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Comentado en Francia el 20 de marzo de 2025
ARTICLE EN COURS DE RODAGEcelui-ci est déjà le secondle premier a été retourné pour cause de panne : arret en pleine lectureJ'y ai joint un rapport d'incident , dont j'aimerai avoir un retour si possibleNotation invalide actuellement
Johan Eklöf
Comentado en Suecia el 27 de julio de 2024
Den är liten & smidig men ljudet är fantastiskt!
ROBERT STASKIEWICZ
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de noviembre de 2024
unit has a solid quality feel
Mr. Stephen Macks
Comentado en el Reino Unido el 26 de enero de 2024
Only had the PL200 for a day but initial impressions are very good. It's expensive but it's also unique.For this kind of money I would have like dlna/upnp and airplay and also a media player. I don't really like Bluetooth but it has it's uses.If you are after a all in one solution this is it! It's small enough to move from room to room.It's a pitty it has no optical or coaxial inputs.It's a joy to use and very ceremonial lifting the lid up and puck then placing the cd in the player. It kinda slows you down a bit. A bit of Zen! Using the PL200 becomes a meditation 🙏.
Robert A. Alps
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 28 de noviembre de 2023
I have had a few MQA CDs from Japan over the last 3-4 years. Like hybrid SACDs, these discs will play on a regular CD player but require special processing to get the high-resolution audio content. I had seen ads on Japanese websites for players costing $2000 and up, which seemed ridiculous to me. In February 2022, I noticed the Topping E50 DAC for about $250 on Amazon. I wasn't sure how it would work, but figured I could hook it up between my CD player and receiver to unfold the MQA signal. Well, that turned out not to work, including using either the optical or coaxial outputs of the CD player to the corresponding inputs of the E50. It turns out that the E50 will unfold MQA only if the signal is input to USB (miniature). It is really only set up to handle streaming MQA audio. An option would be to rip the MQA discs to my computer and then stream them to the E50, but this is not how I wanted to operate. Just a few days ago I saw this S.M.S.L. MQA disc player on Amazon for under $600, much cheaper than $2000+. Even though I think it should be much cheaper still, I took the plunge. The player arrived quickly and I unpacked it and set it up. The instructions are in Japanese and English and are very spare. The result was that I could not get any disc to play. I was suspicious that there was a problem with the input I was using on my Sony receiver, so I called Sony for help. They convinced me that the receiver was working fine. Shortly after that I realized there was a cover over the laser reader that needed to be removed. I did not see any mention of that in the instructions. Once that was removed, things started working. I have 2 George Harrison MQA CDs and two 2-disc DG Bruckner MQA CDs with Andris Nelsons and the Gewandhaus Orchestra. The George Harrison comes off very dramatically, and I suspect it may have been mastered at a high level with emphasis on the upper range. So far, I like it. The Bruckner so far sounds a little better than the regular CD content, but not dramatically so. There is not much MQA CD content available, and it is all from Japan as far as I know, so I don't know what the market for a player like this is, but it works for me. I have ordered several Leon Russell MQA CDs and will be ordering several R.E.M. MQA CDs. I need more content to justify buying this player!The reasons for 4 stars instead of 5:1. I think it should have been less expensive.2. It plays DSD files, but not SACDs. That seems strange.3. For playing DSD or other files, the miniature USB input is used, and I guess it must be streaming. Two of my CD players have a (regular) USB input where I can plug in a thumb drive and then select a file onscreen to play. I don't see how to do this with this player.
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