Skip to main content

Notice

Please note that most of the software linked on this forum is likely to be safe to use. If you are unsure, feel free to ask in the relevant topics, or send a private message to an administrator or moderator. To help curb the problems of false positives, or in the event that you do find actual malware, you can contribute through the article linked here.
Topic: Best Portable Audio Solution 2013 (Read 43996 times) previous topic - next topic
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Hi there, Im looking to buy a new portable music player (but not apple). I also dont want a volume-capped EU product (im in the UK), so I need to be able to buy it from elsewhere...or the device needs to be able to be flashed or modded to remove the cap!
I am a bit of a perfectionist and would like some nice sound to help inspire my work!


I have done a fair amount of research but it is still a tough choice, and would love to hear peoples thoughts or advice!

I am currently attracted to the Sony z-series (mainly the Z1050 / 60) which I can still get on ebay from japan (uncapped)
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/SONY-Walkman-NW-...=item3a7db9eba3

this seems like a lot to pay for something that I cant make calls on though! I understand that it is the amp which bumps the price up.
but...is this kind of player not obsolete now?



And this is part of the brief I guess...my phone is a bit crap so I was thinking that maybe some of the new phones may be good enough for my audio needs.


- I read samsung have good audio, for one...and that many of today's smartphones compete with cowans players for examplem in terms of sound quality

- And ive also seen the new HTC range with 'beats' audio...although I know that the beats brand is somewhat of a gimmick..
HTC one http://www.handtec.co.uk/htc-one-v-black.html  ...which I may be able to flash or mod to remove the cap.

- I have always liked sonys products and have also considered an xperia J ...or even an old w995 etc! Apparently the sonys also have a 'warmer' sound.

- I will also be getting some decent headphones (been looking at the IE9's etc...but will cross this bridge when I have a player in mind )

videos and web browsing are less important to me. I would also probably be disabling any wifi ability as I dont think the frequencies do your body any good.

On this note...has anyone ever looked at the frequencies headphones produce?!



any help appreciated...thanks for reading

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #1
Hi there, Im looking to buy a new portable music player (but not apple). I also dont want a volume-capped EU product (im in the UK), so I need to be able to buy it from elsewhere...or the device needs to be able to be flashed or modded to remove the cap!
I am a bit of a perfectionist and would like some nice sound to help inspire my work!


I have done a fair amount of research but it is still a tough choice, and would love to hear peoples thoughts or advice!

I am currently attracted to the Sony z-series (mainly the Z1050 / 60) which I can still get on ebay from japan (uncapped)
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/SONY-Walkman-NW-...=item3a7db9eba3


For what its worth, the Z series uses some awful nvidia reference design thats meant for tablets and not actual headphone output:

http://www.markuskraus.com/RMAA/Z1060/Z1060TF10.htm

Consequently, its probably one of the few devices you can buy that won't be transparent with even fairly easy to drive headphones. 

- I read samsung have good audio, for one...and that many of today's smartphones compete with cowans players for examplem in terms of sound quality

- And ive also seen the new HTC range with 'beats' audio...although I know that the beats brand is somewhat of a gimmick..
HTC one http://www.handtec.co.uk/htc-one-v-black.html  ...which I may be able to flash or mod to remove the cap.


Nexus phone?  The volume cap basically doesn't matter at all when you're completely unlocked.  Just flash the official ROM and its gone.  Roughly the same price as that ebay link you posted too.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #2
It's been said a million times before, but sansa clip+ or sansa zip..

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #3
I love my Cowon J3. Gapless playback, flac/ogg support, and to make it almost unique - 50 or 60 hours of battery life.
CUETools 2.1.6

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #4
It's been said a million times before, but sansa clip+ or sansa zip..


+1

Or Fuze. For us older folks the larger display has its moments. And I've done well playing videos on it.

So cheap as to be nearly disposable.

So well-engineered as to make you wish that the headphone jacks on far more expensive stuff were as good.

 

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #6
Another for a Sansa player, Clip+ here and love it. The only feature I miss is a physical lock button.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #7
Another vote for the clip+, btw it locks by holding down the home button under OF, and there's another button if you've rockboxed it, just can't remember currently.
You were rather unclear as to whether you wanted a dedicated music player or asking 'which phone has the best sq'. The clip+ as a dedicated dap is cheap, has been tested extensively to be linear, and can be loaded with the rockbox firmware to provide nearly limitless audio options. Did I mention it's cheap? You won't gain anything with a sony player other than a pretty interface, and sub par amp performance. You need to decide if you want a seperate dap or a phone with playback capabilities. If just a dap, the clip+ will give you everything you need with linear playback and a microsd slot. Phone wise, both iphone and android devices offer fine playback. If going android I recommend samsung simply because it's the most supported device line, but if you just want a small, powerful, customizeable music player, clip+ all the way.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #8
But that's no use when it's turned off...and you accidentally catch it in your pocket.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #9
But that's no use when it's turned off...and you accidentally catch it in your pocket.


In my book the Clip and the Fuze are interchangeable except that the Fuze does video and has a larger screen that means something to us old turkeys.

There are also protective covers for Fuzes that will probably address the problem of inadvertently pressing buttons when they are  off. There may be covers for the Clip as well - google is your friend!

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #10
Just a question out of general interest: what made you decide that you specifically don't want an Apple product?


Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #12
I've used a Sansa Fuze for 3 years or so now. I've been perfectly happy with it until I installed a 32GB microsd card and put about 20GB of music on it. When I unplugged the Fuze from my PC it froze while doing the database update. On checking the Sansa website it seems there is a limit to the size of database it can handle and they don't recommend exceeding 16GB. That didn't bother me too much as I use Rockbox anyway and that did indeed handle the database update although it took a long time - not sure exactly how long as I left it running overnight.

On the other hand my Samsung Galaxy Ace with the same files loaded to a 32GB card does the update in a matter of minutes. I'd be reluctant to draw any firm conclusions though as it might be unfair to compare a modern(ish) smart phone with much older DAP technology

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #13
I love my Cowon J3. Gapless playback, flac/ogg support, and to make it almost unique - 50 or 60 hours of battery life.


The Cowon J3 is really good, but it's also discontinued and rather hard to get.
But hey, if you do see one: grab it.


Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #15
Just a question out of general interest: what made you decide that you specifically don't want an Apple product?

1.overpriced
2.limited format support
3.dont like apple telling me what I can and cant do with my devices (the ridiculous lawsuits)

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #16
I love my Cowon J3. Gapless playback, flac/ogg support, and to make it almost unique - 50 or 60 hours of battery life.


I have a Clip+ and a J3. They're both excellent, but the Clip is a LOT cheaper. And strange things often seem to happen to J3 batteries with age - I think mine is now down to pretty much the same playing life as my Clip+.

Re. the Fuze: a lot of people seem to hate the newer trackpad driven Fuze+ and, regrettably, NOS older model Fuze prices are getting silly on ebay.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #17
take that £230, save yourself £150 on this;

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Samsung-Galaxy-Mem...5626&sr=8-1


I 2nd that. You need to install poweramp from the apps store cos the built in player is crap. But all in all a nice player with a decent dac and good quality sound


Third!  I have a Samsung Galaxy S2 phone, and I love its media funtionality, especially with all the apps available.  One project you really need to consider is Subsonic.  it turns you computer into a media server, and there's two different versions of the android app that allow your phone or Galaxy player to stream the files.  Absolutely worth it.


Just a question out of general interest: what made you decide that you specifically don't want an Apple product?

1.overpriced
2.limited format support
3.dont like apple telling me what I can and cant do with my devices (the ridiculous lawsuits)


This.  Apple, frankly, treats their customer base as if they are all idiots.  Between that, and the aforementioned limitations, no thank you.  Android works perfectly for me.
Regards,

Jim
ThatRuled.com

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #18
Have you considered the Altmann Tera Player? It's a high-quality audiophile DAP. I have recently conducted an objective test of the device, and it beats the venerable Clip+ 5:0. But see for yourself:
It's only audiophile if it's inconvenient.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #19
Just a question out of general interest: what made you decide that you specifically don't want an Apple product?


For one, it cost me under $20 to add 32 GB to my Sansa.  With ipods that offer a choice, an extra 32 G will cost $100, and no option to upgrade beyond that other than buy a new one in a couple of years.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #20
That didn't bother me too much as I use Rockbox anyway and that did indeed handle the database update although it took a long time - not sure exactly how long as I left it running overnight.

On the other hand my Samsung Galaxy Ace with the same files loaded to a 32GB card does the update in a matter of minutes. I'd be reluctant to draw any firm conclusions though as it might be unfair to compare a modern(ish) smart phone with much older DAP technology


Not sure what the Fuze has for clock speed, it's predecessor (e200 V2) has a 250 mhz arm compared to a typical hi-ish end phone has multiple CPU's in the GHz range.

"Update" on my older Rockbox player (80 mhz arm) with a 32 GB card runs pretty quickly if I'm adding a few albums as acquired or updating podcasts.  If you're adding 20 GB at once would it be faster to generate the database from scratch rather than update?

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #21
I hate carrying around anything, especially things which need the maintainance of recharging. I use my cellphone's music player for my portable music, since that kills two birds with one stone and it keeps me down to only one such device I wish I didn't have to carry, and if there was some aspect about my phone's music player that I didn't like, I'd get a new cellphone.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #22
Have you considered the Altmann Tera Player? It's a high-quality audiophile DAP. I have recently conducted an objective test of the device, and it beats the venerable Clip+ 5:0. But see for yourself:


Is it compatible with handmade silver cables? Because I might have to garrotte some weirwolves.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #23
I've used a Sansa Fuze for 3 years or so now. I've been perfectly happy with it until I installed a 32GB microsd card and put about 20GB of music on it. When I unplugged the Fuze from my PC it froze while doing the database update. On checking the Sansa website it seems there is a limit to the size of database it can handle and they don't recommend exceeding 16GB. That didn't bother me too much as I use Rockbox anyway and that did indeed handle the database update although it took a long time - not sure exactly how long as I left it running overnight.

That doesn't seem right. My Rockboxed Clip+ rattles through about 15 gigs worth of MP3s in about a minute when updating the database. However, it be noted that the files are neatly organized in folders by artist and album here. Having a non-negligible number of files - worstcase: all of them - in a single folder can slow down indexing considerably.

Database updating in OF always took much longer.
On the other hand my Samsung Galaxy Ace with the same files loaded to a 32GB card does the update in a matter of minutes.

Now that's about the kind of performance I would normally expect.

Best Portable Audio Solution 2013

Reply #24
I think building the database is almost entirely constrained by the relatively slow read speed of the low power SD controllers on these devices.