Philips CD-80-a good deal?


I found a used (9 years old) Philips CD-80 for $345. I like this unit, but realize there are other units on the used market that are newer and cheaper. Is this unit worth the $$ or should I consider other used units which cost less, sound better, etc.
zeetop
The Philips was a very good unit in its time, but technology has moved on. I feel $345 is to much, especially as an average laserunit quits after 5-6 years regular use..... If I were you I'd look further.
$300 would be more like it, but, with the age of this unit if the laser pick up goes out it will cost you more to fix it than it's worth. Also, an inexpensive transport can sound as good as most of the best transports with the addition of a Genesis digital lens which can be had used for about $650-$800. Goodluck. thanks, Brian@HelloHiFi.com ph805.527.9739 fax805.527.9808 www.hellohifi.com eCatalog available. New equipment demo’s by appointment. All quotes are good for 30 days. Customers in every state, & 26 countries (angol/ingles/englisch/beszelunk magyarul!/ hablamos en espanol/wir sprechen deutsch).
I had a Philips CD60 for use in the office w/ Senheiser 545. It's nice but technology has certainly changed since then! A good bet would be a decent DVD player with a 24/96 D/A. I just bought a Panasonic A310 and found it to be much more detailed, transparent, and dynamic vs. my Philips.
Agree with Ke1, the lastest quality CD and DVD/CD players have 20dB better S/N (that's 100 times less noise) and cost between $300 and $700. The CD-80's chipset was one of the best in it's day, but probably even your car's factory-installed CD player has a far superior D/A converter. Besides, the analog output buffer of the CD-80 was not the same quality as the transport or the D/A chipset, hence the high distortion figures.
Pioneer 414 DVD/CD player is cheap and good (and better than the Philips CD-80.