Showing posts with label rca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rca. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Direct Audio Input From iPod Dock Connector to RCA Cable Review

Direct Audio Input From iPod Dock Connector to RCA Cable
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I purchased this several months ago and it works beautifully with my 3rd generation iPod and 1st generation iPod Nano. I have the power hard wired to 12+ so it will charge when the ignition is off and the RCA output goes into my head unit's AUX.Sadly it does not allow audio output from the iPhone, but it will charge the battery at least. Great product, great price, would recommend.

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The IPOD-RCA cable provides stereo RCA connectors from the iPod dock connector port. Using the dock connector output instead of the headphone jack provides a much cleaner, unclipped fixed-level signal output that can be used to feed the auxiliary input of a car stereo or other device. Also features +12 volt power and ground wires to keep the iPod charged while connected. Compatible with all iPod models featuring the dock connector.

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

RCA RS2181i Audio System with Universal iPod Dock Review

RCA RS2181i Audio System with Universal iPod Dock
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This reveiw is for; RCA CD Micro Stereo System with iPod Dock - RS2181I
Ever since my wife & I bought an I-pod, we hardly ever listen to CD's anymore. We have been looking for an adequate shelf system so we can listen to music in the bedroom that sounds decent and inexpensive. We found the RCA RS2181I last night at a local Target for $95. Here are my simple observations;
PROS
Nice compact size - thin - top loading, vertical CD player saves space.
CD player works great. Most of my CD's are recorded CD-R's.
Compatible with ALL Apple I-pods including Touch, Video and 1st to 5th generation I-pods (plastic spacers for all sizes are included).
Unit charges your I-pod with the connected, spring-loaded front attachment that retracts when not used.
Nice remote which you can even use to change songs on your I-pod (song skip or go back).
The remote also has nice range because I used it far from across the room.
Has alarm & sleep mode which allows you to wake up or sleep to either your I-pod, CD or radio.
You can program up to 32 radio stations (FM or AM).
Has two extra inputs for connecting other devices such as other MP3 players that are not I-pods.
One button equalizer settings for simplicity with individual settings for Rock, Pop, Jazz, Classical, Flat (?) or settings can be customized.
One button bass boost. Not strong enough to rattle the dishes, but a moderate bass boost.
Speaker connections are the standard, spring loaded black-red wire, so I suppose if you ever blow-out the stock speakers you can replace them with anything.
CONS
Only 10 watts a channel for a total of 20 (left & right). Not loud enough to annoy your neighbors, but loud enough for my wife & I to listen to in the bedroom.
The spring-loaded, retractable I-pod attachment occasionally sticks to the unit when it is pressed all the way into the unit.
LCD display is difficult to see due to very, thin LCD numbers & letters. You can basically only see it if you are directly in front of it.
Blue light at night is a little too bright, but might be OK for a kids' night light.
AM/FM tuner has no "seek" function. You must manually search each radio station.
Awkward looking AM, plastic antenna (about 3" X 4" plastic rectangle) that you must hook up if you listen to AM, but the FM antenna is just your standard, thin black wire.
Overall, my wife & I are mildly satisfied with the unit so far. It's a step up from the ancient cassette boom box it replaced. It works very well with the Apple I-pod, so I highly recommend it. It's not super loud, but it's loud enough for my wife & I. Great stereo for the bedroom, office or small apartment and that uses very, little space.



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RCA's RS2181i is a convenient and space-efficient stereo system that comes with a pair of two-way speakers, iPod dock, built-in radio, and vertical-load CD player--all in a small package that's perfect for home or office use.

Built-in iPod Dock Enjoy your favorite music, podcasts, and other content off your iPod. Your iPod receives a charge while it's docked, so you can grab it and head out the door with a full charge.

Play Your CD Media Play back your favorite CDs and burned CD-R/RW discs with the vertical-loading CD player, or burn MP3/WMA discs for hours of music on a single disc, complete with folder navigation, shuffle mode, and other features.

AM/FM Radio Tune in to your favorite stations or catch up on the news/traffic in the morning with the digital AM/FM radio. Pull up your favorite stations in an instant with 32 presets.

Audio Input The RS2181i features a convenient front-panel 3.5-mm audio input, perfect for connecting external devices such as MP3 players, computers, etc.

Dial In the Sound With bass boost and a digital EQ, you can always get just the sound you're after. The EQ lets you choose from standard preset curves (flat, rock, pop, jazz, classic) or create your own custom curve.

Wake Up! Most of us have to get up in the morning and head off to work or school. Do it in style with the RS2181i, which lets you wake to your radio, a CD, or your iPod. The time reads clearly on the backlit display, and a sleep mode is also included for listening while you drift off.

Great Looks and a Low Profile The RCA RS2181i saves a lot of space with a vertical-load CD player. Combine that efficiency with a clean and simple design, and it's a great fit for most home or office settings, even when space is at a premium.

What's in the Box

Pair of two-way speakers and digital music studio with dock for iPod
Remote control (batteries included)
Built-in FM antenna
AM antenna


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Thursday, September 27, 2012

RCA RS2664 5-Disc CD Changer Bookshelf Audio System Review

RCA RS2664 5-Disc CD Changer Bookshelf Audio System
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Bought this from Circuit City. It set up easily, and although I am no great judge of sound quality, it produces very good sound. It has an equalizer with presets, and a custom mode that you can configure to your own tastes. It seems to have more than ample power, plus the remote works well. So far, I have not encountered any problems. It has an AM/FM radio that does the job. I use the RS2664 mainly to play MP3 white noise for sleeping, which works well. I also created a few MP3 disks of about 125 songs each, and it plays flawlessly. However, with a USB port, the RS2664 can record directly from a CD to any USB MP3 player/recorder. From my perspective, the workmanship is just fine. All-in-all for under a hundred bucks, this is hard to beat.

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RCA Audio System - Book Shelf - 300 Watts total system power

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

RCA Opal 8 GB Video MP3 player with 1.8-inch Display, FM Radio, and Voice Recording. - Green Review

RCA Opal 8 GB Video MP3 player with 1.8-inch Display, FM Radio, and Voice Recording. - Green
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We have two of these since Christmas, and have had none of the problems described! In fact, I read some negative reviews after purchasing, and was hoping I wouldn't have the same problems, and it's now April and so far, so good!
It has a great screen, great sound, is easy to use, has loads of storage, etc... We bought a case and rarely take it out, perhaps that has kept it safe... but has been dropped a few times and still don't have any problems. In fact we plan to buy another one, as it's a great value - it has a voice recorder, video, great long-lasting battery, FM radio, etc... and so it's a great value for the money.
We haven't used the software, we just transfer music via Explorer, so perhaps all the problems are from the software??
Anyway, I'm no mp3 player expert, but have to highly recommend this... Just based on other reviews, maybe don't use the software?!


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The ultimate portable audio/video experience is here. The RCA Opal lets you listen to audio, watch video clips, record and view photo slideshows all in a full color flash media device! Player includes an FM tuner, Voice Recording and a 1.8" full color display.

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Thursday, December 1, 2011

RCA 7-2887 Superadio III Portable AM/FM Radio Review

RCA 7-2887 Superadio III Portable AM/FM Radio
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If you love AM radio and are looking for a radio that has fantastic reception your choice comes down to two radios: the ccradio plus and the GE Superadio. These are the best radios on the market for fans of talk, sports, Art Bell, Phil Hendrie, etc. Which one should you buy? I have both (the GE for my office, ccradio for home) so here is my take on the two. Both have nearly equal AM reception. At night, you can easily pull in stations from hundreds of miles away (some say even over a thousand miles away but this depends on where you live). There the difference ends. The ccradio has a lot of features that I felt I wanted in a radio. It has a sleep timer, accurate digital tuning, automatic timer that turns your favorite show on at a predetermined time, scan buttons, lighted dial, power cord (not bulky adaptor), weather radio (with auto alert), memory buttons, tv audio of the network stations. The only flaw is that it has a grab indentation rather than a full handle. They are a family business and take GOOD care of their customers. The ccradio company LOVES radio and loves people who share their passion. Is it worth the [$$] for the extras? To me it is. The Ge Superadio has a rotary - and inaccurate - tuning dial. This will drive you crazy if you do a lot of channel switching. Some people tape graph paper to the radio and mark where they found the stations - it is that inaccurate. There is no timer, no alarm, no weather, no tv audio, no lit dial, etc. The sound is better on the GE Superadio, though. The GE SUperadio feels cheaply made and probably won't make it through many beach or camping excursions. The GE Superadio is enormously sized - it is the size of a small attache case or TV! If you only want to pull in one distant station and keep your dial set to that station, get the GE radio. That is all you need. It has great, almost legendary, reception without any bells or whistles. On the other hand, if you love radio, need the extras, change stations a lot, want something sturdily built that will last a lifetime, want to explore the large number of AM stations that are out there, go out and order the ccradio with slightly better reception (see their website to order). I am a radio person rather than a tv person. I have radio playing all day (as some people have tv going on all day). I sleep to radio (and need that sleep timer). I would rather listen to a talk show than watch a sit com. I would rather listen to Coast to coast, Phil Hendrie, and Rush than watch another rerun of Frasier or Friends. If you are like me, do yourself a favor and invest in the ccradio. You won't regret it. P.S., the FM reception will be better than you are used to, also.
Bottom line: The GE superadio is low cost with no extras and big and bulky. The CCradio plus is expensive, has every extra you could want (except a decent handle), more sensitive but does nto sound as good as the GE for music.

Click Here to see more reviews about: RCA 7-2887 Superadio III Portable AM/FM Radio

The GE 7-2887 Superadio III is a high-performance AM/FM radio withlong-range reception for both AM and FM, rotary loudness control, andhigh-performance station selectivity and sensitivity to ensure good signalreception. A two-speaker sound system with a 6.5-inch woofer offers outstandingsound quality, and separate bass and treble controls let you adjust the sound toyour preference. Convenience features include a fold-down handle for easytransport, a headphone jack for personal listening (headphone not included), andtwo-way power operation with an included power cord or six D batteries.
GE offers a warranty ofa year on parts and 90 days on labor for the 7-2887Superadio.

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

RCA Ri503 Sound System with Universal Dock for iPod Review

RCA Ri503 Sound System with Universal Dock for iPod
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Maybe this works a little too well. I got this for my 14yo daughter for christmas, now I'm always telling her to turn her music down. You can hear it well throughout the house. She set it up herself without needing my technical assistance. Didn't realize there was a remote control to it which makes this even nicer.

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Share the music on your iPod using the Ri503 sound system by RCA. This full-sized stereo system features full-range stereo speakers and a powerful built-in subwoofer for the ultimate listening experience. The universal dock for iPod plays and charges your iPod as it's docked. Use the audio line-in to connect other external audio sources. The Ri503 operates on AC power or six C batteries.

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Thursday, September 22, 2011

RCA RIR205 Infinite Radio Tabletop Internet Radio with Wi-Fi Enabler (Black) Review

RCA RIR205 Infinite Radio Tabletop Internet Radio with Wi-Fi Enabler (Black)
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The RIR205 looks good and seems to be well made. It can pickup most internet radio stations from around the world. That includes real radio stations if they are broadcasting live on the internet and also amateur stations being broadcast by individuals. Of course you can do the same thing with a PC but it's harder to do and you have to install different audio player programs, codecs and all sorts of things while the radio just works. It will even play BBC stations that I can't play on the PC because it says I'm not in the U.K. It has stereo speakers that provide good fidelity but they are small and not as loud as some other radios having just one big speaker. The radio will play Slacker Radio which isn't a real radio station but has almost any kind of music sort of like like XM or AOL radio. Slacker will usually work when other internet stations won't. They may have less bandwidth requirements or less overhead to play, I'm not sure. The radio has an alarm clock function but since it gets it's time from the internet I found that although the time is usually accurate it's not always reliable because it won't work if the internet out of service like mine frequently is.
Originally I purchased an RIR200 from J&R through Amazon but when I got it couldn't get it to work at all so I only gave it 1 star. I sent it back and it was replaced with an RIR205. Audiovox was good about replacing it and are more helpful than most other companies. The two radios seem to be identical except the 205 comes with it's own wireless router but I never got that. The new RIR205 wouldn't work at first either and even though I already had 3 older routers I had to buy a new WRT54G then the radio worked just fine. A lot of owners report having wifi connectivity problems with the RIR200 and that must be the reason why. The radio uses vtuner.com and rcainfiniteradio.com to get it's list of stations, not Reciva like a lot of other radios use. Vtuner doesn't quite have all the stations that Reciva does but generally works well and new stations can be added. You can go to Vtuner.com and try it out for free if you want to see if it gets your favorite stations or the kinds of music you like. You can also store Favorites that you listen to frequently but they go to the RCA website so the radio depends on being able to access a third party website everytime it does anything unlike some other models that store favorites locally in the radio's memory. This generally works well but can be a problem if the RCA or Vtuner websites are down for maintenance or unreachable. Also, since RCA sees everything you listen to they could possibly spy on you and keep a list of your radio listening habits. That could be a problem for owners who live in areas where the government considers some stations to be subversive.
This radio is made by Audiovox and sold as the Audiovox in Europe and as the Acoustic Research ARIRC200 in Canada. There is a Google Group for the Canadian version called "Acoustic Research ARIRC200 Internet Radio" that has discussions of that version. There are a lot more reviews of the RIR200 on Amazon listed as product B0016OK5O0. If you search for B0016OK5O0 you can find them.


Click Here to see more reviews about: RCA RIR205 Infinite Radio Tabletop Internet Radio with Wi-Fi Enabler (Black)

Listen to thousands of global music and talk stations with the RIR205 Infinite Radio by RCA.You can listen to web-only streams, as well as AM/FM transmissions broadcasted over the internet from all over the world.Radio includes a WiFi enabler that easily connects to your home modem or router with a standard Ethernet cable.The radio then creates a wireless internet link to the RCA internet radio.The WiFi enabler provides a quick and easy wireless setup option right out of the box.If you are using the radio where WiFi is unavailable, you can simply plug an Ethernet cable from your modem or router to begin listening.You can choose from several audio sources including internet radio stations, local AM/FM stations, radios internal memory, USB input, or Slacker personal radio.Slacker personal radio is an internet radio service where you can create personal custom stations.Using Slacker you can tag the songs you love or ban the songs you dont.Slacker will then customize the music you listen to with every input you make so that the music played is narrowed to your preferred tastes and genres.Slacker offers over 100 genre stations, 10,000 artist stations and millions of tracks.The Infinite radio has 6 preset stations per audio source so that you can conveniently and quickly find the stations you enjoy the most with the push of a button.Enjoy on-demand weather through Weatherbug, giving you one-day, three-day forecasts and emergency alerts.The RIR205 has 512MB of built-in memory so that you can record approximately 10-hours of your favorite music from the internet radio or FM radio source.Use the personal online portal to customize your internet radio.Selections are made on the portal webpage and auto-synced to the radio.You can store your favorite presets and genres or add our own stations and URLs.

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

RCA Ri500 Sound System with Universal Dock for iPod Review

RCA Ri500 Sound System with Universal Dock for iPod
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This speaker system is great for what we needed. The only problem is it has to be plugged in, there is no option of batteries (something I overlooked when buying.) But as long as there is an outlet, it serves it's purpose!

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Share the music on your iPod using the Ri500 sound system by RCA. The sleek, integrated docking drawer tucks into the player for a compact design. The sound system features a digital AM/FM radio with presets and audio line-in for MP3 player connectivity. The Ri500 uses stereo four-speaker technology with EQ presets. Included with the system is a remote control and coking adapters for iPod.

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Friday, August 19, 2011

Basic Indoor Antenna Review

Basic Indoor Antenna
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I'm a first timer at getting OTA HDTV. This has been an experiment in progress for the past 5 weeks. I have gone through four antennas (they are all here as I write this) before finding something that's satisfactory (rather than tolerable).
I live around 25 miles from Manhattan, where the towers of most TV stations are located. I am also aware of the directional information from [...], and have experimented accordingly with its effects on reception. My apartment's windows all face north, while the signals all comes from southwest. I cannot get signals from where it comes from, and thus needed to get signals from deflections perhaps off nearby buildings and trees. It's a very poor circumstance for over-the-air reception, maybe just slightly better than being underground. Signals are weak, and are affected by weather. Stormy and windy days have shown effects at disrupting signal reception.
With this said, and without going into much detail, let's talk about the antennas. Now all these antenna have been tested with the same equipment, setup, directional adjustments, location, etc. etc. and have been tested through good an foul weather, day and night, to observe differences.
1.Terk HDTVa Terk HDTVa Indoor Amplified High-Definition Antenna for Off-Air HDTV Reception- After reading some rave reviews and high ratings at [...], log periodic types (looks like a fishbone) seems to be the way to go. I got the Terk HDTVa first, thinking that the amplification and VHF antenna should nail my reception problems at the start. However, after more than two weeks of fidgeting around ad nauseam (directions, locations, amplifications, different devices, etc.), I only managed to pick up two ATSC channels' signals, and even those don't have strong enough signals to display anything. I thought maybe it's just my poor location, and that I should probably give up on the attempt. The included in-line amplifier dongle doesn't work at all. Powering it on makes no difference in signal strength readings, which hovered around 5-10%.
It is well built, looks nice, good concepts, but it just didn't work.
2.Phlips PHDTV1 Philips PHDTV1 Digital HDTV-UHF Indoor Antenna- The venerated "silver sensor" which was previously sold under the Zenith brand also had great ratings and reviews. It's in fact nearly legendary. I decided, in desperation, to try it out, even if it doesn't have amplification. It seems all my local HD channels are in UHF anyway, so I won't miss the VHF dipoles.
The unit has startlingly poorer build quality compared to the Terk. It has paint bubbles, hairs and dusts trappings in the paint, sharp edged cheap plastics and much thinner metal blades that's covered in oil and has some dings and bendings. I wasn't impressed with the quality, and didn't expect much from it as I set it up.
To my surprise, it picked up 9 working channels (note: the terk got two channels' signals, but they didn't work) from the start, even if it's randomly placed. It's thrilling as it was the first time I saw OTA HDTV. After some adjustment and location experiments, I was able to receive 19 channels. However, not all of these channels work well given the same direction.
The directionally sensitive antenna needs to be adjusted as I switch channels. e.g. NBC and CBS seems to work well in one direction, while ABC has its own favorite direction, which works also with FOX. I tried as best as possible to find a compromise point where everything works. I couldn't. It just needs to be adjusted constantly.
The transmission is often dogged by reception fluctuations. Signal quality tend to fluctuate quite a bit, especially affected by weather. That means the TV playback would get choppy at times, with its severity dependent on the direction I point the antenna at. I didn't think fluctuating signals was a characteristic until I tried the latter two antennas later. I also found that I had to constantly play with the directional positioning to get a stable signal from each of the stations.
It works, and I was impressed, but then in retrospect it could only be best described as a "tolerable" HDTV experience as I struggled for a smooth signal delivery.
3.RCA ANT111 Basic Indoor Antenna- While shopping in stores, I saw this basic and classic RCA loop/dipole antenna for less than $[...]. I couldn't resist the temptation to try it out, just for the heck of it. It is also a different type of antenna than the previous two.
Again, I was surprised. This cheap antenna worked well, especially considering how it's only a fraction of the price of the two I'd tried. I ended up getting 17 channels, a few less than the PHDTV1, with the same location and setup. Some channels also don't work, even if signals were detected. The quality of the signals seems to be the key.
So what's so special about it? It strangely had better signal delivery for the channels that worked. It's not as choppy, and quality level is very steady. It is also not as affected by directional positioning. I was for the first time able to view FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC without adjusting the antenna. However, the lack of directionality also makes it ambiguous when I lost the signal. It seems that there's no "favorite direction" for the channels, which also means I can't pull in stronger signals at my choosing. It is also quite susceptible to weather changes, particularly wind (which probably affected signals reflected by trees?)
The signal strength also seems to be a little weaker, though the signal quality tend to be higher in general. That probably contributed to the smoother video delivery. It also tempted me to get a similar design that has amplification.
4.Philips MANT510 Philips High Performance Amplified Indoor Uhf/ Vhf/ Fm Antenna- This unit has a "digital TV optimized, patent pending UHF panel array". I thought I'd try it out just for the slightly different antenna design, if not just for the adjustable amplification.
Well, it works, and works quite well. The antenna doesn't work without power, and with amplification turned off it works a little less than unpowered PHDTV1 and ANT111. Yet with the amplification turned on, I get 24 channels, with strength up to 81% (compared to 3-10% unamplified, and quality consistently above 60 and usually in the 70-90%+. That generates the most reliable video delivery of all the ones tried.
While thunderstorms still managed to distrupt signals, it's much less often and only momentarily. I also don't have to worry about hunting for signals as I just point it in one general direction and I get everything but three NJN channels (they are even further from here.. maybe a good 50 miles).
I finally can just set the antenna and forget it. It lets me focus on the programming rather than antenna adjustment. While it needs to be powered, it gives me the confidence to finally enjoy HDTV, rather than tweaking and tolerating it. It's good enough that I can probably stop searching. I hope it'll be helpful to you who may be going through the same purchasing decision nausea as I have.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Basic Indoor Antenna

Basic Indoor Antenna, This high-performance indoor antenna reduces static and increases the beauty of the TV you receive over the air, including HDTV signals.

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