps even when stationary. Sometimes it jumps to the middle of a completely different mp3! The sound quality is unlistenable. It often cannot determine the bitrate correctly or read the ID3 tags. I give this item one star (reluctantly) for the large user-friendly display. This was my worst purchase ever. Don't buy this item.
Rating: Summary: Excellent at this price Review: I have not had the trouble with skipping that some reviewers claim to have experienced. EXCEPT when I tried encoding below the 64Kbps level mentioned in the specs. It is a nice, metal and plastic unit and I have been happy with it except for one problem. The unit takes four (4) AA batteries and requires an 8volt DC adapter. It comes with an AC/DC adapter, but there is really no car kit that would be suitable because of the voltage requirements of this unit. The 8 levels of folders are really nice. I use Windows XP and simply drag-n-drop whole folders and subfolders onto the CD-R, burn the CD, and have hours of MP3s available already arranged into playlists from the computer. I'm not a techie, so I love the ease of use and the large LCD display. The unit tells me what it is doing (even when it is only reading the folder structure of the CD), what it is playing, etc. Not the best possible unit available, but for the street price it is quite good.
Rating: Summary: DON'T buy it Review: I have the same problems as everyone else mentioned. The machine pops and squeals and cuts off tracks at the end. I was very disappointed, since I had almost purchased the Phillips unit. I've waited too long to return it, so it just goes in the scrap heap. I will be very cautious about buying any RCA products again.
Rating: Summary: its really cool Review: i just got this as a christmas gift, and, regardless of what others have been saying, its a great player. its never skipped a beat, the sound quality is great, and its way more affordable than a RioVolt! it comes with an AC adapter, and its own music managment software. its great! the only bad part is the player is slightly heavy, and it takes four AA bateries.
Rating: Summary: Great Product Review: I love this player, and have compared it to many others on the market. It has a large display which can show the Artist name and song title. It supports 8 levels of folders, so you can organize your music by genre, album, artist, etc. I burn my cd's at 12x and have no problems with skipping or hissing, even while running (the anti shock works great!). I use this player when I'm traveling. I can store up to twelve hours of music on a cd in MP3 format, which is much better than packing a bunch of CD's. I also use it for audio books, which is great because you can put a very large audio program onto one cd. I'm confused by some of the problems people are having. I'm suspect to attribute them to many of the problems people have when working with computers in general, user error. As with any MP3 player, make sure the tracks sound good before you put them on a CD, and follow the directions. A low quality file like for instance a 32kbs, or 64kbs is not CD quality. You need at least 128kbs to achieve CD quality, and even then a good ear can tell the difference. It has nothing to do with a player, but rather the file itself. All in all I would buy this player again if I didn't already own it.
Rating: Summary: Plays MP3s Well, Has trouble with CDA Review: I purchased one of these a few weeks ago. It plays MP3s very well and is pretty easy to use. The problem that I have with mine is that it seems to chop off the last second of regular CDA CDs. I took it back to the store to exchange for a new one and found that both the store's demo unit and the replacement one did the same thing.
Rating: Summary: A really great mp3 player Review: I purchased this CD Player with the expectation that I would most likely have to return it. As soon as I brought it home, I tried a cd-rom which contained mp3 files, and it played the songs perfectly. No skipping, no hissing. I have since burned 4 cd-R's with mp3s at various bit rates, and it has played all of them between 64kbps and 192kbps. Here is why I would recommend this model: -It displays both file names and ID3 tags -It provides the shuffle/mix option -It allows a lot of flexibility for setting up your data in folders/subfolders. Beforehand, you can organize your music in multiple groupings by albums, artists, genres, or just put all your files in one folder. Keep in mind that you need to set it up on your before you burn the cd. -It has DSP modes for DBBS and Surround Sound -AC adapter is included - Battery Use requires 4 AA batteries -Option available for NiCad Rechargable batteries (not included) My one observation which might help make sense of some of the bad reviews is this: If you are having a lot of trouble with skipping or hissing, or tracks not playing, it is not the fault of the unit. Many mp3s which are downloaded from the internet are not as reliable as the ones ripped from your own cd collection. - I use fujifilm cd-r's 74 minute. I have burned cd's using cd creator on a Dell PC. I have also burned cd's using Iomega Predator & ibook500. I burn at either 2 speed or 4 speed. One cd was burned on Kodak cd-r 80min at 8 speed. All worked. - For MP3 creation, I use realaudio's realjukebox (PC) & itunes (mac). - Either way, on Mac or PC, the cds play in the unit. - I usually fit 200 to 230 mp3s on each cd-r. - This model comes packaged with MusicMatch Jukebox One caveat: Be sure that your mp3 files play normally on your computer before burning them on a cd. This reduce most any problems that you may run into.
Rating: Summary: Returned it Review: I used this unit for three days. Initially, I thought it was great because I could finally listen to tons of my mp3 files on a single CD. After using it for a short while, the player started to show it's ugly side: Loud hissing, especially bad when in Surround mode. Randomly skipping from the beginning of a song to near the end, this while sitting perfectly still on my desk. Four batteries???!!! And it played for only approximately 4 hours on a fresh set of Eveready alkalines. This thing eats batteries. An unususal amount of force has to be used to get the buttons to operate. After retuning the RCA player, I purchased a Rio Volt. The Rio player is superior in nearly every way: It runs on two alkaline batteries and plays longer. Doesn't hiss. Starts up faster, moves between traks faster. Supports WMA files. Has a better LCD. Sounds better. It's smaller and lighter. Has an in-line remote control. Better software bundle. Upgradeable firmware. And the Rio is only slightly more expensive. I'm using the same CDs with my Rio that wouldn't play correctly on the RCA, all of which were recorded at 8x on quality media. As far as I'm concerned, the RCA player has too many thorns to be considered as a serious contender in this market. I really didn't realize how inferior the RCA player was until I compared it to the Rio. Do yourself a favor and buy the Rio Volt, you won't be sorry.
Rating: Summary: So Disappointing Review: I wish I would've read the other reviews before buying the RCA RP-2410. I can only assume that "RP" stands somehow for "rip off". When it suddenly quits playing in the middle of a song you have the memory of an 8-track tape player switching programs. Fortunately with the tape player, the song came back on. The MP3 player just loses its place and that's it! Other than simply stopping, what other reviewers say is true: obnoxious noises, fast-forward through a track doesn't work (or when it does work, doesn't work good), there are weird skips (the display thinks it's 38 seconds into the track when actually you might be 15-minutes down the road...no rhyme or reason to it unless this is some unwelcome new feature called "Shuffle Within The Track.") I took it on the road when we travelled recently, thinking I could treat my family to endless music that we like. What I actually treated them to was endless restarting of discs, taking batteries out and putting them back in to reset, etc. It seems like there should be a law against stealing, which is what taking-your-money and giving-you-a-piece-of-garbage like this reminds me of.
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