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21 Reviews
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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent choice,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
This CD/MP3 player is an excellent choice for anyone who wants to carry a large selection of music without being burdened by bulky stacks of discs. A single MP3 CD will hold eight or nine hours of music, even at the high bitrate I prefer. In theory, I could put my entire music library-- over one hundred albums-- on ten MP3 CDs and fit them in a single CD wallet.The sound quality is excellent, easily in the upper levels for portable CD players. The headphones that come with the SL-MP80 are unexceptional but perfectly adequate, although audiophiles will probably want to use their own set of lightweight headphones to really get full performance. Durability is another nice touch. I'm currently on deployment at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait; heat and dust make this a tough tour for electronic devices, but this one has held up like a champ. It sees particularly rough handling as I like to take my music with me when I exercise, but so far I haven't even scratched the case. The only complaint I have is a minor one: The SL-MP80 does not read v2 ID3 tags! The older ID3 format is supported, but the newer extended format isn't. The v2 standard is hardly new, and I don't see any compelling reason to exclude it, but for some reason this unit simply doesn't support them. It will, however, read ID3 v1 tags, as well as MP3s with both v1 and v2 tags. All in all, I couldn't suggest a better portable CD/MP3 player.
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty good,
By
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
*The first thing that I must mention is that the only difference between this player and the MP70 is the 80's ability to play WMA files. If you don't need that functionality then DO NOT get this player. The MP70 is about 10 bucks cheaper.Now on to the actual review:
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Easy to use,
By
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
It must be hard to be a gadget designers. You take an excellent CD player and decide to add the ability to play MP3 and WMA files while selling the new model for the same price, and then, to your surprise, you get a bunch of whiners complaining why you didn't make it capable of showing porn movies and also washing dishes at the same time, all for the same low price.The point is, this is a very solid CD player that can also play MP3 and WMA files. The interface is very simple, just like on a regular CD discman. Yes, if you had 1000 songs you'd have to press the forward button 999 times to get to the last one. But this is not meant to be a dedicated MP3 player. For that you have the iPods, the RCA Lyras, the Rio's, the Archos jukeboxes. If you listen to a lot of MP3's, you should get a dedicated MP3 player, not this. This is for those of us who listen to CDs on the go a lot, and sometimes have a CD-R or two burned with our favorite MP3s. Tip - to get around the "press forward 99 times to get to the 100th song or 999 times to get to the 1000th song" problem, put a dozen songs in each folder. The Panasonic automatically designates each folder an album, and you can skip to the next album by holding down the fast-forward button. As for the criticism of the volume, I guess it's a very personal thing. I listen to music on the earphones for about 1.5 hours each day, usually during my commute to and from work. I believe my hearing is excellent -- at least that's what my company doctor tells me -- so to me, the bundled Panasonic headphones are already pretty loud at volume level 18, even on a noisy subway such as the No. 1 train or one of the older N trains here in New York. But I usually use a set of Aiwa headphones with bass boost and in-line volume control (bought at Centure 21 downtown near the World Trade Center site) and everyone I've let try out this combination says the volume is more than adequate, even at mid-level settings. I think the upshot is, you have to try it yourself. If you have indulged in loud music directly over your ears over the years, the sad truth is you probably should cut down the amount of music you listen to and work with a specialist to restore some of your hearing abilities. So these are my 2 cents on the excellent SL-MP80. (The slightly cheaper SL-MP70 does not support WMA but is otherwise identical. I have a longer review for that model because that's what I eventually kept.) The sound quality is great, battery life is excellent (although it's stupid for Panasonic to put the battery compartment inside the player so you can't change batteries without taking out the CD), and the design is stylish. I think you'll like this CD player a lot, assuming you are not too hard at hearing.
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great deal - wonderful sound - doesnt skip,
By YeahSoMaybe? "computersandmusicperson" (Beaverton, OR United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
Have owned Sony, Aiwa, Memorex and other portable CD-players over the years, including a couple near top of the line Sony discman's. I seem to get about 3 years use out of any one - regardless of brand. It's the just the fact of the matter. I don't grouse, just resign myself to buying another one every so often. Now that I'm into MP3 and have started running again to stay fit I was looking for a discman that had good skip resistance with MP3's and also sounded good. Hard to find both it seems. Tried an offbrand sports discman (Accuphase)- mediocre sound, skipped. Tried an mid price level Sony Atrac capable sports discman - incredibly poor ergonomics and, (my fault) had I read the label, doesn't play mp3's. Returned it. Started reading discussion groups with my 2 criteria in mind. Found this player. *** It's wonderful ***. It does * not * skip and I can go to town trying to make it skip. Maybe mine was made on a good run, I don't know. I just know it works right. The only drawbacks: You can't fast search, and, like 90% of all discman's out there, one hard and fast truth: ditch the headphones immediately and get some good ones. You will come into a whole new world, sound will improve a couple grades easily. Just figure the price of decent headphones into the real cost of ownership. Volume is adequate/satisfying/enough - not "extra" or blow you away loud but satisfying with decent mid to high efficiency headphones. If you're into LOUD metal volume this may not be the player for you but it wasn't "weak" either. The sound is warm but clear. I encode my mp3's at 128 or 192kbps using the LAME encoder. They sound * great * !! Heck...it sounds better than my stereo at home in some ways. Really I would give this a 4.5 but I don't want to knock it down to a 4. I shouldn't say how good this is as I want a couple more for my friends. I considered the iRiver discman's but backed off due to reports of unbulletproof skip protection which was a primary concern for me. I really haven't auditioned them - they get good reviews mostly - I'm sure they are fine. I covet their hard drive player. Until the hard drive players come down to a reasonable price - this was my solution and is great sounding unit. I am happy.P.S. For MP3's this unit displays the regular windows-named filename in a scrolling billboard way (when you ask for it by switching views - otherwise it's track # and time) which works for me. If you are outdoors/active I recommend obtaining a Case Logic or some kind of see-through padded outer case for bad weather as icing on the cake.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great Sound Quality and Battery Life, but not a Rio,
By
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
I'm such a spoiled..., i just love to navigate through a mp3 cd (RioVolts did it beautifully, but the battery life is horrible) and this device just isn't friendly that way...a downright pain in the... if you have a bunch of random songs. Additionally, the resume feature only works on one cd and starts at the beginning of the track (again, RioVolts do multiple cd resuming and resume wherever you are in the track). Best sound quality and battery life I've ever had the pleasure of partaking of in a cd/mp3 player though...the concert hall setting makes the sounds resonate beautifully. Oh ya, one more bad thing...no protective case...which is a must with these delicate and thinly designed cd players.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pleasantly Surprised,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
I've started using the MP3-Pro format and then discovered my 1st gen Casio portable wouldn't play them and was getting a little tired of converting files. I stumbled across the Panasonic surfing the web on my phone and made an impulse buy. Wow. It plays MP3-Pro (and about every other MP3 rate), has a great battery life, it's light-weight and overall very cool (that's important, right?). It also plays WMA files and normal audio CD's (haven't tested/listened to either so far). It reads song tags in its 2-line, arc shaped LCD display - which is nice when you can't remember a song or artist name, or are searching for a specific title. I've got a disc burned in MP3-Pro (96Kbps) with 110 songs (300 megs) playing in random currently and song access time is great (fast). The headphones are light in weight and sound fine. The earpiece is at a different angle and so rotating the headband back on your head a little gets the earpieces in the sweet spot. However I prefer to listen through a pair of Sony MDR-7506 phones (the coiled cord is heavy and can pull the light player off a table or desk if you're not careful). If you're already comfortable burning data or music CD's and new to portable players and don't want to drop a ton of cash, I think the Panasonic hits the mark perfectly. Note: No AC adapter came with this package (SL-MP80) and the Amazon price is better than the competition. I don't personally care for the preset EQ settings either. Of course on my wish-list is hardware based crossfading - maybe someday.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A decent MP3/CD player that fits most needs.,
By Mike Lee (NJ, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
I bought this CD player looking for an MP3/CD player with long battery life and durability. I got pretty much what I wanted -- the player's survived a couple tough falls (though it'll roll a bit if it lands on its side) and the batteries have held out over periods when I forgot to stop the music. I do have a few doubts as to whether they last for 48 hours, but they're good for at least 20, which serves my purposes fine. The claim of resumable playback is also questionable -- I've had some trouble getting it to work consistently.One major feature that's lacking is fast-forwarding on MP3 CD's -- you can only do this on audio CD's, as holding down the seek buttons just move you up and down the folders in data CD's. But my only other complaint would be the lack of a LCD backlight -- it's really difficult to figure out what I'm doing in the dark, though the button configuration is still intuitive. I'd also have prefered a scrolling (vs. the button-based) volume control, but that's not all that important either. The playback of MP3's and WMA's is useful, though if you have no use for the latter just save yourself some money and get the MP70 (unless you like the concentric ring design of the MP80 to the MP70's blue gradient). There are no problems with sound, a hold button exists, skipping has never happened to me, having ID3 tags is nice, and read time is good. Priced on the lower end of MP3 CD players, I'd say this one is a good buy, but I'd shop around a little more to make sure you get the features you want. There's no remote or FM tuner on this one, and some players boast even higher battery lives. But if all you need is a reliable MP3 CD player that'll play everything on it reasonably conveniently (as long as you don't need to see song info in the dark or be able to search within an MP3 track), this may be the one you're looking for.
19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Lacks two critical features and more,
By A Customer
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
This looked like a great deal, and was highly rated when I bought it. Sure looks cool, too! Live and learn.I have two major gripes about it: weak maximum volume, and its inability to ff/rew inside mp3/wma files. I listen to a lot of classical music, which due to its innately large dynamic range, is usually recorded several dB lower than pop music. This unit's maximum volume is simply too low to hear soft passages clearly. As for pop music, the max volume is only *slightly* louder than I can take, and I'm pretty careful with my ears. If you like to hammer yourself with a huge sound, don't buy this. It probably gets excellent battery economy because of its wimpy power output. Oh, and I compared it to my 4-year-old discman, (same disc, fresh batteries, same headphones), and the discman is definitely capable of louder output. Furthermore, the inability to ff/rew (in mp3) is frustrating because again, classical music tends to have a few 10-20 minute tracks, instead of 12 4-min tracks... and I often like to listen to specific passages, not an entire movement. Fortunately, it *does* ff/rew on a proper audio CD. The mega-bass EQ is acceptable, but the "live" setting sounds positively ridiculous, like the music is being played inside a gigantic trash can. Finally, there is a slight pause between mp3 tracks, though my mp3's are encoded at 256kbit, so I'm surprised the unit even plays them. I think I'm going to return this tomorrow...
16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Versatility of technologies,
By
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
As advertised, it does play all three: CD Audio, MP3 and WMA!At first I had my doubts, but once I got past the WMA copy protection issue and the Variable-Bit-Rate problem, Voila! Do NOT use Windows Media Variable-bit-rate recording option for the WMAs. IMHO, this is a real sophisticated piece of electronics with such versatility and portability. And, so far, it is quite easy on the standard alkaline off-the-shelf AA batteries, at least with MP3s and WMAs. The three choices of Equalizer pre-sets include S-XBS (bass boost), LIVE, and blank/standard. The LIVE setting is HI-FI when used on a number recorded before a live audience and to me sounds like the listener is on the front row of a concert. 3D? One word of caution, however: I am a mature adult and I treat this hardware with the somewhat delicate care such technology deserves. I'm afraid my young adult son would break it in a few days; don't skateboard with it in your pocket! ;-) Also, read the user manual! The player does have other limitations, but they're stated in black-and-white. And last but not least: I just burned ONE CD with 122 songs on it! That's really compact, to me. (In case you can't tell, this is my first experience with a portable MP3 player.)
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good but could be better,
By
This review is from: Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player (Electronics)
Postives:+Attractive price +Looks pretty cool +Plays CDs/MP3/ and WMA (haven't tried yet). +Long battery life Negatives: |
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Panasonic SL-MP80 CD/MP3 Player by Panasonic
Used & New from: $59.99
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