Like the OP, I had an Oppo 95 and just sold it after about 5 years. It's a swiss army knife of a player, very flexible and can play just about anything off a thumb drive. It sounds really good too with redbook cds.
Personally though, I got tired of the long delay upon start up. Since it's a blu ray player, it has to go through this arduous start up. It won't start playing a previously inserted cd for close to 30 seconds.
And if you want to scan through part of a song, it has this oddball method of playing a second of audio, then repeatedly skipping ahead 5 to 15 seconds(depending on how many times you press the scan button) to play another second. No smooth scanning through to more easily get to the part of the song you want. I found it difficult to work with.
On a whim, I bought an old used Marantz carousal player from '97 and compared it to the Oppo. I was surprised that it came pretty close in performance, though Marantz has always made pretty good stuff, and this one was not an entry level model, the CD65SE.
The Oppo had a little more detail, but the Marantz was a little warmer. I can't remember if the Oppo had a bigger soundstage. It opened my eyes a little, because I would have thought that the Oppo would slay the old Marantz.
This had led me to believe that a dedicated cd/sacd player can be better than an all in one. I'm now waiting for delivery of a used Nad C565BEE cd player. I figure it should do better than the Marantz, it can at least play more file types and can operate as a DAC with a Wolfson chipset. It retailed for $800 when new. Oppo is good, but certainly not the be all end all.
Personally though, I got tired of the long delay upon start up. Since it's a blu ray player, it has to go through this arduous start up. It won't start playing a previously inserted cd for close to 30 seconds.
And if you want to scan through part of a song, it has this oddball method of playing a second of audio, then repeatedly skipping ahead 5 to 15 seconds(depending on how many times you press the scan button) to play another second. No smooth scanning through to more easily get to the part of the song you want. I found it difficult to work with.
On a whim, I bought an old used Marantz carousal player from '97 and compared it to the Oppo. I was surprised that it came pretty close in performance, though Marantz has always made pretty good stuff, and this one was not an entry level model, the CD65SE.
The Oppo had a little more detail, but the Marantz was a little warmer. I can't remember if the Oppo had a bigger soundstage. It opened my eyes a little, because I would have thought that the Oppo would slay the old Marantz.
This had led me to believe that a dedicated cd/sacd player can be better than an all in one. I'm now waiting for delivery of a used Nad C565BEE cd player. I figure it should do better than the Marantz, it can at least play more file types and can operate as a DAC with a Wolfson chipset. It retailed for $800 when new. Oppo is good, but certainly not the be all end all.