life expectancy of a cdp?


I am looking at a used Parasound cdp. I know that it is based on amount of use , but on average how long should a unit last, and what amount of maintance is required? I read in other threats about the laser having to be serviced in some units.
Gary
garypic

Showing 3 responses by trelja

OK, now I see where you're coming from, Grant. Yes, we're saying the same thing. Previously, the Philips units were inferior to Sony. The Audio Aero Primas with the Philips part were really bad. Now, it's the other way around - I have very little confidence in the Sonys from the past couple of years.
Grant, actually, it's the other way around - the Philips is far better than the Sony.

From what I understand, that wasn't the case more than 5 years ago. However, since Sony shifted production to China, the quality of its laser assembly has really fallen off the cliff. In the case of a bunch of the Consonance players that used the Sony that I imported in 2007, you were lucky to have the laser work when you opened the box and took the player out. That's quality control for you. I've never had to repair a Philips, the number of Sonys I've fixed in a 2 year period was somewhere between 75 and 80.

The first CD player I ever bought, a Pioneer PD5100 in 1987 for $99 has played flawlessly multiple times a week since I brought it home that day. So, as has been said, there's little correlation between time and use and reliability. Sometimes I've wondered if a player or transport built several years ago is a good option for an audiophile in the market, as if you have a laser that was built in Japan and is working soundly, there's no reason it won't continue to do so far into the future.
Hello, Steve!

The Droplet is the only Consonance to currently use the Philips. Along those lines, it is the only Consonance player not to have laser assembly worries. The first generation of Droplets used the Sony, and had LOTS of problems. What is interesting is that if you read the review, you can see that even the review sample that won the 6moons.com Blue Moon Award was having issues during the review. Truly a harbinger of the future.

Apart from the Reference 2.0 SACD player which used a Sony SACD assembly (good thing, as I hear the Philips SACD assemblies are as just as horrible as the Sony CD assemblies), the older Consonance players, including the initial iteration of the CD120 Balanced, were Philips. They fail once in a great while. Since they are front loaders with a drawer, once they fail, you have a nice doorstop as the company does not support them. All CD120 Linear players use the Sony CD transport.