| Brand Name: | Philips |
| Number of Items: | 1 |
| Brand Name: | Philips |
| Number of Items: | 1 |
Product Details
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"Magic" electronic skip protection automatically stores digital music information during play using a 100-second buffer (MP3, 128 kbps; 45 seconds with audio CD tracks) and inserts it in place of lost information when the CD player is bumped or shaken. Playback options include 50-track programming for extended MP3 sequencing, resume (a bookmark function that picks up playback where you last stopped), repeat (track or disc), and random play.
MP3 features include ID3 tag recognition for convenient song and artist name displays and a navigation system that lets you scroll through discs by either album or by individual track. The player reads files encoded at anywhere from 32 to 320 kbps.
A hold switch prevents unintended interruptions in playback and saves batteries by negating playback when the player is stopped. Auto power off kicks in one minute after playback has ended, an additional battery-saving convenience. The player's 1-bit digital-to-analog converter renders digital audio as smoothly and accurately as possible, and the player runs for approximately 20 hours (MP3 playback; 15 hours for audio CD) on 2 AA batteries (not supplied).
What's in the Box
CD player, headphones, a belt clip, a car cassette adapter, a DC cigarette-lighter power adapter, an AC/DC power adapter, a user's manual, and warranty information.
What's in theb ox
AC/DC adapter, Belt clip, Stereo in-ear headphone
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Almost perfect,
By
This review is from: Philips EXP313 Portable MP3-CD Player with Car Kit (Red) (Electronics)
I bought this player to use primarily while driving, and I've found it to be almost perfect for my needs. The criteria I used to select this model were car adapter included, resume feature, and MP3 capability. Unlike what another reviewer stated, the resume feature works fine for both audio and mp3 cd's, even after a day or more of non-use. He must have had a defective unit. The LCD display is extra-large and easy to read. The skip protection works much better than the last player I owned. Initially, the player would not play my MP3 CDs, which had me worried until I read the instructions. I was using a Linux computer to burn my CDs and was using the Rockridge extensions. The instructions state that the player will only support the Windows-compatible Joliet extensions. After burning a new CD with Joliet only, it played perfectly. I was also initially disturbed by the fact that the resume feature did not seem to work. Later, I realized that since I was using the car adapter exclusively, I had neglected to place AA batteries in the player. Batteries in, problem solved. I have one gripe that prevents this player from scoring 5 stars. It involves the behavior of the player when using the car adapter. When turning off the power by switching off the ignition on the car, the player occasionally locks up and must be "reset" by removing the batteries. This happens about 50% of the time. I have found through trial and error that I must press the stop button on the player before switching off the ignition in order to prevent this behavior. Unfortunately, however, the unit remains ON for about 30 seconds after pressing the stop button before shutting off completely (some sort of standby mode or something). If I shut off the ignition during this period, then the resume feature does not always kick in. Therefore, I have to wait 30 seconds after pressing stop to turn of the ignition. I have almost trained myself to press stop on the player when entering a parking lot, etc, so I don't have to sit idling for 30 secs. Other than this one problem, I've been very happy with this player.
14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
EXP313 attempts to update the 301/303 series, poorly,
By
This review is from: Philips EXP313 Portable MP3-CD Player with Car Kit (Red) (Electronics)
...The Philips EXP313 is one of the latest MP3 CD players available today from Philips, and appears to be an upgraded version of their prior 301/303 models from a few years back, models which didn't have ID3 text display but only numerical track/folder display. ... Although the added ID3 tag support is appreciated, the problems introduced in this latest EXP313 model makes it less friendly than the prior 301/303 models - such as complete hangups when the car ignition is turned off when used with the DC adapter, inability to FF/RW to the next/prior song when the end of the current song is reached, title scrolling on the LCD panel stops after 3 rounds, display settings don't stick, etc. Here's one time where I would say the EXP301/303 series is the better buy. Less annoying even though it only has numerical track/folder display. Keep in mind the latest MP3 CD Portables from Sony and Panasonic are worth investigating - they'll probably be better, and they all have ID3 tag displays. Philips Expanium EXP313 - LCD Only scrolls the title, author, album title three times, then stops scrolling. You have to push the DISPLAY button to skip to the next choice to get it to scroll for 3x before it stops again.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Its not bad,
By A Customer
This review is from: Philips EXP313 Portable MP3-CD Player with Car Kit (Red) (Electronics)
I am happy with this player, in general. I think the sound is great. The anti skip protection is also great. I wear the player on my belt using the belt clip while I jog and it hasn't skip once yet. By the way, the belt clip is a fantastic thing to have. I hate the fact that not a lot of portable players have this feature. For me sound and good anti-skip protection are the determing factors in getting a player (as well as a belt clip). However I have some of the same complains as a previous reviewer. This player could afford a redesign. As is, the volume button is definitely too close to the open/close button. I keep opening the player when all I want to do is adjust the volume. This problem got to be so aggravating that I put a rubber band around the player. On my player it takes between 9 to 30 seconds before the player starts to play MP3s, depending curiously enough on which burning program I use to burn the disc. The resume feature is useless with mp3s.
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