HydrogenAudio

Lossy Audio Compression => MP3 => MP3 - General => Topic started by: Shadow RD on 2003-02-23 04:44:56

Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Shadow RD on 2003-02-23 04:44:56
Hi All,

I have had troubles in the past with hardware that claims to play MP3 files but in practice does not play the files properly. I think it would be really useful to know which hardware devices FULLY support MP3.

By fully support I mean:

- playback of all the bitrates up to 320 kbps
- correct handling of VBR (showing correct playback times)
- no introduced sound glitches

Please feel free to reply to this post stating which devices offer full MP3 support in your own experience.

RD.

PS: My experiences... I know that the XMS-750 DVD player (only CBR) and the VOXSON-250 DVD player (plays VBR and 320 kbps but introduces sound glitches) both do not fully support MP3. I have a Kenwood MP727 CD player which seems to fully support MP3.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: chrisgeleven on 2003-02-23 04:54:51
Only 1 way to go: Any iRiver MP3 CD player. Best on the market, plays any LAME VBR file, and frequent updates to the firmware. No one else can compete. Only thing is the time doesn't count down properly (counts up fine) if you use ID3v2 tags, but someday they will fix this.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: mmortal03 on 2003-02-23 05:08:04
OT, but I don't think a separate topic is needed...On a constantly vibrating van ride today for 4 hours, I noticed some repetitive clicking with the latest firmware on my RioVolt 100 clone with iRiver Firmware.  I am not certain, but I want to say that these clicks I heard were happening where buffering would either be occuring or running out.  I did not experience skipping, but less noticeable clicks that still weren't the perfect sound.  The noise was fairly annoying, and could be heard the clearest on slow or low volume tracks.  I don't think I get these pops when listening in a still environment.  I had the CD buffering on to 40 seconds with this CD.  (Note that it was not an MP3 cd.)  Has anyone else had similar experience with iRiver players and constant vibrating environments?
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Cygnus X1 on 2003-02-23 05:14:55
Iriver products (like the SlimX) rock. You really can't find a better MP3-CD player at any price.

Can I momentarily turn the argument around and advise you on what NOT to buy? Please don't even consider anything by Sony. The one model that I had for about 2 hours  , DJ101 (or something like that) couldn't fast forward or rewind through tracks, took forever to boot up with regular ISO 9600 CD-R's, and wouldn't play VBR or frames above 192kbps properly. Needless to say, after trying to play an --aps disc, I took it back to Wal*Mart and got a refund. Worst part is that it did so little and still cost almost as much as the SlimX (which I later bought before getting a HDD player)! I've recently seen the SlimX on eBay (brand new) for as little as $90! You can't go wrong.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: SometimesWarrior on 2003-02-23 05:28:13
My Philips Expanium plays --alt-preset standard files flawlessly; no problems after over 50 hours of playtime. The model number I think is EXP-401, but probably all new Expaniums perform the same. Also, perhaps because the CD's are so tiny (8cm mini-CD's), it practically never skips while it's in my pocket and I'm walking. It skips sometimes if I'm running, unless I hold it in my hand to keep it from banging around in my pocket. It shows the right "time elapsed" and fast forwards and rewinds properly, but it doesn't have an option to show time remaining.

As a plus, it starts playing 6 seconds after you press the play button... the RioVolts and Sonys I've seen take much longer to load. But the headphone output is a bit weak with my Koss PortaPro's, and very weak with my Sony MDR-V6's. It plays loud enough, but the sound isn't stellar; it's kind of mushy, and with the MDR-V6's the bass is weak. The Sony D-CJ01 (does NOT fully support MP3, needs --nores switch with aps VBR) and the SlimX both sound better to me.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: twostar on 2003-02-23 07:19:34
How about creative labs' players, do they work well with --alt-preset standard mp3s? i'm especially interested with their M-100 (http://www.americas.creative.com/products/product.asp?maincategory=2&category=2&product=494).
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: LordofStars on 2003-02-23 19:34:16
I personally have no problems with my iriver imp-150 (chromex) haven't had a problem with skipping, but then again I upped the default buffer.

I haven't ever used a regular cd in a vibrating enviroment so i can't back you up. sorry.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: grbmusic on 2003-02-23 21:34:33
I own a Pioneer DV 354 (DVD + mp3 player) and play all tipes of mp3 fine, I was try with aps, vbr, cbr at all bitrates and with various encoders (LAME, fraunhoffer, xing, fastenc, ect), and I don't have any problems, but my player is not portable, sorry for my bad english.-
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Drover's Dog on 2003-02-24 03:27:14
Quote
My Philips Expanium plays --alt-preset standard files flawlessly; no problems after over 50 hours of playtime. The model number I think is EXP-401, but probably all new Expaniums perform the same. Also, perhaps because the CD's are so tiny (8cm mini-CD's), it practically never skips while it's in my pocket and I'm walking. It skips sometimes if I'm running, unless I hold it in my hand to keep it from banging around in my pocket. It shows the right "time elapsed" and fast forwards and rewinds properly, but it doesn't have an option to show time remaining.

As a plus, it starts playing 6 seconds after you press the play button... the RioVolts and Sonys I've seen take much longer to load. But the headphone output is a bit weak with my Koss PortaPro's, and very weak with my Sony MDR-V6's. It plays loud enough, but the sound isn't stellar; it's kind of mushy, and with the MDR-V6's the bass is weak. The Sony D-CJ01 (does NOT fully support MP3, needs --nores switch with aps VBR) and the SlimX both sound better to me.

My Sony D-CJ01 Discman plays MP3 flawlessy except for VBR.  The --nores switch didn't help either.

I have a Pioneer DV535 DVD/MP3 player that plays all MP3s flawlessly.  It also has a good GUI (using the TV), but it will only play tracks randomly within a folder, not across all folders.  I also have a Lennox DVD/MP3 player but it won't play random tracks and goes a bit haywire with the play sequence if you have too many MP3 files on the disc.  Therefore, when you're shopping around, pay attention to the maximum number of folders and files the player will handle.  The Pioneer player's limit is around 400 from memory whereas the Lennox player didn't say.  The Sony DVD/MP3 player folder/track limit was too low for me (and it didn't have random play function).

I considered buying the Philips Expanium 401 but a PC magazine review on it was not too flattering (poor tone and short battery life).  The Philips brochure also claims it will only play 32-320 Kbps, so what happens if your MP3 VBR file goes down to 16 Kbps?

My son-in-law has an XMS 750 and it seems to play all MP3s flawlessly, including VBR.

Panasonic have a new range of MP3 Discmans that seem to be reasonably priced and may be worth a look.  Make sure you take a good selection of test CDs (VBR and CBR with both ID3V1 and ID3V2 tags) - and check on that folder/file limit as well.

I hope this information helps.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: LordofStars on 2003-02-24 05:31:02
An mp3 won't go down to 16kbps...
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: ChS on 2003-02-24 05:49:31
These two players I own have had no playback problems with LAME encoded ABR/VBRs including --alt-preset standard encodes:

Creative Nomad II (SmartCard based player)
iRiver IMP-350 SlimX

I had some problems with my old Rio SP-90, which has since broke. --alt-preset standard (3.90.2) encodes would sometimes have seek and playback problems with skipping and whatnot. I resorted to LAME ABRs which played flawlessly.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Drover's Dog on 2003-02-24 06:42:00
Quote
An mp3 won't go down to 16kbps...

I'm sure the LAME histogram shows a few frames being encoded at 16 kbps with VBR (not the alt presets because they usually set a minimum bitrate).  Also, the technical specs of my Sony Discman claim MP3 compatibility of "16-320 kbps"  ??
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Cygnus X1 on 2003-02-24 07:10:10
If I remember correctly, MPEG-1 Layer 3 only goes to 32kbps for stereo frames. So if you are encoding at 32Khz or above, you will never drop below 32kbps (in fact, --aps uses this for digital silence). Only with MPEG-2 Layer 3 (or "2.5") will you get stereo frames less than 32kbps, but this is at a 24Khz or lower sampling rate, something you would use for audiobooks, speech, etc.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: caligae on 2003-02-24 09:36:27
Just for completeness: My iRiver player fails to play any freeformat mp3s (not that anyone would actually use this). My old Samsung Yepp E-32 was playing them fine. This player pretty much sucks though cause it can't play frames > 256kbps properly and has a lot of other flaws.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Shadow RD on 2003-02-28 10:17:57
Quote
My son-in-law has an XMS 750 and it seems to play all MP3s flawlessly, including VBR.

Sorry Drover I have an XMS750 DVD player, and just (5 mins ago) tried to play "--alt-preset standard" files and 320 kbps CBR files and they both did not play - only skips, high pitched squeaks and ear pain were produced.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: GodFinger on 2003-03-01 13:48:20
Hi all !
I have Philips Expanium EXP-101, which is the 1st (I think), portable MP3-CD-player of the Expanium -product family. I have to say that I haven't had any problems with it related to correct playback-time or clipping. The only thing is, that it doesn't rewind or fast forward the tracks...
I guess it plays all MP3's flawlessly, VBR-files are no exception to this.
I wonder do they still have these EXP-101's in the stores lying around anymore ?
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: deej_1977 on 2003-03-01 13:58:32
Quote
How about creative labs' players, do they work well with --alt-preset standard mp3s? i'm especially interested with their M-100 (http://www.americas.creative.com/products/product.asp?maincategory=2&category=2&product=494).

If that player shares its firmware (or the playing part of it) with the Nomad III then you'll have no problems with anything that is encode with Lame and alt-presets. I own one of those babies and it plays everything flawlessly.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: indybrett on 2003-03-01 15:09:40
Avoid anything from RCA. Also, my Toshiba DVD/MP3 player adds some strange artifacts to the audio. Not a good MP3 player.

My Iriver, Nex, and JVC all work perfectly with --alt-preset standard encoded MP3's.

Edit: Actually, the audio is perfect on all three, but the time display is screwy using VBR with the Nex.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Walkman on 2003-03-01 21:45:46
I've owned a RioVolt SP100 since Summer/2001 and SP250 since 12/2001 and both have performed flawlessly. I've used Lame 3.89 to 3.92, -r3mix, -aps, and some from unknown encoders/settings. I investigate most playback flaws and always discover it's not he player (it's almost always in the original WAV). They can be prone to skipping but I didn't get them to run or workout with.

I received a cheap Mitsubishi DVD/CD/MP3 player DD-4030 and, after some research, figured out that it couldn't handle *any* frames below 112kbps - not even silence. I fixed that problem by adding -F to the -APS line to force strict enforcement of the implied "-b 128" switch in -APS. This fixed the problem and only adds a tiny amount of size to the files by raising the silence frames from 32 to 128 - usually less than 0.5%.

BTW: I initially made the mistake of adding -b 112 -F which had the undesirable effect of lowering the minimum bitrate floor for everything from 128 to 112
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Drover's Dog on 2003-03-04 03:27:04
Quote
Sorry Drover I have an XMS750 DVD player, and just (5 mins ago) tried to play "--alt-preset standard" files and 320 kbps CBR files and they both did not play - only skips, high pitched squeaks and ear pain were produced.

Shadow RD

Ah, yes - my son-in-law had the same problem initially, but the problem was in the disc format.  If you burn the disc as an MP3 music disc in either Easy CD Creator or Nero, it should play fine.  If, however, you create a data disk containing the MP3 files, it won't play.  I don't quite understand why yet, but one day I'll work it out.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: DonP on 2003-03-04 14:45:51
Quote
Ah, yes - my son-in-law had the same problem initially, but the problem was in the disc format.  If you burn the disc as an MP3 music disc in either Easy CD Creator or Nero, it should play fine.  If, however, you create a data disk containing the MP3 files, it won't play.



????? Isn't an mp3 disk a data disk?

My Apex 600  dvd/mp3 only supports 1 level of directories,
only the basic CDR format (no cdrw, no "direct-cd"), and
goes ape when it finds data at the end of an audio CD.
Displayed file names are, I think, limited to 8 characters (the
".mp3" is suppressed in any event)

I also have an RCA 5 disk cd/mp3 that seems to play my files ok, mostly
VBR at nominal 128 or higher but also some mono  recordings at
low bit rate and 22 khz sample rate.  I got it because you can navigate
with the built in display... most/all DVD players you need a TV to see the
track and directory names.
The biggest downside is it takes a long time to scan a disk when first inserted, or on power-on.
While this is going on you can't stop or open the drawer.

edit: to address one of the original post points, I just burned a few tracks at 320 kbps
joint and straight stereo CBR, and the highest VBR setting (on dbpoweramp converter
using lame encoder).
No problem on playback.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: budgie on 2003-04-02 08:26:58
Some time ago I bought a Roadstar PCD-3048MP as the price was irresistible (~65 Euro). It replays all kinds of MP3s (32-320 kbps, be it LAME, Xing or FhG) and even MP2 at 384 kbps  I connected it into my "big" HiFi and it played more than decently even there...
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: STSinNYC on 2003-04-02 20:41:17
I have the iRiver Slim-X 400. Plays VBR MP3s (LAME) just fine, no errors AFAIK.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: pyrosb on 2003-12-03 20:45:14
i've got a sony d-ne510 and it plays every mp3 i throw at it, high quality vbr (235 avg), excessivly long mp3s (60min+), and the rest of my collection. (320-64 cbr files) its wonderful, the included earbuds suck though.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: jason_taverner on 2003-12-09 17:12:57
Just tried my new Sony D-NE1 with a freshly transcoded sabres of paradide (from flac  cd  into --alt-preset extreme.

Works prefectly, and also plays 2&1/2 hour mixes fine.

Using the sony fontopia headphones - which cost me some 40£ uk  the quality is indistingushable from the original cd played in the same player.

Waiting for the price of the rio karma to drop.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Smiff on 2003-12-09 18:20:11
philips expanium is great (ive just bought a 521 to replace my 303), plays everything i've ever tried - and that's a lot!, but what's with the pop at the start of some mp3s (that isn't there when played on the PC?). anyone know?
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Smiff on 2003-12-18 03:57:44
i killed the thread? sorry
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: gerdez on 2004-07-01 00:09:28
I have a Sony D-NE510, never had any problems with it... --aps --apx it doesen't matter, it plays great.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: adam917 on 2005-11-01 08:29:56
Will there ever be another MP3 CD player as good as iRiver devices are? The only iRiver I've had problems with is their iMP-900 (it jumps ahead two files at any time, for no reason at all), and they are now giving me a hard time giving me at least a new unit, let alone a complete refund of 180 USD + shipping that I paid 11 months ago. I really wish something better was out, preferrably something that would play DVD as well.

I'm so used to iRiver's VERY high level of customisability since 2002 that I wonder if I could ever go back to the Sony stuff that I used before. I quickly found out that most Panasonic units can't FF/REW through MP3s, nor resume, and that's something very important for me, as I have many MP3s over 2 hours long (DJ mixes).

Since late 2004, iRiver has completely discontinued all of their CD players and older 'do-it-all' iHP-/H-series and now have these (crappy useless) portable media players and (OK) HDD devices that are small and lack the dozens of features that their older stuff has.

I wonder what to do should my 2-to-4-year-old iRiver units iMP-550 and iMP-150 go (and you know stuff eventually _does_ die). iRiver units did it all when it comes to MP3-CD players. No other manufacturer comes close. Thier iMP-1100, which was sold in very limited quantities in 2004 in only Europe & Asia, even had a colour screen and played MPEG-4 video and I think JPEG & BMP images too, alongside the rest of the stuff their previous iMP line does.

So does anyone want to revive this thread to reflect today's (2005--2006+) MP3 CD climate? There _is_ a sizable amount of people who still use CD players for MP3 use. I personally would love a slim portable CD-sized DVD-MP3 player that could do all that iRiver stuff does. Shame they never went down that route. Forget about complete ID3 tags, folder browsing + next-track-queueing during playback WMA, and _any_ Ogg Vorbis support on any DVD players that play MP3.

Thanks very much...
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: adam917 on 2005-11-06 23:06:14
Quote
Iriver products (like the SlimX) rock. You really can't find a better MP3-CD player at any price.

Can I momentarily turn the argument around and advise you on what NOT to buy? Please don't even consider anything by Sony. The one model that I had for about 2 hours   , DJ101 (or something like that) couldn't fast forward or rewind through tracks, took forever to boot up with regular ISO 9600 CD-R's, and wouldn't play VBR or frames above 192kbps properly. Needless to say, after trying to play an --aps disc, I took it back to Wal*Mart and got a refund. Worst part is that it did so little and still cost almost as much as the SlimX (which I later bought before getting a HDD player)! I've recently seen the SlimX on eBay (brand new) for as little as $90! You can't go wrong.
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=67933"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

I think you mean the D-CJ01. I did hear that was a VERY bad device. I think all future Sony stuff, like their D-NExxxx line, works fine, though.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: dreamliner77 on 2005-11-07 06:54:14
I'll be the first to pull it out
(http://www.nevtek.net/pics/thread/batman_threadres.jpg)
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: adam917 on 2005-11-07 19:32:23
Quote
I'll be the first to pull it out
(http://http://www.nevtek.net/pics/thread/batman_threadres.jpg)
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=340169"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

Pull _what_ out?
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Hoop on 2006-09-20 09:28:28
I've just started burning Mp3's instead of regular audio.  And I've noticed a lot of problems.  When I'd burn audio discs, I might burn 15 or 20 discs before I ran into one I had to do over.  Now with the Mp3's, about every 2 or 3 discs I run into problems and have to burn it over, sometimes more than once.  From reading this thread, I'm getting the idea that a lot of Mp3 players really aren't as reliable as regular audio players.  Could this be the reason I'm having so much trouble?  I thought it was me or something.  :-)  I have a Sony 400 disc changer,  CDP-CX455.  It plays audio discs fine, but Mp3's are iffy.  I just finished two different ones, and when you get to the last 40 or so songs on the disc, they start cutting out for 2 or 3 seconds.  If you back it up to recheck it, it doesn't do it again, but it will do it in a different spot later.  Any suggestions?  Thanks,  Hoop
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: Nikephoros on 2007-03-30 08:28:05
In 2001 sometime my brother bought a Riovolt PSX100 MP3 CD player for something like $150. I cannot remember when(2004?)but he bought an iaudio x5 20gb and gave me the Riovolt. After a while the iaudio had problems with battery life and he had to order a new custom battery from the manufacturer since most modern hd mp3 players as an "awesome feature" do not use standard AA or AAA batteries but custom and built in rechargeable batteries. Now for some reason the hd does not work either.

The Riovolt Psx100 is still working on the other hand. That thing has been dropped too many times on concrete and it still works. The batteries are two standard AA, which means you can take advantage of the numerous companies making 15 minute rechargeable batteries and not have to worry about costly battery replacements if they are even available down the line for those "blessed" with the custom battery feature. It also has a green backlight display that automatically goes on when it is dark. It lets you navigate files and directories and displays ID3 tags. For the last five or so CDs that are put in it remembers what track or mp3 file you left off at continues from there. On my Philips DVP-5960 DVD player on the other hand if I want to resume watching a DVD I literally write down where I am at on the movie to be able to resume later.

The cons of this player is that the skip protection sucks, you cannot really use it to walk with especially with audio CDs. It is big and bulky a little too bulky for the pockets(but you can manage it) and discontinued. I would like to get a newer CD mp3 player but all the newer Slimx's by Iriver have the so called built in custom rechargeable battery feature which will make the odds of any such player having a useful life of over 6 years a huge doubt. The huge manufacturers like Sony and Philips on the other hand do not even seem to think support for navigating your mp3s with anything other than track number is necessary.
Title: Fully MP3 compliant Hardware MP3-CD players
Post by: itisljar on 2007-03-30 09:48:14
Well, Creative Labs MuVo TX512 SE plays all mp3s I throw at him, also my Pioneer DVD575.