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RioVolt SP50 Portable CD/MP3 Player

RioVolt SP50 Portable CD/MP3 Player

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Brand: sonicblue, rio, riovolt
Category: CE

Buy New: $69.99



Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 58 reviews
Sales Rank: 28936

Media: Electronics
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 11.8 x 8.6 x 2.3
Warranty: 1 year warranty

MPN: 90260381
Model: 90260381
UPC: 018258012249
EAN: 0018258012249
ASIN: B00005YU7N

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Brand new in factory sealed blister pack with full manufacturer's warranty, superb life-like sound in style, MP3 playback capable, a must buy!!!

Features:
  • Plays CD-R and CD-RW discs and standard audio CDs
  • 120-second anti-skip protection (above average)
  • Adjustable EQ, Repeat and Shuffle play modes and programmable playlists
  • Supports ID3 tag title display
  • 10 hour battery life using only two AA batteries

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The RioVolt SP50 plays both standard music CDs as well as your own custom CDs that you've burned with MP3 files on CD-R or CD-RW. With your RioVolt and one favorite MP3 CD, you'll have ten times more music with you than a traditional CD player. Plus, it features up to 120 seconds of skip protection, making it the perfect companion for your music.

Amazon.com Product Description
The RioVolt portable MP3-CD player grants free listening across standard audio CDs, as well as the MP3 and WMA (Windows Media Audio) files that you've recorded to CD-Rs and CD-RWs, letting you enjoy over 20 hours of digital audio from one CD (or around 250 songs). Plus, RioVolt's large backlit LCD supports both ID3 tags and CD Text, simplifying song identification from any compatible disc, while 120-second antishock circuitry guards your listening almost anywhere.

Amazingly, the RioVolt sports a playback time of up to 10 hours on two AA batteries (included), making it the first disc player we know of that can't play a single CD in its entirety.

The ID3 text display includes track number, song name, artist name, folder (album title), and overall playing time. The RioVolt also lets you navigate through directories and search for tracks one by one or in blocks of 10.

A sleek eight-function remote control lets you operate the RioVolt while it's tucked away in its carrying case or even in a backpack. The RioVolt comes bundled with RealNetworks music management software and Adaptec CD-burning software for use on your PC or Macintosh.

Audio features include adjustable equalization curves with five presets (normal, jazz, rock, classical, ultrabass), repeat and shuffle play modes, and programmable playlists.

The RioVolt comes with a one-year warranty on parts and labor.




Customer Reviews:   Read 53 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars I've never used this CD player, so ignore my review..   August 23, 2006
I was going to explain the logic behind Skip-protection on these CD players. The "45 second" skip protection is really 45 seconds of buffer memory. If it says 45 seconds for a regular CD, you can figure out how much memory the buffer is. For a regular CD, a second is 16-bits times 44100 sample/sec, divided by 8-bits (per byte), per channel. So 88200 bytes times two channels (left/right), which comes to ~172Kilobytes per second. If you have 45 seconds of buffer memory, that is approximately 8 megabytes.

Translated, for your mp3 files:
Take you bit rate, divide it by 8, to get the rate in kilobytes,
then divide 8 megabytes by that.

So 128Kbit = 16Kilobytes, 8000KB / 16KB per sec = 500 seconds of anti-skip protection. It's possible (and I don't know) that that's for just one channel, so at least it's half that, but at most its 8.3 minutes. Half, sounds about right.

So if you are playing mp3 files, you will get better anti-shock protection.

Another side effect of mp3 players is that the decoding process takes less power than spinning the disk. IF the CD only needs to spin the disk every 4 to 8 minutes, your batteries will last longer with mp3's than with regular CD's.

The downside is that all mp3's are of lesser quality, encode at 160Kbit (Dual-Stereo, VBR). Don't do Joint-Stereo it sucks. I don't know if with many mp3 encoders there is that choice anymore. VBR = Variable Bit Rate, it means the audio converter balances quality with bit-rate over the CD, so where bits would be do nothing for some quiet areas on the disk, they go further toward the areas where there is audio. CBR encoded mp3 applies the same number of bits per frame, so every second has the same amount of sound quality (sound loss), but there are times when VBR can sound better than CBR, because savings in one area can be applied to make a higher quality in another area. Other formats like WMA and Sony's ATRAC, have different ways of storing the information, and may compress the audio much better with higher quality. Note that some companies hold patents of encoding processes, MPEG was the only one that was available in "Open Source".. MP3 was a off-shoot that deals with low-bit rates,
generally not what you encode CD audio to. Audio books require WMA DRM, because its a patented process that is illegal to circumvent (if not impossible). But anyone can decode mp3's, not everyone can decode WMA DRM, except Microsoft.

Oh another quality of mp3 files, each second of a mp3 file is split into chunks, each chunk has a 4 byte header that specifies the encoding of the chunk (I'm writing a mp3 utility), anyhow, if you seperate the ID3v2 header from the front and the 128 byte V1 header from the back, all that is left is these "frames", which supposedly can be mixed, cut, spliced, all without re-encoding the files. In the encoding process it's very easy to equalize the audio because its stored in a frequency/time format rather than amplitude/time. So all one needs to do is filter out the frequencies before they are converted back to waveforms. Also the length of the audio can be increased, decreased, and the pitch can be changed, independent of each other. This is just something you get for free with the mp3 format..



4 out of 5 stars Reliable basic player   September 18, 2004
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have used this player for more than a year. The only thing that has broken is the little window showing the disk turning. This can be pushed in relatively easily, so I had to super glue it in. Other than that, everything still works properly.

I only play Mp3 CDs on this. Sound is good. I got a car kit to play in cassette players and in the car. The bass boost needs to be turned off to do this or it will distort. No equalizer, but my experiences with other players are that the preset equalizers are pretty much useless- they only degrade the sound in slightly different ways. The bass boost really makes a difference.

I almost always use the random play mode only, which works well (a truly random mix that doesn't repeat the same songs). Otherwise, navigation is confusing- I can never remember what sequence to punch the buttons, which aren't labeled very well for this. I just memorized the sequence for random play. The ID3 tag information scrolls as the song plays.

It will sometimes skip when bumped hard, but does not skip when just sitting still, which I've found some other players do. That's a plus for this player.

It has a hold switch (called Lock), no resume feature. No backlight, which is a drawback if you listen in the dark and punch in songs a lot. It has no belt clip- why don't they put removable belt clips on any of these things? They're supposed to be "portable," right?

All in all, a good player but a bit difficult to navigate.



1 out of 5 stars Made in China, and it shows   October 30, 2003
 2 out of 6 found this review helpful

What is wrong with this player:

The volume control knob is messed up, right channel comes on before left.

Line-Out refuses to work

No remote, and it would be easy to put one in

This player feels like it's going to split in two.

$.01 per unit and the screen could be back-lit

Navigating your songs is next to impossible if they are not in folders, and it only plays
in the order they were burned (leading zeros are required)

High bit-rate (160kbps) reduces the anti-skip to around 50 seconds, down from 120.

If it's moving when it gets more MP3 data, it will skip and pop (loudly)

Adjustable EQ is a bass boost switch, sounds like you're listening through a blanket

Eats batteries as a light snack, no matter the type

Good luck with tech support, it's outsourced to India, they have thick accents and are clueless, and the number is a long-distance call!

Do not buy this player!


5 out of 5 stars Can't beat the price   August 16, 2003
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I bought the SP50 for [cheap] after mail in rebate. It plays any mp3 disc i throw at it. The only thing is the headphones just plain [horrible]. But for the price get some better ones.


4 out of 5 stars Cheap and it works   August 4, 2003
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

OK, a few things that the description for the SP50 lies about:
1. The display is not backlit.
2. You can not add a remote.
3. There is no EQ.
4. It does not come with burning software, but you can use anything that can burn a MP3 CD (most any good burning software).

That aside, this is a good, cheap player. Navigation is a little sketchy, you have to select a track in a folder to jump to that folder, but the manual doesn't tell you this. The CD comes to a complete stop during MP3 playback, and spins back up every 120 seconds to save batteries. If it's not spinning, you have to wait about 3 seconds for it to spin up and get data. Most players do this, even the iPod does it (it has a hard drive so it kind of has to). Throw away the included earbuds, they [are poor quality], which is typical.

If you need a cheap player that you don't care if it gets dropped/smashed/soaked in napalm and set ablaze, and can play MP3's, get this player. It even comes wih batteries.

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