







🎶 Retro vibes, modern freedom—your soundtrack, your way!
The Craig Portable Top-Loading CD Boombox combines classic audio formats—CD, cassette, and AM/FM radio—with modern usability. Featuring a top-loading CD player compatible with CD-R/CD-RW discs, a 3.5mm aux input for external devices, and dual power options (AC or 6 C batteries), it delivers versatile, portable music enjoyment in a sleek black design weighing just 1.27 kg.








| ASIN | B07QSZFN88 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 184,555 in Electronics & Photo ( See Top 100 in Electronics & Photo ) 276 in Boomboxes |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item model number | 813171 |
| Manufacturer | Craig Electronics |
| Product Dimensions | 27.31 x 25.4 x 15.6 cm; 1.27 kg |
A**R
it is useless
tried to retun it via UPS but unable to d it pleaser just cancel the refund I have given upon Amazon and will putiing it out with the rbbishe
V**P
I got this because I needed something with a wired aux input and no bluetooth. I have a small AM FM radio with no speaker that gets horrible to no reception on any speaker that has bluetooth and a wired aux, maybe the bluetooth interferes with radio reception. I never got on the earbuds bus and sometimes use headphones, which for AM reception seems to be the best choice. And I don't like to use anything that involves extended bluetooth transmission. Out of the box it seemed like it had to “wake up” for all the transistor or technology connections to connect because it didn't seem like it worked very well at all. But it could have been because the aux and the CD mode are on the same setting, and because there is a round cardboard in the CD player, it turned on as if there were a CD in;it took a few minutes to figure that out because I could hear some clicking sound and other sound, the CD drive belt or motor, and I opened the lid and found the cardboard, which I removed. Works fine for what I wanted it for, never tried the CD or the cassette and I‘m not sure about the actual radio reception on it but other people say they‘re all good. When a radio doesn't have an antenna the cord is the antenna, not much different than the aux - in line acts as the antenna on headphones for radio reception (I've found for some radio stations, mostly AM, a longer cord, using headphones and my tiny radio with no speaker gets clear reception on stations with a weaker signal or sometimes gets interference from other signals, which sometimes takes moving the cord around a little but it's no different from adjusting an antenna). The radio I use is digital (not data) reception and isn't analog, but it just doesn't have a speaker, it was made that way, It's not that the speaker stopped working or something. I've had it for about five years and have another radio with an aux - in and a light that also has a 3.5 mm jack and speaker that it works fine in but wanted something so I wouldn't have to keep moving those around. And I totally wasted money on two speakers, and they weren't a pair, that had bluetooth and aux - in but gave awful radio reception. They work fine with music apps on a smartphone and the wired aux, which is why I think bluetooth must interefere with radio signals. I guess this review is for the probably small number of bluetooth resisters and light data users (I would say light kilobyte users but a lot of people are heavy data users and recognize gigabytes with little or no reference point for kilobyte). But we late adapters to tech are analog at heart, and probably always will be. To be fair,in the case of the two Bluetooth and wired aux speakers that Do Not work with the radio, which was the only reason I bought them, the second one after the first one was an absolute failure; one defaults to bluetooth and switches to aux only after the aux jack is plugged in, the other always has bluetooth on and it can't be turned off because it can daisy chain with other like speakers of the same brand; that one was the biggest mistake because it's always pumping out the bluetooth signal, and I just don't like the idea of using bluetooth except very minimally; "bluetooth frequency pollution" is the way I think of it, except we're surrounded by wifi frequency or waves and and "certified safe" levels of radiation or waves or rays from smartphones (including what might come from the battery, I think); so that a dose of bluetooth I doubt actually matters very much. But it doesn't mean I want to use it if I don't have to, and,as far as I know, from experience,it interferes with radio signals . If it didn't the radio I have would have worked on the first speaker (with aux and bluetooth) that I bought, and it has always worked fine on the light and the other radio that both have 3.5 mm aux - in ability and no bluetooth.
A**R
No one told us that it would be a different voltage From Australia so of course it would not work. It was also our Fault for not reading instructions first.
V**E
CD player not working please send your experts/technicians for proper guidance
Y**O
Con el asa se hace muy práctico su transporte. Sirve muy bien y me permite escuchar música casetes que tenía guardados desde hace mucho tiempo. También me permite sintonizar Radio UNAM desde el campo. ¡Es más hermoso que el amanecer!
M**Z
Diseño elegante y cumple con lo que anuncia.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago