Thinking about a new, lower end CD Player


My current CD player is a basic, older Sony, probably 10-12 years old. Works fine but I could use it in another location with a lower end system. It seems to sound about as good as my Arcam CD92 that lost its DAC a while back.

So now thinking about buying a new CDP and have a couple of questions.

I’d like to keep this in the $300-500 range for units with internal DAC. Not looking for SACD player. Other than a remote, not looking for special features or multi disk players.

I’m guessing that in this price range SQ is probably comparable to other units in that range.

First, is a CDP in this price range going to sound any better than the old Sony?
Second, if not, is there any reason not to just buy a comparable $200 unit?
Third, for units in this price range ($300-500) is there any reason to look for one with balanced output capability and if so, is there any way to know if it is truly balanced.

Thanks all,

George


n80

jafant,


I have not checked with Denon, but, a couple of weeks ago, I did look up videos about replacing the drive on the Internet and looked for parts on eBay, They are available used so who knows what they would end up being. There were no new ones I could see at that moment which may indicate that Denon quit supplying them.


Another observation from eBay was that a number of players were advertised as "not playing CD" or SACD, or whatever else. Quick Google search for "Denon 2910 CD not playing" (or something similar to that) brought a lots of comments telling me I am not the only one. Hence my previous post. I would stay away from buying those players these days, unless they are cheap enough not to be disappointed with failure.


I wonder if modding operations are gone simply because the market for it has shrunk as people have gradually moved on to less physical formats. There is probably only a handful of us who have these Denons sitting around and have not tossed them yet.


I recently bought a CD (SACD, in fact) player and everyone I tell it to asks me "who still buys CD players these days?" I guess, n80 and me.

I know there is a guy out there who repairs and mods Arcam players. Condor Electronics or something like that. Quite expensive though.

As for who buys CD players it was interesting that at this Goodwill there was a shelf full of DVD players that will play CDs but not one simple CD player.

Personally, for now, I find CDs to be the most gratifying media. Low res streaming is convenient and to me the sound quality isn't unbearable most of the time. But it isn't great. I also don't like renting stuff and paying monthly fees. Hi-res Tidal is $240 a year. Right now I'm probably averaging around $6 per used CD. That's 40 CDs that I've researched the production and sound quality of.  Buying hi-res files is pricey compared to most used CDs. HD Tracks does not back them up for you. I don't need to back up CDs per se....but I rip them anyway. I have CDs that are close to 30 years old and sound fine. I know they can degrade,  but in general are pretty durable.

Vinyl is its own thing. Not knocking it at all but that bug hasn't bitten me yet. Four times as expensive, at least, just for the media and to get the most of it the gear is more pricey too.

So for now I enjoy researching, hunting for and buying good CDs more cheaply than you can buy from HD Tracks or iTunes for that matter.

It seems the challenge for me is to find and keep running CD players. ;-)

Its hard to beat $20 DVD/ bluray players that when you use just as a transport to send your CD signal to a quality dac can rival very expensive dedicated CD players.

I have 4 sources for CD playback in my various systems ( including a Sony PS3) and every one is just used as transport sending signal to a superior dac for playback.
n80,

Check your local library. Mine has a basement where people donate books and CDs (it used to be records, too, but not anymore). They are $1 each and you could find everything. From MFSL CDs to Austrian polka. Selection changes, actually expands, quite often so it is always like a candy store.