Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox

Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox

User reviews
3.8

Battery Life

4.3

Features

4

Screen Quality

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Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox

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Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox
4 6 user reviews
517%
450%
317%
20%
10%
3.8

Battery Life

4.3

Features

4

Screen Quality

4.3

Sound Quality

4.3

Value For Money

User Reviews

Guest
5

Value For Money

5

Sound Quality

5

Features

3

Battery Life

4

Screen Quality

The Xclef Hd-500 20gb Jukebox Is A Bit Big. Yes,

The Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox Is a bit big. Yes, it's old so don't expect too much. I like it realy much. Try it when possible.

Dave Cox
4

Value For Money

4

Sound Quality

4

Features

4

Battery Life

Sound Quality Is Excellent, Can Store About 8,000

Sound quality is excellent, Can store about 8,000 mp3 files which should be ample for most folks, can encode directly from any source with an earphone socket, without the need for a pc, although you do need a PC if you want to name them. i converted all my vinyl's with it, great player !!! It did freeze occasionally when I first had it [which is about 5 years now,] but I downloaded a different firmware which solved the problem 5,323 is the firmware version I now use, Multi - Chanel Labs now dont seem to support it now so if I need new leads or charger etc, I might have trouble. Generally very good player, excellent sound, solid , strong , well built, a bit big by todays standards but suits me fine,

stephen page
3

Value For Money

3

Sound Quality

4

Features

4

Battery Life

I Bought A Xclef Hd-500 20gb Jukebox Mp3 Player 2

I bought a Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox MP3 player 2 years ago. I am now on my fourth one; 3 having been replaced free of charge by the supplier. Every kind of problem has occurred: software failure, controls failure, and lastly the power plug has broken away. Don't forget these faults are on 3 different players.

It is no great surprise that the product has been made obsolete. It is a pity as the iPod is not the answer.

We are still waiting for the perfect MP3 player.

evansncl
5

Value For Money

5

Sound Quality

4

Features

3

Battery Life

I Bought An Xclef Hd500 A Good Few Years Ago, And

I bought an XClef HD500 a good few years ago, and as my first MP3 player it was perfect. 20GB hard disk, which, back then was enough for my whole collection. However, as the MP3's mounted up I invested in a 2.5" disk and took my player apart and installed this instead. Now, the player is obsolete, but still available on eBay and some sites that stocked it when in production; and Digital Mind Corporation, the American wing of the XClef distribution offers it with different sizes of disk all the way up to 100GB. A world first when they announced it. It is also sold as a shell without any disk, which is a great alternative to a player when you have old laptop drives hanging around being used for external storage. I'd recommend this player to anyone who isn't bothered about portability above everything else, and it doubles up as a simple drag-and-drop storage device, if and when users upgrade to a new smaller player, as I did with the Sony HD5.

So, the player itself has a reasonably large back-lit LCD screen, and runs on a root directory system like the iRiver H140 and many third-party players. This means you just copy your MP3 directory straight onto its drive, using whatever system you like. I found alphabetical directories with sub-directories for artists to be easiest to navigate. However, it is possible to put groups together in directories based on genre or other reasoning, which gives you the flexibility that is enforced on you by ID3-based players like the iPod. There is no need to update all your MP3's to one uniform standard of ID3 format or file name. Practically this means you can move between computers and update your music collection whenever you like, as well as uploading all other content. Any system running Windows XP or later will do this with no bother.

The sound quality on the player is excellent, with a huge range for bass and treble, as well as its own presets. An FM tuner is included, and this can be recorded directly onto the disk as MP3 in bit rates up to 320kps. Direct recording via either an analogue or digital wire is also possible from any sound source with an output. The input can obviously also be an active mike, which means the XClef is great for voice or studio-based recording from a mixing desk, as long as the sound levels are adjusted correctly on the player. There is also an internal voice recorder with a maximum bit rate of 128kps, but be warned, it is an internal mic with a lot of drive noise when the disk is accessed, which is every five minutes or so.

The firmware is upgradable via an easy process given a little PC knowledge, and recent updates include support for Ogg/Vorbis, though some firmware is better than others, with an annoying bug causing one version to crash when searching through directories. However, pressing the off button for 10 seconds sorts every problem out. There is a thriving online community of users who aim to open source the player as far as possible. This currently includes a program to edit the fonts and graphics of every part of the player's system, as well as start-up and end logo's.

Battery life is reasonable by modern standards, around 10-12hrs, and it uses a lithium-ion battery that is removable (useful for dealing with serious errors on the system) and replaceable. That's really about it for the Xclef, it's a hard disk caddy with audio functions and a good screen. It won't win any awards for prettiness, but it is upgradable and held together by screws (curiosity will win out, I guarantee). Its power supply is the same polarity as the iRiver H140, but it must be powered during any USB transfer as the drive cannot get enough power from USB alone. There is a powered inline remote also available. If you like the features of the HD500 but not the size, there is also a 1.8" drive version, similar in many ways, called the HD800, which is similarly upgradeable and runs on the same menu system plus some extra tweaks.

My player ran without fault until recently, and it has only been partly superseded by a 20GB Sony player, which is more to do with size than features. I am planning on keeping the XClef as storage for my entire collection, and the ability to open it up means it can be used just as a caddy for a range of disk drives.

foxinthebox2005
4

Value For Money

4

Sound Quality

4

Features

3

Battery Life

I Have Had An Xclef Hd-500 20gb Jukebox Player For

I have had an Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox player for 8 months, tried the Creative Zen models for a change, resold on e-bay after 2 weeks. The reason? The sound is awful in comparison to a HD500, if you play anything with any bass it distorts badly. The HD500 can handle whatever you play, loud enough to make your ears bleed, and the sound quality does not even flinch. A friend has a 'trendy' i-pod, I have tried it, it too sounds tinny compared to the Xclef. Do yourself a favour if you are in the market for a MP3 player, with extras, buy the HD500, it's much cheaper than the 'trendy' ones, you will not regret it but your ears might.

itshimthere
4

Value For Money

4

Sound Quality

4

Features

4

Battery Life

Reasons To Buy The Xclef Hd-500 20gb Jukebox:

Reasons to Buy the Xclef HD-500 20GB Jukebox:

You can read text files of the screen.

Can be upgraded to bigger hard drive - takes laptop 3.5" drives.

Easy to use.

Cheap for what it is.

Can encode straight from a hi-fi, no need for a PC.

Big, clear display.

Can organise data just like a Hard drive.

Reasons not to:

Scroller is a cheap plastic slide on the side, feels weak. Not a patch on the Ipod system.

For an Mp3 Player it is big - just over 5" in Height and 3" wide and 3/4" deep.

Doesn't hold big text files to read i.e. no books

Not amazingly pretty.

Takes ages to start up when you turn it on, as it scans the whole drive, and audibly whirrs as it does so.

Having said all of this the only thing that holds the Xclef Hd-500 back is its size. If you are looking for a cute, small and pocket sized Mp3 player this is not for you. However if you want a true gadget with the ability to upgrade the size of the hard drive and change the battery as it takes mobile phone (Nokia) Batteries, but to do this you must be relatively familiar with electronics.

When all is said and done I do love mine, oh but how I dream at night if only it was a little smaller...

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