






🎶 Retro vibes, modern precision — the cassette player you didn’t know you needed!
The FiiO CP13 Transparent Cassette Player redefines modern analog audio with its audiophile-grade JRC5532 op-amp, robust 1800mAh battery offering 13+ hours playback, and premium aluminum alloy build. Featuring large tactile controls, USB-C charging, and a pure analog circuit free from digital interference, it delivers authentic cassette sound with contemporary durability and style—perfect for millennials craving nostalgic music experiences without compromise.











| ASIN | B0CV7S58TK |
| Additional Features | High-Capacity Battery, Dual-Mode Power Supply, Audiophile Op-Amp, USB-C Charging, Headphone Input |
| Best Sellers Rank | #6,223 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #7 in Portable Cassette Players & Recorders |
| Brand | FiiO |
| Built-In Media | USB charging cable and quick start guide |
| Color | Blue |
| Compatible Devices | Headphone |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 744 Reviews |
| Cycles | DC Motor |
| Enclosure Material | Aluminium |
| Included Components | USB charging cable and quick start guide |
| Manufacturer | FiiO |
| Material | Aluminium |
| Mfr Part Number | CP13 |
| Model Name | CP13 |
| Model Number | CP13 |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Signal Format | Phono |
| Special Feature | High-Capacity Battery, Dual-Mode Power Supply, Audiophile Op-Amp, USB-C Charging, Headphone Input |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 |
A**X
Best modern cassette player?
As anybody in the cassette circle knows, all modern players are kinda junk. They use a "Tanashin mechanism"; a sort of "catch-all" phrase for shoddy Chinese knockoffs of a Japanese budget design meant for car stereos that ceased production around 2009. Every modern cassette player uses this Chinese clone mechanism, because sadly it's the only mechanism still being produced. It's known for poor tape feeding, insanely high wow/flutter (basically the tape playing at incorrect speeds or the sound "warbling"), and other issues. So how did FiiO achieve something so much better? The CP-13 has shockingly good playback quality for a new player. You can plainly see from the motor position and a few other signifiers (like button placement) it's a Tanashin mechanism. But, whatever improvements they've made have paid off, since of any modern cassette player I've used, this by far has the lowest wow/flutter I've heard, thankfully reaching the realm of "you can't notice it with your ears, only if you pull out some equipment to measure it will it show up." Can't say the same about some cheapo no-name players you'll find on this same website... As for sound quality, well, don't expect anything too insane and you'll be happy. It lacks Dolby NR, as Dolby has stopped licensing out that technology for cassette years ago. But still, with a good-condition tape I haven't noticed any serious hissing or crackling issues. Whatever amp they've put in here lets it get reasonably loud, good enough to drive some speakers probably. On my Koss Porta Pro's, around 20% on the dial is reasonably loud, anything beyond that is painfully loud, haha. The build quality is immaculate too; all-metal build, though I got the model with the transparent door, so that bit is plastic. (But, a very sturdy feeling plastic, not some cheap junk.) Buttons ka-chunk nicely just like you remember, the door opens and it loads tapes easily, everything just works, and works well. (I will say I wish it had auto-stop on FFW/RW, but can't complain too much.) Size-wise, yeah, there's been much smaller vintage players, but I wouldn't say this is obnoxiously large. There's certainly bigger ones out there. I will say this though; FiiO, where's the freakin' belt clip!? They even sell a separate case for it... which also doesn't have a belt clip! The heck?! Finally, for value, I'd say easily this is the only modern cassette player worth spending your money on. Yeah, vintage may be better, but some of us don't want 40+ year old electronics that could fail at any second, and want something that's guaranteed to work out of the box for some time.
A**.
The 5th star is the cherry on the cupcake. I’m giving 4 stars for quality!
The quality and durability is top notch! back in the day we didn’t really concern ourselves with how clear or muffled a tape sounded. just as long as it wasn’t playing the cassettes too fast or too slow. we just popped them in and started listening to the music we loved and songs we identified and would sing to! But in todays world we are wanting to go back in time and enjoy the primitive technology but with mp3 or streaming quality. the facts are is that cassettes aren’t going to sound that good back then and now. it will solely depend are you equipment for that! but this cassette player is by far the king of new age cassette playing! it’s either this one or the WE ARE REWIND cassette player. But remember less is more! this one is only a basic mechanism with an on board chip that has a high quality preamp for volume. WE ARE REWIND HAS THAT TOO BUT WITH OTHER FEATURES THAT CAN INTERFERE WITH PLAYBACK DUE TO ELECTRICAL DISTRIBUTION. Like Bluetooth and a mic in port. Those features need power constantly fed to them to be operational so you may hear a hum or a buzz while listening to cassette’s while the FiiO cp13 has non of that so there won’t be any electrical interference! The build is great! With an all metal body that feels very sleek and sturdy and gives it a good weight! And it has a built in 18650 cell battery so no need to go out and buy expensive cells any longer. I’m a repair guy on cassette players as well and I think I can disassemble these to get to the battery and belts to do my own repairs to the battery and belt situation! Cons- you will more and likely have to adjust the azimuth to get a clearer sound. Mine came a bit muffled sounding but I adjusted it and it sounds good! Overall I give the FiiO cp13 4/5!
N**H
Analog goodness, just trust your ears
I've read review after review of cassette players and it is really obvious that some people don't know what they're getting into with cassettes. They're not pristine. Honestly, they weren't when they were the most popular way to carry music. Nearly every other format sounds better, cassettes were convent, compact, portable and customizable if you were making your own. No other format gave you this option at the time. The Fiio CP13 is probably the best of the lot as far as modern cassette players goes...or at least best of the ones that I have heard. I have an extensive music collection and hundreds of titles on cassette. This has good sound, but the tactile ritual of playing a cassette is what makes it worthwhile. I won't go into the history of the mechanism. If you care, read all of the other reviews, everyone is an "expert" because they have Google. You can look at specs all day and at the end of the day, it doesn't tell you anything. You need to hear with your own ears and decide if a product is a fit. I have some nice high end Walkmans from the 80's and 90's (purchased when new and well kept, not scoured from eBay) and the sound quality is on par with several of them. I opted for the clear front model and honestly, it's great. I haven't had a single cassette sound bad in this machine. Fiio did a good job in putting quality components and chips into this device and giving it as good of a chance as possible to produce good sound. I have enjoyed every single minute that I have used this player. The battery life is really good. To the extent that I have forgotten when I charged it last. I don't really know exactly how long the battery has lasted on a single charge because I don't play for hours at a time ,but I have played a large number of cassettes without the battery charge showing any weakness. The overall aluminum construction seems to be sturdy and feels like it was well thought out and not just thrown together to make money. The only other player in this class would be the We Are Rewind player and it is almost double the price. I do think that this player is the best value of what you will find for modern cassette players and it will give a vintage player a run for its money. This is not to take on a walk, run, jog, hike to the gym. There are other players for this type of thing. If you want to give an old cassette collection new life, this is a fantastic unit. Trust your ears and decide for yourself.
R**.
The best modern Walkman for regular folks
Finally, they got rid of the motor noise in the modern tape mechanism! Tapes aren't amazingly clear to begin with but that's part of the allure, an audio "aesthetic" if you will. They also don't sound bad either, and this cassette player has FINALLY addressed the one major problem holding these new ones back. It now sounds as good as my old walkmans used to. Now of course there's going to be hiss, no dolby, maybe some wow and flutter. It doesn't sound broken or bad in any way, just very "tapey" which is the reason you come back to these in this day and age. People are expecting the level of quality of a top-of-the-line 90's deck in a $100 portable device created with what's basically a dead technology in a dead market. That's not realistic in the slightest! Such a device wouldn't be anywhere near $100 even in those days. Furthermore, anyone looking to cassettes for hifi quality or portability (for say, jogging) is being a little silly in my honest opinion. In 2024 you have extremely cheap options for much higher fidelity than a cassette based device can ever give you. Plus, you're not seriously considering going on a jog with a semi-fragile device that can literally only hold one album at a time, right? If not, then you don't need to worry that it doesn't have an anti-rollback mechanism. It sounds just fine when laying right-side up. Also, fast forward and rewind have always had to be stopped manually. It might be new if you've never had one but that's normal, you just gotta pay attention to it. The lithium battery + type C makes it SUPER convenient to use. However, if you need a really good digital audio player go for the Surfans F-28. I can recommend that little dude. Expensive but quality. Back to business. If you're still hooked on cassettes in 2024 it's because you're a nerd, you gawk at those Bandcamp cassette releases and you like the warm fuzzy vibe of old technology but aren't dedicated enough to really get into 90's hifi and "proper" cassette machines. If you're one of the old tape heads, that's a no go. But if you're just like me, and want a cassette experience that's not total crap and like cheap cassettes for what they are, and aren't asking them to be hifi, then this device is for us. Don't let the negative reviews scare you away! But wait, how does it compare to the We Are Rewind cassette player (which I also have)? Aside from some missing functionality (Stereo recording, Bluetooth) the Fiio wins. As much as I like that device, it still has the horrendous motor noise during playback due to lack of proper electrical interference shielding (?). The recording would be good for a lofi musician or good enough for us average joes, and the Bluetooth of the We Are Rewind is awesome but not really needed. It's also about $70 more expensive, and it's poorly laid out. None of the buttons are oriented correctly for you to see what you're doing from a casual glance. I don't regret buying it but if you're on the fence get the FIIO. It's just so much better audio wise because that motor isn't screeching in all the quiet parts. One thing both players don't do great is the lack of rubber stops to keep the aluminum from getting scratched up. I added some generic sticky ones from this site all over the We Are Rewind so it can set on a desk. I might not for the FIIO because design wise it is so much prettier. Plus these guys need a case, preferably with an arm sling like they used to come with. Other than that, that's my clunky review. Full 5 stars and I hope we continue to iterate on these cassette players and give them back the popularity they deserve, even if it's an evolution of what they are now rather than what they once were. As for me this is a modest dream come true. It isn't my first FIIO product either, check out more of their stuff. Not paid to say any of this. I just buy a lot of their stuff.
M**T
Love it! Takes me back to the 80s.
Update April 2026. I got the clear one in December 2025 since I had sold the blue one to help pay for vet bills. I love seeing the tape while it’s playing. I have had the We Are Rewind player and it’s fine, but a bit too bulky. This Fiio player is the best modern era player out there IMO when paired with Retrospekt Koss headphones, also sold on Amazon. Can’t wait for the CP15 rumored to be coming out soon. I own many old school Walkmans that are breaking down. So I got this one because I like supporting companies that are putting out cassettes and cassette players. I have a Retrospekt and Aurex, both sound great but love this one as well. I love the rechargeable battery and it seems to play cassettes better that the other two new ones I have. Meaning, I had a tape play fine in the Fiio and slow in my other ones. This is also old school in that there is no Bluetooth, keeping it simple. It stops automatically when the tape ends but please note that it does not stop automatically when FF or RW. Not a problem because my old school players are the same way. This is built well and is very sturdy. Very cool design and high quality sound in my opinion. I use the Retrospekt Koss over ear headphones that sound great. Got those on Amazon too. I know there are people who swear by older Sonys but mine require constant maintenance that I’m getting tired off. Most everything is made in China these days, gone are the Japanese made Walkmans 😃. This player sounds great! Also getting a We Are Rewind player soon (yes I have a problem 🤓). I also really love the volume wheel on this Fiio Walkman, super cool and easy to turn the volume up or down.
G**E
FiiO had great intentions, and I appreciate that…
The first impressions were good – quality materials, some weight, no gaps, no flimsiness of any kind. But then I started using it, and here is a summary. Good: (1) Tested how long it runs on a single charge – yes, about 13 hours, just as stated in the specs. (2) Signal to noise is stated at 55, and while I did not measure it, this player is definitely the least electrically noisy player out of the modern ones that I tried. (3) As already stated – quality build, makes a good first impression. (4) Seems to sound better with higher impedance headsets, at least to my ears, and can easily drive them, as it has a powerful amp. Bad: (1) Unnecessary tight door – hard to open due to very tight springs and a small opening notch on one side only. (2) Loud mechanical noise during playback. Frankly, even cheap players of 90s did not produce it so loud. (3) When a tape finishes fast forwarding or rewinding, the reels start making a load squealing noise, really unpleasant. I realize it does not auto-stop while in fast forward or rewind, but that alone should not warrant that type or level of noise, it should idle more or less silently. Not acceptable. (4) The speed was set too fast at factory, and after a few hours of playing it increased even further. I realize that there is a pot to adjust it, but the pot is located under the loading side of the player, so there is no way to play a calibration tape while adjusting. A question is how they adjust the speed at the factory, cause they would face the same issue. (5) Measured wow and flutter – 0.26% WRMS/0.46% Peak, tolerable, but not impressive. A cheaper auto-reverse USB tape converter I recently tried measured similarly. (6) I have to assume that they set azimuth at factory with the door open, or when the mechanism is not even installed in the player’s body, as there is no way to adjust that azimuth screw when the door is closed. When measuring with an azimuth tape inserted without using the door, with the door open, the player actually shows a well-adjusted azimuth, even at 12.5 kHz. However, once the tape is inserted properly, into the door, and the door is closed – azimuth goes into anti-phase, literally, 180 degree off, so the highs go muddy. Seems like the door’s geometry, its construction, takes the player out of alignment. Not acceptable. Again, kudos to FiiO for trying, but the result is disappointing.
A**.
Great player (with caveats), full review from an olde "tapehead"
I've been recording and listening to cassettes on home decks and portable players since 1980 and have been looking for a newly manufactured Walkman-style player for the day that all of my vintage units inevitably fail and can no longer be repaired economically. So, is this player worth a try? SHORT REVIEW: The build and sound quality of this model is equal to or better than nearly any other portable player currently in production. Newly made options are limited, so that's not an unqualified thumbs up. Still, recommended. Casual listeners: If you're NOT an "audiophile" and just looking for a portable cassette player to enjoy commercial cassette tapes, the sound quality of this Fiio CP13 will far exceed that of those tapes, which mostly sound pretty mediocre. I know, because the music label and audiobook company I work for produced cassette tapes for years. Though, for maximum enjoyment, do see my headphone tests below. Discerning listeners: If you've got great-sounding chrome or metal tapes that you've made yourself with a quality home cassette deck (this is me), you'll find this player better-sounding than many entry-level portable cassette players and even some entry-level home decks—with some tweaks required. Recommended, with caveats. See long review. LONG REVIEW: Warning: This goes on forever, so it's only for obsessive tape-lovers (or those with insomnia). :D First, THE COST: $99 is a fair entry-level price. I paid $60 for similar entry-level players in the late 1990's, with lesser build quality—though with more features like bass boost and auto-reverse. That's about $120 inflation-adjusted to 2024. I paid $200+ (about $400+ inflation-adjusted) for better players, mostly Panasonic and Sony. * MECHANICAL PARTS: Contrary to some of the negative talk online, this upgraded Japanese-designed, Chinese-made Tanashin style tape transport mechanism is very good compared to my vintage players, many of which have been professionally restored. No, it's not as good as a Sony Walkman DD direct-drive player, but the various upgrades are audible. Per Fiio, those include a heavier copper flywheel, a more powerful power source and motor that exerts more torque for speed control, and cherry-picked playback heads (similar to the way that Grado phono cartridges and Intel i3/i5/i7 processors are sorted and marketed post-manufacture). * WOW & FLUTTER: Very low, virtually inaudible even with 30-year-old cassettes. I've seen test results from 0.15% to as high as 0.24% online, but my unit tests at 0.13%. This is as good as my Dual 606 direct-drive turntable and better than my Technics 1991 mid-tier home deck and refurbished vintage players. Yes, my Nakamichi MR-1 professional deck tests at 0.03% (!), but anything better than 0.18% should sound fine to most people. Though note that some kinds of W&F will sound much more annoying than others, even if it measures low—it all depends on the frequency, amplitude, and "random-nicity" of the warbling, which varies from player to player. TIP: My favorite test is to play a tape containing long, sustained solo piano notes, which reveals W&F like nothing else. A good choice is "Thelonious Himself" (1957), which sounds smooth as glass on my Fiio unit. * WOW & FLUTTER WHEN JIGGLING THE UNIT OR WALKING. This has ALWAYS been an issue for portables (except expensive direct-drive players like top-end Sonys, which have gear failure issues all their own). With all units, including the Fiio, you're going to hear a bit of warble when grabbing your player off the table and definitely when jogging, but much less when just walking. TIP: When out strolling, get your player (and hands, lol) out of your pants and into a fanny pack or shoulder-sling pouch. * MECHANICAL TRANSPORT NOISE: Some posters have complained about this. Well, I can tell you that this player's motor is VERY quiet—as quiet as any belt-driven portable player that I purchased new from 1990 to 2000 in the $70 to $300 range (inflation adjusted). And it's MUCH quieter than those refurbished-but-still-aging units are today. NOTE: Many cheap blank or commercial music cassettes are quite noisy. That's why high-end blank cassettes like the TDK SA/MA and Maxell MX/XL series say "Anti-Resonance Mechanism" on them—even 30-year-old ones are nearly silent compared with cheaper blank and most commercial cassettes. TIP: If you are playing a noisy, rattly old cassette, put the player on a soft towel or coaster (plastic and wood tables act as natural noise amplifier-resonators). * AMPLIFIER POWER: Stronger than average. With various 32-ohm (typical) headphones, I've got the volume knob set around "3" for 80dB output (right on the edge of hearing damage). At "10" this unit drives all of my home receivers and integrated amps (with 200- to 200,000-ohm input impedance) perfectly, with no distortion. What about fancy high-impedance headphones? I don't know: please post your results if you test them with the Fiio! * LEFT-RIGHT BALANCE: Perfect on my unit, tested with monophonic audio recording. * FREQUENCY RESPONSE. This is the Fiio's weak point for me. While one user tests this as nearly flat from 40 to 18,000 Hz (graph here: https://www.reddit.com/r/cassetteculture/comments/1ap2o6q/fiio_cp13_a_first_impressiot n_and_detailed_review/), I found the bass response thin. My old top-tier Panasonic playback heads (rated at 5-20,000 Hz) sound much better, but so do my Panasonic entry-level players (rated at 40-16,000 Hz). I wish this player had a bass-boost or EQ function. A solution? Pick the right headphones (see below). * TAPE TYPE SELECTOR? No Normal (Type I), Chrome (Type II), and Metal (Type IV) settings—so chrome and metal tapes will sound brighter—though interestingly less trebly than on any of my other vintage portables without tape type EQ. If this is a deal-breaker for you, see "HEADPHONES" recommendations below. I'm listening only to chrome and metal tapes on the Fiio, and they sound fantastic with the right headphones. * DOLBY B, C, or S? Nope. But commercial tapes have such poor high-frequency EQ that the treble boost of dolby-encoded commercial tapes actually sound better to me than ones without (when played back on a player without dolby decoding). * SPEED & AZIMUTH: Both were calibrated near-perfectly at the factory (speed within 0.5%). But amazingly, you can adjust BOTH without cracking open the case! When I hear reviewers complaining that these adjustment screws are "such a pain to access," I have to laugh. I have spent hours taking apart my old players to get to the speed adjustment screw inside (when they even had them). And AZIMUTH adjustment? This is a true "audiophile" feature: Nearly all old portables at this price point had no such option. In the old days you'd have to keep buying and returning units before you got one with proper azimuth (i.e., that sounded clear in the treble range and not "muddy" or "muffly"). Or we'd bend the metal head frame when possible. Even my many home cassette decks lacked this feature (though the Nakamichi has it). See Fiio's video instructions: https://youtu.be/gcqCSET-EXU?si=a9izz_H0Kenau06V. TIP: Tape speed may drift as the belts break in, so use it for 10-20 hours before adjusting speed. At 18 hours, mine is still within 0.5% accurate. You can get a calibration tape with standard frequency tones online and pair it with a free frequency-measuring app on your phone or computer). * REWIND SPEED: Slow compared to vintage players and home decks, but perfectly acceptable. With a 100-minute tape: Fiio 3:49 (min:sec) | Panasonic RQ-E20V (typical entry level vintage player) 3:21 | Nakamichi MR-1 deck: 1:44 * "BUT I CAN'T REPLACE THE BELTS OR BATTERY!" - I haven't taken this apart but there are screws inside the cassette bay (hidden under little sticker dots). In all my old Sony and Panasonic units, this is how I've gotten inside—so the Fiio looks serviceable. Removing the spring-hinged cover is the hardest part, but Fiio posted a video in Mandarin Chinese showing how to do so (sorry, can't find the link, but their rep on a hi-fi audio site says they will post an English-language version soon). -- MISC TIPS FOR THOSE NEW TO CASSETTE PLAYERS: * Clean and demagnetize after every 10 hours of playback, or when you hear HF (high-frequency) attenuation or W&F. See Fiio video for cleaning the rubber roller, capstan, and PB head. BUT, if your unit still sounds muddy in the high frequencies, it's time to demagnetize the head. You can use either a demagnetizer wand (best) or cassette (adequate). Wand: https://www.amazon.com/Universal-DEMAGNETIZER-Cassette-Recorder-Track/dp/B003ZKLP4 | Cassette: https://www.amazon.com/CASSETTE-CLEANER-DEMAGNETIZER-WET-TYPE- * If your player (any cassette player) stops while playing a tape, forward fast and rewind it completely 2-3 times. The base layer of old tapes can get sticky. And also ... * Always hit "STOP" as soon as your player is done rewinding/ff-ing (there's no auto-stop). Reason: you can stretch, shear, or over-tighten the tape spool, damaging it. In play mode, this player DOES auto-stop at the end of the tape, so no worries when just listening. * Be mindful of getting your headphone cord stuck on doorknobs etc. and yanking it while plugged into the player! Over time, faulty headphone sockets have been the death of HALF of my players, not the belts or heads—and the main reason I bought this Fiio replacement. * Break in the capacitors and mechanicals before you decide on the sound quality - I've played this unit for about 18 hours now and the bass and treble balance is already sounding better. This seems true for many audio devices. -- *Updated 6.1.2024* HEADPHONE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THIS PLAYER: After trying 9-10 different headphones, I've found three that sound very good with the Fiio—with all types of tape, but especially chrome and metal. And I found a few that TRULY SUCK with this player. Of course, all ears are different so your mileage will definitely vary. Just offering some ideas: * BEST (*****): Samson SR850 $40. Gigantic AKG clones. Best headphones that I've tried for this player: Near-neutral treble and bass, and very low tape hiss with chrome & metal tape (with no Dolby). Also pretty good with commercial normal tape encoded with Dolby B. High sensitivity (very loud at low settings). Also great EQ and sound with phones, DACs, etc. https://www.amazon.com/Samson-SR850-Semi-Open-Back-Reference-Headphones/dp/B002LBSEQS * EXCELLENT SOUND (****). Sony MDR-G45 (discontinued, wah). I got these "behind-the-neck" cheapies for $15 a few years ago and they sound custom-made for the Fiio. They now go for $90 on eBay—sheez! The Sony MDR-G52 "classic" walkman-style headphones look similar (and cheaper). With chrome and metal tape, better-than-average bass with the Fiio (but not as strong as the Samsons) and more accurate treble EQ than anything else I tried. High sensitivity (loud). * V. GOOD/EXCELLENT SOUND & CHEAP (****). Panasonic RP-HT21. $8 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00004T8R2. Marketed with "XBS bass boost", lightweight walkman style on-ear headphones. These sound just a tiny bit less lower-resolution than the Sony MDR-G45 but still very enjoyable listening. 24-ohm, 30mm drivers. Sensitivity: 100 dB (loud). * V. GOOD SOUND & CHEAP (BUT NOT VERY LOUD) (***): Maxell 190316 behind-the-neck style walkman headphones, $17. With the Fiio, sounds as good as the Sony MDR-G45 above but requires volume set at 9 or 10 for 72 dbA listening volume. https://www.amazon.com/Maxell-190316-Stereo-Neck-Bands/dp/B00006JPRP. The Maxell 190319 $6 (what a deal!) looks similar https://www.amazon.com/Maxell-High-Quality-Headphones-Adjustable-Lightweight/dp/B00006JPRN/ HEADPHONES I DO *NOT* RECOMMEND FOR USE WITH THIS FIIO PLAYER: * Bose QC25 or equivalent. The active EQ makes these very frequency-neutral (accurate): which means that with the Fiio, excessive treble with chrome/metal tape and weak bass. Also, this inline-microphone headphone doesn't seat quite right into the Fiio's 3.5mm input so the right channel will cut out unless you jiggle it just right. Finally, most active noise-cancelling headphones use DSP (digital sound processing), which kind of defeats the pure-analog point of this player, right? * Grado SR60 & SR80. My favorite high-resolution headphones but way too "bright" for chrome or metal tape and weak bass with the Fiio. * V-Moda LP crossfade2. Renowned for huge bass but sounds very muddy with the Fiio. * Koss Porta Pro. You'd think these retro walkman-style headphones with famously fat bass were made for the Fiio, but they sound horribly muddy with this player. * Panasonic RP-HTX7-K1 - These retro "ham radio style" headphones (as seen on "Stranger Things") sound just awful on a high-end system—and even worse with the Fiio. Just mentioning to save you the disappointment. * Shure I2C-M in-ear monitor headphones (similar to many current entry-level IECs without bass boost) - These are also neutral-EQ headphones with no bass emphasis. They sound clear but tinny/trebly with the Fiio player. * Apple earbuds, iPhone 6-11 (the hard plastic ones, not the kind with soft in-ear seals) - For me these sound tinny/trebly with all music players, and very weak bass with the Fiio. I can't believe you read this whole review, thanks! Hope this helps, and happy listening whatever you're using to play music. Note: I am in no way affiliated with Fiio, Amazon, or other manufacturers mentioned, nor have I received this product in exchange for a review. Just a music lover who also likes to write epically long posts. :D
S**K
Weak, thin sound? READ THIS!!!
Firstly, I knew this thing would be pretty awful, but an elderly friend wanted a walkman-type cassette player, and this seemed to be "the best of a bad lot". The only cassette Walkman I was ever really happy with was the Sony WM-DC2 Walkman "Professional" (DD Quartz- locked mechanism, amorphous heads, Dolby B/C, etc.) Even with the Sony there were certain things that could've been better. I'm a professional audio engineer...I'm pretty demanding! Compared with the 1980s Sony, this Fiio thing is a toy. Even though it's super- basic, they somehow still managed to screw-up the design! Initial impression of the sound quality was "Huh? wtf?" Not a good start. Jogging-on-the-spot to test out its "shock resistance", the sound was literally all over the place. Far worse than just simple wow & flutter. Quite bizarre! I've used probably 50+ different Walkmans/personal stereos over my lifetime, and never experienced this kind of issue before. Not once. Well, there is indeed a simple explanation. Unlike EVERY Walkman I ever owned/used, there's nothing in this thing to keep the cassette FIRMLY in place. Tape-to-head contact is absolutely critical in a cassette player, and this thing fails miserably. The lid has no leaf-springs to hold the cassette steady. The lid is barely more than a cover, and its technical role has been totally overlooked. If your Fiio sounds thin and weedy (it almost certainly does!), try this: Turn it door-side-down (cassette facing the ground). Almost certainly the audio will dramatically fill-out in both bass and volume. The head height is therefore also wrong. (I don't mean azimuth, I mean height). The solution to fix both issues (no firm grip on the cassette and the sound quality issues) is to raise the cassette position slightly. Easiest done with the door removed, and you'll also want to remove the door to adjust the azimuth, too (for clearest sound). To remove the door/lid, just force it open further than it normally opens. Re-fitting the door is slightly harder, but just the same thing in reverse. There are a couple of springs, too, but just pull upwards and the springs will pop off the main unit. Anyhow, the solution involves stacking-up sticky labels until the sound is optimal. I found that a stack of seven little circular paper labels, placed inside the cassette well (left, right, and center top) will fix the problems. It's not a very elegant /professional fix, but I didn't want to actually modify the unit. See photo to make things clearer! These Chinese manufacturers making record players, cassette players, etc. seem pretty clueless. Digital they can do, analog/mechanical, not so much. God knows how this design got approved with so much "slop" in the positioning of the cassette. It's literally free to wobble around inside the cassette well of thxthe CP13. Needs a lid which hold the tape FIRMLY in place, and proper height alignment of the tape head. Yes, I'm available as a consultant, if anyone from Fiio wishes to hire me to improve their designs! Meanwhile, get some ChromaLabel colored stickers (available on Amazon) if you want your Fiio CP13 to sound how it's meant to sound. Remember to also adjust the head azimuth (screw) to achieve clear treble after adding the sticky labels to get the bass/volume optimized. The rest of the unit is totally "meh". The metal exterior is "ok", nice-enough volume knob, too. Everything else is mediocre (compared with virtually any half-decent Aiwa, Sony, Panasonic, etc). One glaring omission is a belt clip, carrying case, or even a little lanyard/hand strap. You get NOTHING. Nada. ZILCH. If the good-old-Japanese players were still available, this Fiio would be going straight back to Amazon, but unfortunately choices are so limited that I think my friend will have to keep this thing (along with 21 little sticky dots to make it work properly!) "Enjoy" 🙂
د**ي
مشغل ممتاز
منتج جميل وسلسل
T**S
デリバリーもいい体験
海外からの輸入でしたが、刻々と状況を通知いただき、楽しみが増しました。モノもそうでしたが、デリバリーも体験に優れていました
M**9
Ottimo walkman moderno
Comprato per curiosità, avendo ancora molte cassette musicali e nessun riproduttore funzionante. Non avevo grosse aspettative (abituato al mio Sony WMD6) ma devo ammettere che come riproduttore funziona bene e la ricarica da usb-c è molto comoda. Provato sia con le cuffie (riesce a suonare bene con le cuffie a bassa impedenza, con le Sennheiser HD600 ovviamente non ce la fà) che collegato all'impianto stereo. Qualità audio piu che accettabile (stiamo pur sempre parlando di musicassette, con tutti i limiti del supporto), peccato non abbia una uscita di linea per la connessione allo stereo ma si debba utilizzare l'uscita cuffia. Il bluetooth sarebbe un plus per l'uso con cuffie/auricolari, ma usandolo esclusivamente a casa non lo trovo un limite cosi importante
C**5
Quality Product
The Fiio CP13 was promptly delivered and exceptionally well packed. Feel/Quality The Fiio CP13 is a delight to hold and feels like a well-made quality product. It has a simple design and solid buttons which should hopefully last a long time. Operation The operation is simple and manual with strong chunky buttons for play, rewind, fast forward & stop. It has an auto stop on play but not on rewind or fast forward so please be aware of this if you have a weak or fragile tape. I found this to my cost when it chewed one of my 1970’s tapes. Cons There is no button to open the cassette door so this may prove difficult if you have limited manual dexterity. Sound Quality (dependent upon how recorded) The sound quality has proved to be good when replaying my cassettes recorded in the 70’s, 80’s & 90’s (could do with a little more high-end response but that could be my recording) however, 2000’s onwards the quality has been excellent. Please note this can also be dependent on the headphones used. To maintain best sound quality, it is advisable to clean the cassette heads regularly. Cons Due to limited space (the cassette case does not open very far) it is difficult to clean and demagnetize the cassette heads. Earphone Socket I used the Sennheiser CX300 S ear canal headphones and found that if the supplied ear tips did not provide enough bass, you could use ‘Aiivioll’ silicon ear tips instead. I used cheap Philips over ear headphones and they gave excellent bass. When using ear canal headphones, the volume is very good requiring minimal adjustment to increase the volume. This is handy as it saves battery life giving more cassette playing time. Note: If you are using over ear headphones, you will have to drive them a lot more and turn up the volume considerably. Cons Using ear canal headphones, it is likely that you will have to pull the jack out of the Fiio CP13 headphone socket a fraction (0.5 to 1mm). This was not necessary when using over ear headphones. Charging Battery life depends upon headphones used and volume selected. Ear canal headphones give at least 9hrs 10mins. Over ear headphones give about 7hrs 45mins. The cassette player gives no warning when it runs out of power – just stops! Thankfully charging is easy and quick in about 2.5hrs.
E**O
El viejo y querido sonido analógico de un buen cassette
Este es un walkman con la calidad tal vez mejor que los que se hacían en Japón en los años 80. Solo le faltaría tener Dolby-B para ser perfecto. Sonido analógico del bueno (por supuesto con auriculares buenos o unos buenos altavoces) ya se sabe que en una cadena de dispositivos sonoros, la máxima calidad es la del eslabón más débil. Es una pena que nadie encare la elaboración de buenos boombox, radiocassettes y pletinas con la calidad de antaño, y como demuestra FiiO ya se puede hacer también en China, si se quiere.
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