The cheapest CD player ever made is surprisingly good - the 1988 Yorx CD Pal

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • A closer look at a CD player I first did a video about nearly 12 years ago: the Yorx CD Pal, also sold by J.C. Penney. One of the first CD players to cost less than $100, it lacks many features, but actually has several things in common with much more expensive CD players.
    **CORRECTION: At 12:40 I meant a sampling rate of 96 kHz, not 48 kHz.**
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 740

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 Před 3 lety +370

    "CD PAL" the superior version of the CD NTSC standard :P

    • @FifoF
      @FifoF Před 3 lety +7

      Haha!

    • @CptJistuce
      @CptJistuce Před 3 lety +17

      Funny, it doesn't look flickery to me...

    • @SproutyPottedPlant
      @SproutyPottedPlant Před 3 lety +1

      CptJistuce PAL-60

    • @CptJistuce
      @CptJistuce Před 3 lety +1

      @@SproutyPottedPlant NTSC color gamut
      (Also, PAL-60 sacrifices the resolution advantage PAL-50 has over NTSC)

    • @michaelturner4457
      @michaelturner4457 Před 3 lety +4

      CD PAL capable, even before VideoCD was invented. Not bad

  • @vincentliew9763
    @vincentliew9763 Před 3 lety +106

    This sounds way better compared to those unknown China made dvd players which provides tonnes of function. Sound is priority in my opinion.

    • @EdgarsLS
      @EdgarsLS Před rokem +1

      Yeah, you can even hear tons of digital noise in the audio on them because they put everything on a matchbox sized PCB

  • @AnonymousFreakYT
    @AnonymousFreakYT Před 3 lety +88

    The music on the first CD you used to demonstrate it sounds exactly the way the unit looks.

    • @jub8891
      @jub8891 Před 3 lety +4

      it took a while for me to see it .. until the lead sax started

    • @jub8891
      @jub8891 Před 3 lety +4

      the tracks actually remind me of 90's japanese visual novels..

    • @JasonBlank
      @JasonBlank Před 3 lety +3

      Link to music: czcams.com/video/-EOYg29gh4s/video.html

  • @dougr3142
    @dougr3142 Před 3 lety +44

    I still have the very first CD player I ever bought: A single tray Yorx I bought in 1987 for $80 and the damned thing still works!!

    • @scottziegler4238
      @scottziegler4238 Před 2 lety +4

      I have my Dad's first CD player, a 1986 Realistic. It's my main CD player.

  • @gotham61
    @gotham61 Před 3 lety +35

    The bottom model shown at 1:23 was my first CD player. I remember telling people I would buy a CD player when they dropped below $200, thinking they would never get there. It took about a year.

    • @Hubjeep
      @Hubjeep Před 6 měsíci +1

      My brother had a similar model, the Magnavox CDB-460. I used it in the garage to the mid 2000's, then Roku Soundbridge, finally built a computer for the garage streaming music.

  • @ChaunceyGardener
    @ChaunceyGardener Před 3 lety +88

    Early 'cheap' products of any new tech are better than late cheap revisions.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Před 3 lety +12

      Chauncey Gardener Not always.

    • @oleo007
      @oleo007 Před 3 lety

      I agree.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety +9

      @@tookitogo Agreed, not always, take LCD monitors for example, in the early 2000's I had a 15in 1024x768 KDS LCD monitor with built in speakers, and t was like $300 at the time, and that was considered a cheap low end model, and just a few years ago I bought 3 Sceptre 24in 1080p 16:9 60hz displays with VGA, DVI, HDMI, 3.5mm in put, and built in speakers(i don't use them they are crap), 2 are on my main gaming machine at home, and one on my work machine at work, all 3 have served me well, and cost me a total of $310 USD shipped to my door from Newegg, and are miles better then the old KDS display.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Před 3 lety +2

      Commodorefan64 Exactly!!!

    • @qwertykeyboard5901
      @qwertykeyboard5901 Před 3 lety

      Modern cheap portable cd players are pretty decent

  • @TheTapeDiscMan
    @TheTapeDiscMan Před 3 lety +139

    If this was the cheapest CD player back in 1989, I probably would've bought it.

    • @redstickham6394
      @redstickham6394 Před 3 lety +8

      The first CD Player I had was in the late 1980s and was made by Sharp.

    • @N0zer0
      @N0zer0 Před 3 lety +9

      Me too. It sounds pretty decent. The only thing it really lacks today is digital output.

    • @xaenon
      @xaenon Před 3 lety +11

      I would buy it right now if it's for sale. The simple basic functionality of it appeals to me.

  • @techtomek5062
    @techtomek5062 Před 3 lety +54

    Good that it has so few features, where nothing is, nothing can break 😁

    • @roytofilovski9530
      @roytofilovski9530 Před 3 lety +6

      Could not agree with you more.

    • @Jiji-the-cat5425
      @Jiji-the-cat5425 Před 3 lety +4

      It's cheap, but so few parts, as long as you take care of it, it'll last forever.

    • @techtomek5062
      @techtomek5062 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Jiji-the-cat5425 The more complex a system, the more vulnerable it is

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife  Před 3 lety +19

    *CORRECTION:* At 12:40 I meant a sampling rate of 96 kHz, not 48 kHz.

    • @ThriftyAV
      @ThriftyAV Před 3 lety +2

      I read comments, so I found this. Some commenters blast away without looking. It might help minimize addition folks offering "corrections" if this one was pinned to the top.

    • @ThriftyAV
      @ThriftyAV Před 3 lety +1

      oops... the one you have pinned is the one that SHOULD be pinned... never mind. nothing to see here.

  • @themaritimegirl
    @themaritimegirl Před 3 lety +19

    Wow, a completely lackluster and unassuming device packing some actually decent hardware inside. That's pretty neat.

  • @ApolosaCakau
    @ApolosaCakau Před 3 lety +85

    Loading a CD is like loading an audio cassette tape on that thing

    • @martytoo
      @martytoo Před 3 lety +5

      Yes, but the first vertical cassette players were an innovation. I think i was afraid to buy a vertical cassette player when they first arrived. All the original cassette tape players and recorders were of a drop in configuration.
      My first drop in was a hissy Magnavox made by Matsushita. The second was a Dolby model from Harmon Kardon made by Nakamichi before they marketed models in the US.
      My third was a 2 head Nakamichi 600. The transport was slanted!

    • @redpheonix1000
      @redpheonix1000 Před 3 lety +10

      And interestingly enough, Techmoan has a cassette player that loads a tape in a tray, like most CD players do!

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety +1

      redpheonix1000 I have a Denon like that, but it doesn’t work.

    • @maximilianfischer8899
      @maximilianfischer8899 Před 3 lety

      @@danieldaniels7571 i have one and it does work

    • @maximilianfischer8899
      @maximilianfischer8899 Před 3 lety

      @@danieldaniels7571 what does not work on yours?

  • @dashcamandy2242
    @dashcamandy2242 Před 3 lety +17

    The sound quality is surprising, as your title says. I appreciate when a manufacturer designs a device that puts out an unadulterated signal.
    I was really, really, really interested in getting a standalone CD Player at Caldor when they had a Soundesign for $99.99 (I'm guessing 1991-92?) and that is what I asked for as my 8th grade graduation present - it was destined to sit on top of my Channel Master AM/FM/8-track stereo. Instead, my father bought me a Sony CFD-470 bookshelf system, the speakers for which I still use daily (connected to the receiver that my PC is connected to).
    My first CD? Phil Collins' "Face Value." Not quite as amazing as "No Jacket Required," but still a great album. Thank goodness CDs don't wear out from repeated plays, I was constantly playing "In The Air Tonight" and "I Missed Again."

  • @Jimmyhaflinger
    @Jimmyhaflinger Před 3 lety +50

    the only important feature of any cd player is durability, and this one still works after 30 years while many more expensive models failed long ago

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Před 3 lety +5

      My moms Sony CDP-M27 is on it's 3rd KSS-150A/210A laser and it started getting incredibly shock sensitive again... whereas this one is probably still on the original late 80s laser because... well who would want to buy a replacement laser at likely half the original cost of the player (not even including labor). And it still works...

    • @jimaglenn
      @jimaglenn Před 3 lety +1

      Sound doesn't matter?

    • @Jimmyhaflinger
      @Jimmyhaflinger Před 3 lety +1

      @@jimaglenn cd players sound all the same way to me

    • @Jiji-the-cat5425
      @Jiji-the-cat5425 Před 3 lety +4

      If it's super basic and not fancy, but the parts that work are built well, it'll last you forever.

    • @thrivalmode4523
      @thrivalmode4523 Před rokem

      @@Jimmyhaflingero say that all CD players sound the same to you is like to say that all singers sound the same also. Impossible! Just because you might be tone deaf doesn’t make it true!

  • @peacearchwa5103
    @peacearchwa5103 Před 2 lety +17

    As I own a very large collection of CDs, I've noticed subtle differences in sound quality between players. Your testing demonstrates one cause of those differences, the D/A conversion and design for frequency filtering characteristics. Visually, the Yorx and JCPenney players are appealing on the shelf. If I see one in good working condition at a yard sale or thrift store, I am likely to buy it. Thanks!

    • @alkestos
      @alkestos Před 2 lety +2

      You mean to claim you hear tones over 20kHz?

  • @BigEightiesNewWave
    @BigEightiesNewWave Před 3 lety +98

    Cheapest back then but made in Japan , NOT China , is a win.

    • @Mario_N64
      @Mario_N64 Před 3 lety +7

      CD technology still wasn't made in China back then.

    • @traxonwax
      @traxonwax Před 3 lety +29

      I'm 47 and I can still remember people still putting down Japanese tech. Nowadays, we would pay a hefty premium for anything made in Japan.

    • @souljastation5463
      @souljastation5463 Před 3 lety +6

      @@traxonwax It will happen the same with Chinese stuff in the future.

    • @zsin128
      @zsin128 Před 3 lety +1

      @@souljastation5463 but who will make cheap tech then?

    • @qwertykeyboard5901
      @qwertykeyboard5901 Před 3 lety

      @@souljastation5463 China makes amazing and good stuff

  • @afloyd4976
    @afloyd4976 Před 3 lety +93

    If you have any CD-Rs with a paper sticker label, you best copy that to another disk if it still reads. Paper labels kill disks.

    • @stepheng8779
      @stepheng8779 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah found that out, heart sinks when I come across one that I've missed.

    • @EgoShredder
      @EgoShredder Před 3 lety +5

      What's the current thinking on those printable CDs?

    • @ardenpips
      @ardenpips Před 3 lety +2

      I’d like to know that myself

    • @ardenpips
      @ardenpips Před 3 lety +1

      I guess for cheapness

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 Před 3 lety +10

      I've once seen someone trying to remove one of those CD labels..... it peeled off the freaking reflective layer too >_

  • @LightTheUnicorn
    @LightTheUnicorn Před 3 lety +15

    Simple, solid and still doing its job even today (aside from the sleepy LCD!). Great find!

  • @cjpwolf2436
    @cjpwolf2436 Před 3 lety +29

    It's the CD Toaster!!!

  • @stepheng8779
    @stepheng8779 Před 3 lety +18

    Cheapest cd player I ever bought was from Richer Sounds in the UK. £29 for an Eclipse cd player. About twice a year they printed vouchers and you could even get £10 off.
    What hi-fi magazine raved how unbelievably good these players were, mine lasted years and I sold it for more than I paid 👍

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety

      Cheapest CD player I ever bought new here in the US was a portable job being an RCA $28 USD with 10 sec anti-skip back in the mid 90's, unless you want to count DVD-RW drives for computers I've picked up new over the years for builds for $18 USD(I still build all my desktops with 1 DVD-RW drive as you never know when you might need it).
      however today at a local Goodwill I was able to snag a like new SONY CFD-S50 portable AM/FM radio with CD/CD-R/CD-RW/MP3 CD player, tape deck, as well as 3.5 line in/head phone jacks for $11.91 USD thus making it the cheapest CD player I've bought to date.

    • @adejupe8308
      @adejupe8308 Před 3 lety

      Ahhhhh the Eclipse CD101 from Richer Sounds. I remember them well :)

    • @stepheng8779
      @stepheng8779 Před 3 lety +1

      @@adejupe8308 them's the boys 😀 bullet proof, used to play everything, never skipped. Took it on mobile DJ duties, used to recommend it to all the bars I worked, unbelievable bit of kit.

  • @battra92
    @battra92 Před 3 lety +19

    You are dead on correct about why CDs took over. The cheapest CD player sounded great while the record players were sounding worse and worse (for what people could afford.) Plus CDs were smaller, less prone to damage and all that. It just got a lot better a lot faster. It was the cost of the discs that made converting over expensive in my family.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety +2

      I never got the “converting over” concept. Always kept playing my records on a good turntable while playing my CDs on a CD player. Back then car and portable CD players were expensive and skipped constantly, so music on the go had to be recorded to a cassette anyway if you bought it on vinyl or a CD.

    • @battra92
      @battra92 Před 3 lety +1

      @@danieldaniels7571 it was more about that new CDs were far more expensive than records or tapes. Plus the upfront cost of buying a player.

  • @cigarobsession
    @cigarobsession Před 3 lety +15

    Oh man flash back! I had a big fake rack yorx system

  • @robbo5life
    @robbo5life Před 3 lety +33

    when you smacked the top 2:58 reminds me of Onlow from Keeping up appearances with his old TV

    • @Alexis_du_60
      @Alexis_du_60 Před 3 lety +6

      Good ol' percussive maintenance :p

    • @01chippe
      @01chippe Před 3 lety +3

      I was just watching Keeping Up Appearances!

    • @FIXTREME
      @FIXTREME Před 3 lety +4

      @Robbo 5 Life "OH NICE" 🧔🏼🍺🚬

    • @stragulus
      @stragulus Před 3 lety +6

      This was surprisingly more common in those days than people might expect! Those 70s/80s tv's just kept on working but over time a lot of them developed bad solder joints from heat, or from gravitational force as they'd cram some boards in vertically. Nothing a good whack wouldn't 'fix' for a little while..

    • @danielponder690
      @danielponder690 Před 3 lety +2

      The Bucket residence, lady of the house speaking

  • @kbhasi
    @kbhasi Před 3 lety +29

    Somehow, with the design, I imagine some people got a bad impression of audio CDs from that cheap player, or upgraded to higher end players and were wowed by the features they offered.

    • @Mario_N64
      @Mario_N64 Před 3 lety +3

      The jump in sound quality was so big, that you didn't really miss fancy features. You listened to whole CDs from start to end.

    • @matthewszalkowski4719
      @matthewszalkowski4719 Před 2 lety

      I had a Cambridge audio that had a burr brown DAC

  • @ozmond
    @ozmond Před 3 lety +24

    I honestly wouldn’t mind having this sitting in my entrainment console.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety +3

      Same here, I live in the southern US, my house was build in the 1950's, is a single story ranch house, and it was common then to build homes with front sittings rooms to entertain guest, and I would love to have something like this in that room right in the corner between my 2 couches with a pair of matching black floor, or larger book shelf speakers for a late 80's/early 90's stack setup.

  • @Chris-tf7gi
    @Chris-tf7gi Před 3 lety +8

    That looks so 80s'! And surprisingly good quality sound. Nice find.

  • @JohnDobak
    @JohnDobak Před 2 lety +14

    Interesting that CD players could be that cheap that quickly into their life-cycle. First ones were released in 1982~ish so in just 6 years or so they went from $700+ to $100~.
    For modern day manufacturing turn around time's that's not very shocking but given the generally slower pace of development and iteration back then It's pretty darn quick that CD players became so commodified.

    • @NielsVandenPut
      @NielsVandenPut Před 5 měsíci

      One of my professors at university used to work at Philips (from 1985 to 1994) and he always spent his first class of his course in mechatronics to demonstrate how the mechanisms in CD players were miniaturized year after year, allowing the cost to decrease. Interesting stuff! But it's been over 10 years and I don't remember the details.

  • @gregoryjohnson2028
    @gregoryjohnson2028 Před 3 lety +13

    I had one of these! Loved that you could see the CD spinning. However there was always a very slight noise (possibly from the motor) that came through the RCA outputs that was usually audible between tracks. Otherwise, the sound was great. I ended up giving it to my cousin and bought a Technics.

    • @ixionn563
      @ixionn563 Před 3 lety +1

      It was motor interference, probably due to cheap circuit design, those cheap record players have the same issue, hum audible from the motor via the outputs.

    • @HuskyGamersUNITE
      @HuskyGamersUNITE Před rokem

      That is what you call ground loop hum. little bit of tinkering with a couple smidges of wire and capacitors in the right spot would cure it.

  • @dean6816
    @dean6816 Před 3 lety +4

    I bought one by Crown in the UK on my 15th birthday (1993) for my first CD player, cost around £70 from a shop called Richer Sounds which still exists. It connected to my Hitachi Boom Box (the one with 4 speakers along the front).

  • @codebeat4192
    @codebeat4192 Před 3 lety +3

    There was also the Philips CD207 (1986/1987), a cheap and basic featured top loader (available in many vivid colors) with outstanding specs. I can remember it had similar price range. A hifi magazine takes this model to the test to find out it was of any quality because of the extremely low price. The magazine did a durability test with 10 or more units of this model, playing for weeks and none of these models failed the test. This model became very populair and Philips sold many, many units of this model. You can find some detailed pictures of this model and packaging on dutchaudioclassics, hower not present the most exciting color: Grey. Google "dutchaudioclassics Philips CD207" or search for "Philips CD207" on google pictures.
    I have a later Panasonic RX-FD80 boombox that uses the same simple front loader idea of loading a disc. Simple is good and durable.

  • @BessieBopOrBach
    @BessieBopOrBach Před 3 lety +18

    Another fascinating piece of audio archeology, vwestlife. I'm stunned at all the Sony chips in this and the fact that it still works. Many CD players start to stutter after 20 years due to lubrication along the transport rails drying up.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety +5

      This one might not have been used as much, plus the fact it's CD drive is vertical could have also helped the grease on the rails of the laser last longer with it all not being right on top of the heat generating components which is what can dry out the grease on horizontally setup CD players.

    • @HuskyGamersUNITE
      @HuskyGamersUNITE Před rokem

      Ecolube is what I use for worm gear lubrication. It's used for scuba diving. It is safe on your skin and does not eat plastic.

  • @ThriftyAV
    @ThriftyAV Před 3 lety +6

    One more unit that was just below $100 from the late 1980s was the Crown CD-70. It is a top loader similar to the Sears one you mention. The CD-70 lacked the ability to scan through a track, you could just skip forward and backward, and it would mis-track way too often. Unfortunately, I have not been able to find an advertised price for this unit in an old magazine or catalog.

    • @FIXTREME
      @FIXTREME Před 3 lety +1

      Crown Japan? They are still an electronics brand here in Bolivia

    • @ThriftyAV
      @ThriftyAV Před 3 lety

      @@FIXTREME A lightning strike took out my Pioneer CD player in 1988. I saved up my after school job money at $3.45 per hour to purchase the cheapest CD player I could find to replace it, and it was a Crown Japan CD-70. Within a year I replaced it with a much better Teac.

  • @therealchayd
    @therealchayd Před 3 lety +3

    I used to love the old '80s cheap stereo thing where they used to plaster the front of devices with redundant wordage like "Advanced Graphic Equalizer System", and fancy, meaningless graphics and even fake buttons or a "spectrum analyzer system" which was just some fixed LEDs, or maybe a LED VU meter if you were really lucky.

  • @marvingarden4587
    @marvingarden4587 Před 3 lety +1

    flashbacks from the 80s are hitting hard with that first demo CD you played there :) Great review VWestlife, cheers!

  • @StevenSmyth
    @StevenSmyth Před 3 lety +4

    I had one that was very similar. It was a tray loading Sharp I purchased at Pacific Stereo in Reseda, CA around 1987. It was on clearance for about $100 and I was happy to get it. At one point I had to open it up to get out a disc that got stuck. The component arrangement on the PCB was very similar.

  • @tomlemole4164
    @tomlemole4164 Před 3 lety +2

    Great review! I really like vertical loading CD players, especially when you can see the whole disk spinning. There's something enjoyable about watching the disk spin, especially on CDs with colorful disc art.

  • @shkeni
    @shkeni Před 3 lety +11

    That Colors in Motion CD sounds like 1987 even though it's from 1997. Funny how even low end Japanese stuff was quite fine back then. They were just well made, I always seek the stuff.

    • @jimdayton8837
      @jimdayton8837 Před rokem

      Was thinking the same. I looked it up on discogs and was surprised to see it was from '97 and that it included their song "Foreign Nature".

  • @CreRay
    @CreRay Před 3 měsíci +2

    Ah yes, this brings back some memories, when I was about age 12 and staring in the shop window of our local Philips store (a chain of stores all around the country that only sold Philips and sub-brands Aristona and Erres). The Erres-branded midi system that came closest to what I could afford had a front-loading CD player just like this one, 2 7-segment displays for track and (I think) 2 LEDs for play and pause. Even by this time (about 1989) front-loading was associated with cheap and therefore it didn't seem like a good buy to me at the time. If you wanted a cd-player, this was your cheapest option, although CD was still a bit "a thing of the future" at that time, I certainly didn't own any CDs in 1989.

  • @BilisNegra
    @BilisNegra Před 3 lety +5

    18:21 Such a reflection many of us have made, summed up in so few words, it's a shame it's buried at the end of this video, I would gladly welcome a whole video inspired by that idea!

  • @uxwbill
    @uxwbill Před 3 lety +13

    That player reminds me a lot of the similarly cheap Soundesign model you once demonstrated. I am somewhat amazed that the transport belts are still good.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife  Před 3 lety +6

      I think I ended up giving that Soundesign "Laser Audio" player to you, right? Hopefully it didn't get lost in the flood.

    • @uxwbill
      @uxwbill Před 3 lety +2

      @@vwestlife Yes, it's still here and still works fine.

  • @irtbmtind89
    @irtbmtind89 Před 3 lety +26

    I wouldn't be surprised if Funai was the OEM that actually built this thing.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety +2

      Me either considering how many brand names they have bought up over the years, I've had several Funi rebranded TV's both CRT, and LCD over the years, and they have all worked just fine for the amount of money paid, same for the bottom end DVD player I bought with direct Funi branding i use to have in my RV before switching it out to an LG Blu-Ray I lucked up finding at Goodwill for $22 with the remote, about a year 1/2 ago.

    • @michaelturner4457
      @michaelturner4457 Před 3 lety +3

      When I first saw this player, I thought it might have been made by Crown. But the Funai CPU chip definitely confirms who the OEM was.

  • @wilkes85
    @wilkes85 Před 3 lety +10

    I like the front loading style! I've seen a few CD players from the '80s with that mechanism. Another style you never see anymore are the top-loading changers with a plastic dust cover, probably to fill in the newly-vacant space where the turntable would normally go.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety

      I remember those, and yeah, that’s totally what they were used for. Fisher actually made one like that which also doubled as a turntable. Great concept, but it was a terrible turntable as well as a mediocre CD changer. I wish a more reputable company like Sony or Teac would’ve ran with that concept and made a good one.

  • @kostis2849
    @kostis2849 Před 3 lety +3

    We were selling these! The brand was Sherton (99% sure) You are right, these were never sold separately, only as part of the system. I believe that was in 1987.

  • @net_news
    @net_news Před 3 lety +26

    Even the chepeast CD player sounds amazing, I think that's the great thing about CD format... you have to spend lots of money to have a turntable with equivalent sound quality.... way above $1000 and maybe more.

    • @Alpine_flo92002
      @Alpine_flo92002 Před 3 lety +1

      Thats because CD is digital. and a very "low" quality of 44.1khz. Yes speakers can still suck but the direct output cant be messed up that much

    • @facethewoods
      @facethewoods Před 3 lety

      You are exactly right.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Před 3 lety

      And *still* can't do it 🤣

    • @mikafoxx2717
      @mikafoxx2717 Před 2 lety +1

      Ironically, CD's are still higher quality than 95% of what we listen to today. Only now have streaming services started to go to lossless codecs

    • @Lively_1185
      @Lively_1185 Před 2 lety

      @@mikafoxx2717 Maybe at the expense of chewing up more of your mobile data though.

  • @foxyloon
    @foxyloon Před 3 lety +6

    It's pretty neat that this CD player uses essentially the same chipset as the more expensive contemporaries of the time. Probably helps explain why it sounds so good! Not at all what I was expecting to see when I read "cheapest CD player" in the title of the video.
    Honestly, I'm a huge fan of how simple and efficient the design is, as It makes for easier servicing and solves my pet peeve of sticky loading drawers. (I had a thrift store Sony CD-102 that did it, and my Kyocera DA-310cx still does it when it's cold, despite replacing all the belts and lubing it accordingly.) In this regard, this CD player is a winner in my book.

  • @tntuof
    @tntuof Před 3 lety +3

    Never knew how much I missed that laser tracking sounds

  • @tractorface1236
    @tractorface1236 Před 3 lety +8

    Reminds me of an AIWA boombox i had around the time this was made, front loading cd player didn't skip much at all for an early boombox player. Still regret getting rid of it years ago though.

  • @ralphhoskins2115
    @ralphhoskins2115 Před 3 lety

    Another masterpiece buddy... can’t wait for your next turntable review or repair.

  • @bareknuckles2u
    @bareknuckles2u Před 3 lety +2

    CDs are outstanding!

  • @spytromics
    @spytromics Před 3 lety +1

    I like how you have a Tandy 1000 in the background. That's so cool.

  • @jimdayton8837
    @jimdayton8837 Před rokem +2

    I find it quite impressive that the thing is still working. Most modern CD players break after a few years. Also, awesome choice for the Colors In Motion CD :)

  • @brentmonson8532
    @brentmonson8532 Před 2 lety +1

    Inspired by this video, I recently purchased the same Yorx player from a Shop GoodWill auction. I didn't have to do much to get it working. While cleaning it, I discovered that if you press “Stop” (instead of "Play") after a disc is loaded, the player will briefly spin the CD, read the TOC (table of contents), and then the display will show the number of tracks on the disc. You can then skip up or down to select the track you want to begin with when you press "Play." I'm not sure how handy that function actually is, but it's cool to know that it's in there.
    Handwritten on the back masonite panel, presumably by a store clerk, in descending order: O - $199.95, N - $99.95, $69.99, and $49.99. Since the last price was not crossed out, I assume it was originally sold for $49.99.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Před 4 hodinami

    Very soon after it was introduced, the CD format became mainstream, and CD players became common, even in equipment made by low-end manufacturers. Because, unlike analog formats, CD players deliver a uniform signal which varies little from the cheapest units to the most expensive, old, inexpensive players like this one still sound pretty good. The problems with early cheap equipment were more likely to lie with programming problems, reading of discs by the laser, etc., rather than poor signal quality to the analog outputs.

  • @charleskosyjana1295
    @charleskosyjana1295 Před 3 lety +2

    This reminds me of my first cd player I got for Christmas in 1985. Mine was branded ' Electrosonic ' and I believe came from Caldor. Very similar except it didn't have a see through cd holder. When I was 20 and had a decent job, I treated myself to a top of the line JVC component system. The cd player I got was the 2nd in line model with all the bells and whistles available at that time ( 1989 ). I was VERY disappointed in it's sound quality which was rather tinny and it skipped with moderate bass. The cheap Electrosonic sounded better and hardly ever skipped except at very high volumes.

  • @Rotoscoptic
    @Rotoscoptic Před 2 lety +1

    Maybe one day, I'll make myself a cheapo hi-fi stack. I love the cheaper components, they tend to have a unique look to em and if you look right you can get some great sounding stuff !

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 Před 3 lety +1

    Always loved those CD players with a window embedded into the disc tray, so you could see the disc spinning. Something i really loved about my parents' compact double cassette-Radio-CD boombox from Philips, back in 1991. The first CD player we ever had in our family. Must have been listening to countless CDs on that thing and always loved seeing the disc spinning inside and hearing the soft noises of the disc drive as it started to skin or when you skipped a track.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety

      There is a definite cool aesthetic to that. There were players in the late ‘90s that were made specifically to capture that: images.app.goo.gl/3ox2pUcS7JgReArs6

  • @extrahourinthepit
    @extrahourinthepit Před 3 lety +3

    I believe players like these are why CDs actually took over, and especially why cassettes got the bad rep they still carry: anything that can play a CD is already working with a crystal clear, noiseless, 100% perfect signal. That, audiophiles will argue, is something cassette players could never have reached, and while true, that’s not the real problem to the budget consumer: the real problem is cassette players needed some modicum of effort to get close.
    Sure, CD was winning at the highest end, but really, CD didn’t have much on DAT, DCC, or even VHS Hi-Fi, if anything at all (if you want proof, listen to Whitney’s I Will Always Love You, anywhere you wish. That track’s master was a DAT.).
    The common folk couldn’t tell a mid-range tape in a mid-range deck from a CD: the CD’s actual achievement was to be affordable for people who never experienced equipment good enough to know that.
    The same goes for “reliability”: cassettes were reliable too, given occasional deck cleaning, but the CD could reach folks who were too casual (or stupid) to know.

  • @cavannus
    @cavannus Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the review! I found the exact same model - but branded 'Veston' - at the thrift store a few days ago. I'm happy to learn more about it. I liked the external design (typical of these years) as well as the command minimalism. The sound is very good, but the player can't play the discs or tracks that have minor scratches or tiny spots of dirt. It can only play pristine CDs.

  • @TechMaxWare
    @TechMaxWare Před 3 lety +2

    I guess other than features, I don't see how using a very cheap CD player is ever going to be bad. The nature of playing a CD doesn't change depending on price unlike a record or cassette. Also, interesting you brought up the tray window. I remember when I was a kid my dad thought I was crazy for wanting a CD player where I could watch the disk spin as the unit played it. Of course that was back in the early 2000's when there were all sorts of different portable CD players. I remember finally getting one for Christmas with BOTH the window and even the ability to play MP3 CD's and absolutely having a ball with it lol.
    CD's might be obsolete, but I still enjoy using them even now. - And you can't tell me their any less useful or obsolete than a record or cassette.

    • @TechMaxWare
      @TechMaxWare Před 3 lety

      @@tarstarkusz I suppose that might be true if one is picky about having the absolute best sound. But I guess I have yet to fully experience this. With sound quality I more meant that with something like a record or cassette, quality of the medium can significantly reduce or improve sound quality, with a CD this is far less likely.
      I've seen crappy DAC's in smartphones far before I've experienced them in a CD player.

    • @markrowe8824
      @markrowe8824 Před 3 lety +4

      CD's are not obsolete, new music is released every week.

    • @TechMaxWare
      @TechMaxWare Před 3 lety

      @@markrowe8824 I would agree, however most get their music online these days. CD sales are suffering. And the technology by itself doesn't hold nearly as much as an microSD card would.
      That being said for what I use CD's for, I still find them very useful.

    • @xx-mreba-xx4051
      @xx-mreba-xx4051 Před 3 lety

      @@TechMaxWare my issue with downloads is the varying volumes.. at least almost every CD tape or record will be mastered using the same levels so i can change albums without having to adjust the players volume.

  • @darkwaterblue
    @darkwaterblue Před 3 lety +8

    Not bad. The vents on those larger caps look like Panasonics? Well made!

  • @dxer22000
    @dxer22000 Před 3 lety +5

    amazing the optical pickup still works. Maybe it used a sony KSS pickup which were very robust. Its normally the laser pickup that fails in a CD player

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety

      Yep it's either that, the LCD dies/burns out, or some leaky caps on the mainboard

  • @garypoole716
    @garypoole716 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent as always 🇬🇧❤️

  • @radio1342
    @radio1342 Před 3 lety +3

    1:25 my first ever CD player was #12 on the catalog photo. A Magnavox. That thing was a beast. It lasted forever. When I was DJing in clubs I even carried it around to play mix CD's so I could take a break. Dropped it down the stairs of the nightclub and surprisingly it still worked. I had it for over 20 years and then I think heat finally got to it as I was DJing at another club where the AC was out and it finally died. As for the JCP CD Player, it looks like the one my wife had when we were dating. After we got married she left it at her parents house. I should check next time we visit there but chances are it is long gone since we have been married over 20 years now.

    • @corneliusantonius3108
      @corneliusantonius3108 Před 3 lety +3

      That looks like a Philips CD492/482/480 clone, Philips owned the brand Magnavox for parts of the world or the whole world by that time, but your Magnavox was manufactured in Hasselt Belgium by Philips.

    • @radio1342
      @radio1342 Před 3 lety +1

      @@corneliusantonius3108 I am not really sure where it was made. Wish I still had it. I remember Phillips/Magnavox had a factory at one time in Knoxville, TN before all the jobs moved overseas.

  • @gotham61
    @gotham61 Před 3 lety +11

    You forgot to mention the most obvious missing feature. A remote. I'm surprised it doesn't say "Professional" on there somewhere.

  • @discocrisco
    @discocrisco Před 3 lety +2

    In a few years, when all of the other fancy programmable CD players with their fancy detection of loaded disks and new fangled indicator displays have died, these will be treasured.

  • @TheEmeraldMenOfficial
    @TheEmeraldMenOfficial Před 3 lety +1

    That sounds better than my Discman from 1995 does, and certainly better than Apple Music’s streaming. I’d buy this in a heartbeat if given the chance to see it in person.

  • @stephendobbins9251
    @stephendobbins9251 Před 4 měsíci

    Dang! This has the best DAC I have ever heard from a cd player in my whole life. This sounds better than the DAC in my standalone blu-ray player or blu-ray rom in my laptop. This player in your video has a very nice warm analog sound you don't usually hear from cd's. Thanks for sharing!

  • @wendystarita7996
    @wendystarita7996 Před 3 lety +1

    This is Brian. Thanks for testing this unit with a cd-r. Sony equipment wss notorious for not playing cd-r and cd-rw discs. This is a nice unit for its price. You are my hero for testing affordable units that slipped through our fingers in the past because people think you must spend more to get more. I have to mention that I've opened alot of sony low end boom boxes and equipment from that era and found all Goldstar chips inside. And sony sold them at high prices.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Před 3 lety +2

      Wendy Starita CD-RW playback requires explicit support in the CD pickup, so only very late CD players had it. CD-R, on the other hand, is designed to play in any CD player. When it doesn’t work, it’s because of a combination of the quality of the burned disc (whose quality itself is the result of the quality of the blank disc and how good the CD burner was) and the quality and condition of the CD pickup (with time and use, the lasers and photodiodes age , the adjustments can get out of calibration, and the optics can get dirty and foggy). When all these factors conspire to reduce the contrast in the signal, eventually it gets to where it can’t play. (Whereas, for example, the aged CD pickup may still produce a usable signal with a good pressed CD.)
      Anyway, upshot is that the reasons why CD-R and CD-RW won’t work in old players are totally different. :p

    • @wendystarita7996
      @wendystarita7996 Před 3 lety

      @@tookitogo I agree, but while every other company was making equipment to play cd-rw, sony didn't step up. I believe it was because Sony was manufacturing store bought pre- recorded cd' s to sell , especially when they acquired many labels,(Columbia, Warner bros. Etc.) in 1992. My friends all bought Sony equipment around that time and were disappointed because of this pitfall. Philips was far ahead in this market. Thanks for your specific analogy.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety +1

      Goldstar = LG

    • @wendystarita7996
      @wendystarita7996 Před 3 lety

      @@danieldaniels7571 This is Brian. Really,? well, Goldstar was the number one Microwave seller in the early 90s. And with their chips in low end sony products, I'll bet you are right. I have an LG tv and phone. Seem pretty good. (Fingers crossed)

  • @ArturdeSousaRocha
    @ArturdeSousaRocha Před 3 lety +2

    I love that it's junk on the outside and good on the inside, not the other way around like so many products.

  • @absinthedream9668
    @absinthedream9668 Před 3 lety +3

    Pretty cool the lack of features is to it's advantage I reckon and very decent sound quality.

  • @lurkersmith810
    @lurkersmith810 Před 3 lety +1

    The design of that JC Penney player looks like the original Denons from the birth of CD's, that cost, I think, thousands of dollars, and skipped like crazy if you breathed on them. (They had the distinctive triangular power or eject button in one corner.) The most amazing thing about CDs is, they could be played on the cheapest, worst maintained players out there, and unless they got physically jammed or scratched, no damage was done to the CD, and it would still sound like new on a good player. I had a pretty good mid-to high range stereo system back in the day, and my first CD player was one I could afford, a cheap Sanyo front drawer loader. I could not believe how good it sounded. Not that I was sophisticated enough to detect whether the cutoff from 22KHz was sharp or gradual. I never looked back, and forgot about vinyl until a year or so ago... (Yes, it happens.) I'll never give up my CDs. You can get them at my estate sale when I'm done with them!

    • @HuskyGamersUNITE
      @HuskyGamersUNITE Před rokem

      Not sure why people have a superiority complex with music and lock themselves to one format. I have music on all formats and they cost me less than 50 cents to $5 a piece for everything i have new or used. just recently got into reel to reel and saving old radio broadcasts lost on home recordings.

  • @TechBaffle
    @TechBaffle Před 3 lety

    My sister had a Bush boombox with a front loading CD mechanism.
    Always pretty cool seeing the artwork spinning around

  • @zsombor_99
    @zsombor_99 Před 3 lety +2

    I can be more minimalist via connect an old PC CD drive to a PC power supply and connect some speakers to the drive. 😉 That would be only "play", "skip forward" and "stop". That's it. No display, no anything else, just only a flat volume knob and a stereo "headphone" equivalent output. 😊

  • @riffdigger2133
    @riffdigger2133 Před 3 lety

    The CD player lovers enjoyed this. Price point is and was a big deal. The technology, the systems - the designs- the marketing. Our huge CD libraries appreciate your info and great camerawork.

  • @brucebuschman2186
    @brucebuschman2186 Před 3 lety

    I like that you put that analyzer on there to show the high frequency roll off you get from CDs.

  • @Retroaria
    @Retroaria Před 3 lety +2

    Excellence of content always in this channel. Greetings from Seoul. The CD loaded by tray was very common, I recently bought an INKEL tape deck with tray loading. Researching I discovered that this was not so rare in the past but the question remained: Was the design of loading CD by tray inspired by tape decks? Thanks for the video and on the other hand, it is the first CD player I see using tape decks inspired loading.

  • @CharlesBridgTec
    @CharlesBridgTec Před 2 lety

    Great info video!

  • @LatitudeSky
    @LatitudeSky Před 3 lety +1

    I owned the LXi Top-loading CD player. It was extremely basic in operation and very sensitive to vibration from people walking around or whatever. But it did work. Soon replaced it with a JVC tray-loading CD player that was light years beyond the LXi.

  • @KDoyle4
    @KDoyle4 Před 3 lety +1

    My first CD player was a Sharp DX-610H. It cost $69 at the local supermarket. It was not programmable, and it had no remote control, but it worked well for 10 years.

  • @tookitogo
    @tookitogo Před 3 lety +1

    Maybe this player hadn’t been used much, such that its laser isn’t worn out, and its RF adjustments happened to stay in-spec, all combining to let it play CD-R. (As a reminder to readers who don’t know this, a CD-R is intended to mimic the optical characteristics of a pressed CD, such that in theory, any CD player should be able to play a CD-R, as it appears to the player as a slightly dirty (less contrasty) disc. But if a player has aged such that its laser pickup is weak, then the reduced optical quality of the CD-R can result in a signal too weak to detect reliably. In contrast, CD-RW has radically different optical characteristics from pressed CDs and CD-Rs, and thus requires explicit support in the player.)

  • @DanielleWhite
    @DanielleWhite Před 3 lety +1

    I remember finally being allowed to get a CD player in 1991. My father's decision was I was allowed to get one from Service Merchandise in exchange for him keeping my daily allowance for 3 months and a ton of extra farm chores during that time (allowance for the time would have been $90 but it was put into an account where I couldn't access it until I turned 18.) He also set a limit of $100. With the 3 months of labor done my mother and I go and I'm crestfallen to find the cheapest they have is a front-loader from Magnavox (like the AZ8100) for $125. No getting it that day; had to go home, get dad to agree to an extension which was 2 more months for the extra $25.

  • @spatsbear
    @spatsbear Před 3 lety +1

    I have a 1988 Soundesign that I paired with my 1988 Soundesign stereo, very reminiscent of this. I’ll have to do a video on it, but it must have been an upgraded version of this: it has a VFD display and programmable playback.

  • @JessHull
    @JessHull Před 3 lety

    you always play so much cool music.

  • @rodneykingston6420
    @rodneykingston6420 Před 3 lety +1

    Memories: I was at work on a Sat. night in '86, and during a break I was looking through the paper and saw ads for a stereo store out in Framingham that was having a ONE DAY sale, that day, the big lure being 2 models of CD players, a Pioneer and a Sharp for $175 each. Called a friend and told him if he'd go out there (from Boston) to pick me one up, using his credit card, I'd take him out to a nice dinner. I wanted the Pioneer, as it was the more prestigious brand at the time, but it was some kind of a bait and switch, they basically refused to sell him one, and he called me from the store because they were putting such pressure on him to get the extended warranty for $29. That's where the sales reps made their money in those days. I had to give him a pep talk to resist (spend $29 to protect $175 for 3 years? ha ha!) It was quite a while before regular prices came down below that, and I was the first among my friends to get a CD player, a bare bones Sharp. It was a stereo component, it had no speakers. By the time it gave out 10 years later, I was able to get a Sony 5 CD carousel player (a component) for $99.

  • @TheRailroad99
    @TheRailroad99 Před 3 lety +6

    Probably the frequency cutoff is so soft because a filter with a softer decline needs less stages and is therefore a few cents cheaper... (especially coils cost a little bit and are relatively big, therefore engineers try to avoid them when possible)

    • @westelaudio943
      @westelaudio943 Před 3 lety

      They use RC filters or even DSP, not LC types using inductor coils.

  • @ArmadaAsesino
    @ArmadaAsesino Před 2 lety +1

    I like that you can see the disc spinning.

  • @seacampal1425
    @seacampal1425 Před 3 lety +1

    In the early 90's in Canada, you could buy a front-loading Magnavox player from the 'Club Price' for $ 25!! I was surprised to see that my cousin who did not know electronics as much as I impressed me with a product that cost less than the records we played on it.

  • @jamesw.1174
    @jamesw.1174 Před 2 lety +1

    In simplicity there is beauty and this one sounds good and that's what matters

  • @stuartwilkie4887
    @stuartwilkie4887 Před 3 lety +1

    I enjoyed the music on the video. Maybe you can do a Vlog featuring music from your favourite genres.Thanks!

  • @ajgirardin2098
    @ajgirardin2098 Před 2 lety +1

    I always liked the vertical playing units. Reminds me of the first CD player we had growing up. It was a Hitachi boom box we got at Sears that came with 5 free albums. For the longest time those were the only cds we had! 😆

  • @WaybackTECH
    @WaybackTECH Před 3 lety +1

    And after 31 years it still works like new.

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke Před 3 lety +23

    It ain't a Sony, but it certainly is one at heart... :P

    • @devolutionary
      @devolutionary Před 3 lety

      My parents could only afford Philips and Citizen players. Those also had a side loading mechanism. At least our Citizens CD player had a disc sensor though. Some of those early models had a limitation on the number of tracks read on a CD.

    • @johnjylanne7100
      @johnjylanne7100 Před 3 lety +1

      It's got Sony guts. That's why it still works.

  • @robshorts
    @robshorts Před 3 lety +1

    It reminds me of my very first CD player bought in 1992 from a now defunct catalog shop here in England called Index and was the cheapest CD player at the time. It was branded 'Crown Japan', though amusingly had 'Made in China' directly underneath the brand label. It had a red power on LED and a similar very basic LCD display that wasn't even backlit.
    It did have a motorised tray, can't remember if it had Random or was programmable but I have never use those features much. I did feel that it represented very good value for money though as the sound was so clear and much better than anything I was used to. You would have had to spend a lot more money for similar sound quality from an analogue cassette or Record player.

  • @namon2345
    @namon2345 Před 3 lety +14

    Me in first sight:LOL,What a cheap CD Toaster design.
    VWestlife show the mainbard part: Holy mother,That's Toaster Sleeper af from SONY CD decoder and 1Bit D/A converter.

    • @KokoroKatsura
      @KokoroKatsura Před 3 lety +1

      A N I M E
      N
      I
      M
      E

    • @namon2345
      @namon2345 Před 3 lety

      @@KokoroKatsura Both of us are A N I M E

    • @wd3574
      @wd3574 Před 3 lety

      Is the CXD1140 chip in that CD player really a 1 bit D/A converter?

    • @namon2345
      @namon2345 Před 3 lety

      ​@@wd3574 I can't find the datasheet. In radio museum said 8 Bit but i guess it might be 1 Bit oversampling to cut a cost.

    • @wd3574
      @wd3574 Před 3 lety +2

      @@namon2345 I don't know for sure either, but I don't believe 1 bit converters were quite available yet in the late 80's.

  • @ecamormex
    @ecamormex Před 3 lety +31

    I remember when a good Sony Discman portable CD player would cost almost $500.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 3 lety +1

      We all do, but by the mid 90's you could get a lower end RCA portable CD player with 10 second Anti-skip for about $28 - $30 USD that included headphones.

    • @noorazmi2329
      @noorazmi2329 Před 3 lety +1

      Imagine what if the PS5 game console and a complete set of utility to make it playable like 4K screen and etc. comes in the 80's. What is the people impression? And would it sell for 100 million dollars due to its technology?

  • @redneckways1933
    @redneckways1933 Před rokem +1

    That was my very first cd player. I had bought a new Sharp stereo in 91 but it didn't come with a cd player. My old friend gave me the Yorx.

  • @heinzfehrmann7121
    @heinzfehrmann7121 Před 2 lety +1

    But anyway ... there are more than 20 years between production and these test. And it's stil working fine. This fact cannot be taken for granted.

  • @neil6958
    @neil6958 Před 2 měsíci

    Even compressed, this audio sounds good. Interesting selection near the end!

  • @atkelar
    @atkelar Před rokem +1

    The simplicity of the player reminds me of my own first CD player. It was a regilar front tray loading Philips model that had a green LED display for the track number. Otherwise pretty much the same feature set. I got it with a compact HiFi system for Christmas; must have been around 1990-ish.

  • @markwinechairman
    @markwinechairman Před 3 lety

    vw love your posts!!! Thank You!!!

  • @scottpeterson7500
    @scottpeterson7500 Před 3 lety +10

    I bought my first CD player in 1984, the Sony D-5, it was on sale for $500. 😎🍕🍺🇺🇸