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View Full Version : Good mp3 player..


digo
01-13-2006, 08:30 AM
I want to buy a good mp3 player... i know there is the ipod video\mini\nano but i know there are some more good mp3's that can be better then the ipod.... there is iriver h10, the creative zen touch and the iaudio x5l... what is the best to buy?

dutchmasterflex
01-13-2006, 10:44 AM
I just bought a iaudio X5L 20gb... found it for a real good price in the classifieds.. the thing is great, it has so many features that no other player has..

i've been through about 3 ipods already, couple of them have gotten stolen, and my latest one died (4g click wheel.) I bought the X5 because I really did not want to give apple another $300 heheh.. the funny thing is, I took my broken ipod apart the otehr day and put it back together and all of a sudden it works again..

mindgam3
01-13-2006, 12:40 PM
I'm not a huge apple mania fanboy but imho the ipod is the best mp3 player out there, except if you wanna go with something like a psp which will cost you less ;)

mindgam3
01-13-2006, 01:20 PM
well, sonically speaking....there is NO such thing as a "good" MP3 player.

MP3s are a rubbish form of media to begin with......so the main limiting factor in the performance of ANY media player has to do with the fact that:

A) they are an MP3 (which can't possibly be good)
B) how bad your headphones are.

the player doesn't determine much.

go buy some proper records, or go buy CDs....that's my advice ;)

Bullshit - if you encode your mp3's at a high enough bit rate, the difference between the mp3 and a CD track is pretty much unrecognisable.... I've tested on various high quality speaker setups and I don't believe for a second that anyone could tell just from listening....

I tried my B&W, Rotel amp/cd player set up and compared it with the cd player and with an ipod connected to the amp in a sound proofed studio and you couldnt tell the difference....

The only way you a difference is going to be told is if you literally spend a couple of thousand on some speakers, a couple of thousand on an amp and a couple of thousand on a cd player but the difference will still be minimal.

Plus, you can't carry all that around with you in your pocket ;)

Fleischmann
01-13-2006, 02:02 PM
IMO...if you have the cash then go with iRiver. Whatever you do, don't opt for creative labs hardware, my GF has the MuVo and it's built like shit, it's completely not durable.

dutchmasterflex
01-13-2006, 02:22 PM
mp3 players can do what CD players and Phonographs could never do.. hold 500 albums at "cd quality" into a player that fits in your pocket...

if you're not big on recording straight to mp3 via line in, mic or fm radio, go with an ipod.. if you want those features, go with the X5

AlienDB7
01-13-2006, 04:04 PM
MP3s are a rubbish form of media to begin with......so the main limiting factor in the performance of ANY media player has to do with the fact that:

A) they are an MP3 (which can't possibly be good)
B) how bad your headphones are.

the player doesn't determine much.

That argument is as rubish as you claim MP3s are.... so "it depends".

MP3s are bad if:
A) You're a dog with good hearing
B) Your headphones are so crappy you can't hear any details to begin with
C) Used a crappy MP3 encoder (e.g. ISO or Xing based)
D) Used a low bitrate

If you use a quality MP3 encoder such as LAME and encode properly without stupid settings such as low 128-160kbps. Starting from 192kbps, the difference becomes hard to tell for most people. I use the extreme preset in LAME and it works very well in almost all cases.

I guess you haven't been using digital formats for long. MP3 has come a long way since the .MODs days when the best consumer soundcard you can get is a 8bit SBPro... Yes, I actually used it to play MP2's when they came out ;)

Although *most* newer MP3 players have decent DACs, some of them don't. I have a Sandisk Sansa E140 (with a pair of Shure E2C) myself, it comes with WOW enabled by default which distorts the music. I disabled it right away but seems like some people actually like it. This again shows how "quality" is subjective and differs from person to person.

Not only that, when you're using a portable player on the road, what you hear is really limited by the level of background noise. Unless you have a pair of studio headphones with good isolation, the background noise will be greater than the artifacts generated during a proper MP3 encoding process. If you can't hear anything from the outside, you're definitely playing your music too loud!

Sorry for the long post :oops:

digo
01-13-2006, 04:52 PM
well thanks guys i have seen that the iriver h10 6\20 giga and the iaudio x5\l have the best sound quality and battery life.. whats is the better? and another thing i want to know is if those two player are easy to use?.

digo
01-18-2006, 12:14 PM
someone?

5vz-fe
01-18-2006, 01:56 PM
Try the iRiver, I have one of their flash type MP3 players...and they sounded pretty good. Didn't have any experience with iaudio tho....I hope that helps some what

dutchmasterflex
01-18-2006, 02:15 PM
I'm very pleased with my iAudio X5L.. Easy to use, no bullshit software (i.e. itunes and the like) to load music on to the player, just drag and drop.. (for movies you need to convert them before transfering)

Does the iRiver play movies, or record (with line-in, built in mic, or FM radio) in mp3?

digo
01-18-2006, 02:51 PM
yes it does.. the difrence between the two is the price , the sounnd quality and the battery time..

dutchmasterflex
01-18-2006, 04:31 PM
yeah, one thing i like about the X5L is the battery life.. the latest firmware gives me atleast a solid 30hrs of use.. probably a little more closer to their claimed 35hrs..

you dont need to charge it every day, no real need for a car adapter and works great as a portable hd cause of the extra long battery..

the one thing you might not like about the X5 is the navigation and the way it sorts media or lack there. the X5 doesnt sort it music by ID3 tag (like the ipod), you have to organize it your self when you load the files onto the player.

edit: the H10 doesnt play videos, bottom line, the X5 has the best bang for your buck.

now i will stop trying to sell this damn mp3 player to you

digo
01-19-2006, 10:42 AM
thnks dude my choise will be the x5l...

dutchmasterflex
01-19-2006, 11:49 AM
hope you like it, how much are you able to find it for?

digo
01-19-2006, 11:54 AM
its aout the 400 dollars... here those things are very expensive ...

when you wrote "you might not like about the X5 is the navigation and the way it sorts media or lack there" is that really anoing things or you can live with those things? and what is the quality of the videos on the screen?

saadie
01-19-2006, 11:58 AM
http://smb.us.sony.biz/intershoproot/eCS/Store/en/imagesProducts/250x250/MHCGX250.jpg
heh :prr:

dutchmasterflex
01-19-2006, 12:04 PM
the navigation isn't too bad, but it ain't no apple ipod click wheel.. I have to give it to them they were damn smart to patent that idea..

the quality of the video is everything you'd expect from a 2 inch screen.. its small but clear. you can definitely watch videos say if you were on a plane or bus or in the car..\

hmm $400 seems pretty expensive.. I dont think I would of gotten the X5 if I had to pay that much...

I lucked out and found someone selling their 20GB X5L for $250

digo
01-19-2006, 06:16 PM
i bought it its a fantastic player.. the sound quality is so huge ..
I want to plug he player to my car.. and i have found something that is called FM transmitter, i know that it works on an fm station or somthing..
do you know if its any good? or it will better to take out my stereo and plug a cable inside like in the ipod thing...

digo
01-23-2006, 08:40 AM
someone ?

dutchmasterflex
01-23-2006, 10:19 AM
an FM transmitter will not have the best quality.. If you have a tape deck player in your car, it would be better to get a cassette adapter if you want better audio quality..

The one thing about having a FM transmitter is portability, you will be able to use your mp3 player with any radio, anywhere.. but the quality might not be what you'd want for your car.

No.1
01-23-2006, 10:21 AM
http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/AppleStore.woa/72801/wo/la7rizBYTDEN3e74mMSnBvBUMqC/1.0.19.1.0.8.25.7.11.1.3

I have an FM transmitter to my iPod, and to be honest it is a pain in the ass - sound quality is poor - this is a much cheaper and quality alternative.

It might not look as cool as an FM Transmitter, but then looks aren't everythin - if they were, you would have got yourself an iPod :P :wink:

digo
01-23-2006, 03:05 PM
so how is the best way to connect it to the car?

MIHALS
01-23-2006, 03:31 PM
the best way is, if your player in the car has 2xcinch in-line. I had this type of radio and used the mp3 discman for it. the tape adaptor is such a rubbish if you want to listen to good qualitty music...

dutchmasterflex
01-23-2006, 03:52 PM
of course its not as nice to have a 1/8th inch auxilary input in your car's headunit, but I will stick by my cassette adapter and say that the quality is not bad at all! It's just as good as plugging directly into an aux input.. just not as pretty

MIHALS
01-23-2006, 04:00 PM
I had the adaptor 4 y/ago and it was squeeking and cracking shit, so with the music I was listening some strange noises aswell :lol:
the best way, if you want to buy new car audio too, is to have a look for this cinch option :wink: