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249 requests
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11 Sold
Product Description
Breathe new life into your CD collection with the PD-501 CD Player from TEAC. Delivering high-resolution CD playback without the need for a PC connection, this player comes equipped with 5.6MHz DSD file native playback and up to 24bit/192kHz PCM on recordable DVD discs Read More
For the 11 people (really, only 11?!) who purchased this transport, any buyer's remorse? I do like it's design (it looks like it could be rack-mounted). Sure, I have a CD player built into my desktop PC. Is this device a worthwhile addition to an audio-toy-enthusiast's listening nook?
ScubaManLakeHuronWhile I didn't purchase the PD-501 on Drop, I have one of those. The transport is great as you'd expect from TEAC. Apart from CDs, I used it with DVDs loaded up with several albums. Sadly, it doesn't play FLAC so you have to use WAV. I suspect the internal DAC is Ok, but I run it through the UD-501. I don't think you can rack mount it though.
I picked up one of these used about 4 years ago and I'm not disappointed. if you can pick one of these up for a good price it's worth it...even just as a transport. it actually does sound pretty good through its analog outputs, but it really does shine as a transport.
who actually makes cool small form factor brick solid transports anymore these days anyway?
meh to the silver, though. heh
anybody out there rocking a full Teac 500 series stack? respect.
MotorradThanks for sharing. It sure is a handsome unit. Have you tried burning FLACs onto DVDs or DVD-RWs? The official product site says there should be no problem with that, but I'm wondering if that would actually work.
I've done Raspberry Pi and Allo. Seperate storage, dedicated streamer, DAC, paid subscription player etc... I've had a better and cheaper experience with this. Just download an album and rip it to CD/DVD-R. Easy. It sounds damn good. Another thing, I'm digging just having 2 boxes in my space. This player and an integrated amp.
I guess it's your money and you can spend it how you like. But some audiophiles seem to have a very optimistic view of their hearing abilities. Just rip your CDs to FLAC lossless format and stream to your other audiophile equipment.
I own it. It is a great, simple CDP. Teac missed the boat with the lack of any inputs and no SACD, but the build is solid (Esoteric, Teac/Tascam’s hifi brand makes some of the best disc players on the market). If you’re looking for redbook and/or a small form factor, it’s worth considering. Otherwise, there is probably better options for more/less money.
A Sony BDP with SACD capability would be a good starter option if you have a DAC with coax and a TV, or an AVR with HDMI. They’re available close to free.
Tascam decks are also typically quite decent for redbook. The current Teac/Tascam 650 has a lot of the features this CDP is missing. You can find them under $200.