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Review 1 of 4 Summary: We have both the XC-30M and its successor, the XC-35M. Not much difference, but the newer machine does seem to load a bit faster with a tad more finesse. Upon loading 5 CDs, you can select which disc and which track you want it to play while the drawer is still closing; elapsed time before the sound comes out, including drawer-closing time: 15 seconds. That's going to be too slow for some, but remember, this is a pretty full-featured machine that can be had on sale at Best Buy for $100 even, and unlike the similarly-priced Technics machine on the shelf next to it, the Aiwa comes with a remote.
We also have minidisc, which is one reason to want the optical out (no Toslink cable supplied, however). The Aiwa can of course be programmed across discs (any track from any disc in any order), and if you're making cassettes instead of minidiscs, it will compute the best track arrangement to fit onto whatever length cassette you tell it. It will play the tracks for side 1, politely pause while you flip the cassette, then play the tracks for side 2. Nice.
Can it play discs with horrifying scratches caused by disturbed children playing with Xacto knives? No, but it can handle reasonably defective discs without skipping or groove-locking. Better than the portables we've used, even with their shock buffers on. Not as good as our old single-disc Sharp, though.
If you have bat hearing and can hear the sound of individual electrons tripping over crystalline boundaries in your speaker cables, you probably won't like the sound of the digital-to-analog converter in the Aiwa, because it just doesn't cost enough. People with bat hearing also spend a lot of time in dark, cavelike conditions and will therefore complain about the overeager display, which does do a certain amount of, um, flashing. The rest of us will find the unit's dual 1-bit DACs sound just fine, and our solution to the whackety-whack sounds that disc-changing makes will be to put the machine in a cabinet in our audio furniture and think of ways to spend the money we saved on fun audio toys. In short, a heckuva deal. Strengths: most features for money; cheapest CD player of any kind with an optical out Weaknesses: noisy, somewhat slow disc change (improved somewhat on XC-35M); display is, well, exhibitionistic Similar Products Used: XC-35M, many portables from Panasonic, Sony, Aiwa, GPX
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