The best CD Player for the money


I AM IN THE PROCESS OF BUYING A CD PLAYER AND I DONT KNOW WHICH WAY TO GO.WITH SO MANY TO CHOOSE FROM I WANT TO PURCHASE SOMETHING GOOD BUT I DONT WANT TO SPEND 10,000 EITHER.
jazze22
Hi,

Don't spend your money in a CD Player!
Read my article CD Player? PC Music? Naaa! Flash Memory Music.

And I promise that you will hear MUSIC much, much better than any CD Player, yes, even those who cost's thousands.

Regards
There are such good DACs in all price ranges, and decent used transports - you get the flexibility of playing both CDs and digital files. IMO it makes less sense these days to go the one-box CDP route. I just got the Metrum Octave which sounds great with the (old!) CAL delta transport, and totals <$1200, hard to beat sound quality at that price.
I'll fourth or fifth the Cambridge Audio 840C. Very nice resolution, laid back, and just plain fun in my system. Of course, YMMV.

Also, McIntosh MVP871. Very nice and you get everything but Bluray. And you can get them at relatively bargain prices now (or at least you could a while back).
I would look at Resolution Audio. The Opus 21 is fantastic and if you can spring for it the Cantata plays with the very top players at much less.
Denon DCD A100 for $1499 from Music Direct is a tremendous 2 channel bargain!
If you can find a used Simaudio Equinox for under $1000 grab it. I've had one for 7 years and it's been total bliss in my system.
Thanks, Mapman. Now we just need to get everyone else on the thread signed off on the 840C. :)
"Do you think you could find one that everyone agrees on and let me know?"

I'd recommend The Cambridge Audio 840c. I've heard it and it is very good. Many consider it a best value.
Guys, I've been waiting 11 years to buy a CD player. Do you think you could find one that everyone agrees on and let me know? I'd appreciate it.
Tough question, and difficult to define without establishing a price point. For some, "for the money" is $10k. For others, it's $900. Figure out what you want to spend and what kind of sound you like, then get the player that makes you happiest at a given price point. Simple as that.

Research the heck out of it, go to dealers and listen to familiar recordings, using a system you're familiar with (whether yours or a friend's) to establish a sonic baseline, so that you know what the system you're hearing the CD player through is doing. Then you can properly evaluate the player.

I went with a Primare CD21, because both reviews that I saw described the sound that I wanted from CD. And I got that sound. Voila. Done, for about $700. Just remember, the most important things are your budget, and the sound you want.

And don't be afraid if you like a player that isn't part of the general scheme of things. Remember that somebody had to be the first one, right? At some point, Oppo, Cambridge, Jolida, Jadis, any of the vaunted firms were a joint nobody had ever heard of. So don't worry about that. Just get the sound that you want.
If I had less than $1000, I'd go with the NAD 565.

If I had less than $5000, I'd go (and did eventually go with) the AMR CD-777. After owning various CD players from Ayon, Acoustic Research, McIntosh, Docet-Lector, Meridian, Bryston,and Wadia, I can honestly say my search for a decent redbook CD spinner ends here.

Addendum: I wouldn't call either the 'best for the money'. That title remains unclaimed as far as I'm concerned. I just like what the NAD and AMR do at their respective price points.
I think this may be the best budget cd for the money.

http://www.slipperybrick.com/2007/09/cd-player-shoe/
I've heard an oppo once at an audio show. I had high expectations and was very disappointed. I was not familiar with any of the gear in the rig though, so a good chance it was not the Oppo's fault. The gear looked a lot better than it sounded (horns of some sort I think but can't recall exactly). Very flat and lifeless I thought which was not what I was expecting prior to hearing.
I was scanning all the responses and I did not see an Oppo 95
Although it is not strictly speaking a cd player but a universal
Player and does everything just right. I have owned one for 1 month
Only and I'm warming up dearly to the sound and picture
I agree, there are many great players and I doubt you can definitively proclaim a clear winner. That won't stop me from nominating my player though!

For a little over $1K, I think the Simaudio CD.5 is excellent, and I've chosen this over a few others (Rega Apollo, Apollo 35th, Exposure 2010s2, a few universal players). Clear and detailed, with plenty of PRaT, but also smooth and grain free. It's hard to find fault with the presentation, but of course you need to find the right match when it comes to amps and speakers. Even the best player on the market will not sound like it if the match is poor.
There are many excellent players on the market today. The "classic" players are the current ones. If you were to try an original phonograph it would sound crappy also. CD players have come a long way since the 80's.
10-13-11: Koestner
For the money only go out and get a $35 DVD player from Sam's Club. Bring it home and stick some soft rubbery feet on the bottom and some weight on the top (10-15 Lbs.). This will sound about 80% as good as any $500 player (IMO).
...and then what? Stick it in a broom closet and go back to playing record? Just kidding.

Or in the words of one of my favorite audio writers back in 2004 I think, So there are lots of early Amps, early Speakers, and early Turntables that are considered to be classics, and are there any early CD players that are now classics? No, because they all sound like shite.

Happy Listening!
The NAD 565BEE will outperform a $35 cdp by leaps and bounds. I don't understand the previous comment at all.
For the money only go out and get a $35 DVD player from Sam's Club. Bring it home and stick some soft rubbery feet on the bottom and some weight on the top (10-15 Lbs.). This will sound about 80% as good as any $500 player (IMO).
10 1/2 years and all the time I thought this was one of those trick questions and I was going to say

"for playing music, the best CD player money can buy costs less than $1.00 because, there are no good sounding CD players worth hundreds, much less thousands of dollars. Don't waste your money"

Did I win??? What do I get? Let me guess...
a cheap CD player? :^)

Happy Listening!
Marantz SA7-S1. Even when I get the itch to sell my for change sake, I just cannot do it, and I've owned a lot of other players. This one has soul!
Wow!

I can't believe it took 10.5 years to answer this!

This can end today.
Electrocompaniet EMC1-Up.
Used Meridian 508.24 or the Marantz SA8004. I've had both, and both are outstanding. I've kept the SA8004 because it just slightly edged out the Meridian on Red Book CD, plus does SACD playback and I can tap into its DAC for my Squeezebox. One heckuva bargain!
I agree, Rega has always prided themselves for always making some of the best quality products for the money. That's why they are so successful and popular.
However, may I make one more recomendation. Arcam fmj.
I have a Sony CD Player, modified by Tube Research Labs (TRL), and could not be happier. It has a very palatable presentation, yet the resolution is amazing. The bass goes to beyond believable, yet is well controlled. The treble is natural and extended. The midrange is mind blowing. The imaging is mind blowing. And, the dynamics, both macro and micro are spooky good. I can not recommend TRL enough.

My advice is to contact Paul Weitzel at TRL. They have modified MANY brands/models of CD players. They say some lend themselves to improvement more than others. Don't be surprised if Paul recommends a very inexpensive player. You have him modify it, then you can take it up against your friend"s mega dollar players.
Best high end sound I've owned for under $1k is the NAD C565BEE CD/USB player.
I sometimes tie on a little Sony discman for beach or sandpit listening. Vinyl gets too messy and my tapes are waaaayyyy too valuable to see sand.
so far... it is a little $49 Sony PlayStation 1 player that sounds exceptional for the money. Hey, quit rolling your eyes!
Yes Jed,
I should have stated "in my system".

I have a freind that was so impressed with the ERC-1 after hearing it compared to my other Oppo's that he bought one for himself.
He was very dissapointed with it in his system.

He and I are always compairing and testing cables and front ends and it's amazing that some thing work in both systems very well and others work in one but not the other.

It's just comformation that Synergy is real.
Have a great day.
John
Hi Zmanastronomy

Like everything else I guess it depends on your system. I was at listening session with a bunch of veteran audiophiles and we had an Emotiva ERC-1, stock Oppo BDP-83 and some other older Sony CDPs in rotation. The general consensus was ERC-1 was the weakest sounding of the bunch. The ERC-1 is built like a tank but the stock Oppo BDP-83 was thought to the better sounding of the 2.

A CDP/SACD player that I think should be considered here is a Pioneer Elite PD-D9 J.
Emotiva ERC-1.
I've owned two Oppo's and the ERC-1 cold smokes both of them.
One was an 83 and when I got the Emotiva, I realized the Oppo was over rated.
Wow. 10 years of different answers which all in their own way are correct. I maintain that the best CD Player for the money is the best one you can personally afford. There is no one single answer because not all of us listen to the same music or have the same setup.

My current vote goes to getting excellent condition Demo items from a dealer. The dealer has been using the CD Player in a clean environment and has run it hopefully long enough to burn it in. This way you can instantly jump into the best the CD Player will be capable of rather than waiting for a hundred hours to burn it in. Demo gear is often a spectacular deal.
Ayon CD-2S, close to the performance of the CD-5 for almost half the price.