California Audio Labs Tercet Mk.III CD player
At $1295, the Tercet Mk.III represents a step up from CAL's $750 Icon, which I enthusiastically recommended back in April 1990 (Vol.13 No 4, footnote 1). Externally, with the exception of a wider and slightly thicker front panel, it appears to be a carbon copy of that unit. Like the other products in California Audio Lab's stable, the Tercet Mk.III is designed from the ground up in-house.
Cambridge Audio CD1 CD player
Four years after its launch, the CD medium would appear to have come of age, at least in production terms. Annual player manufacture is now big business, and there is hardly a major audio brand without a CD machine to its nameeven such analog stalwarts as Audio-Technica and Shure have succumbed.
Cary 303/200 CD player
The CD-303/200 is a stout, handsome unit with a thick front panel of black-anodized aluminum (silver is also available) and a beefy, epoxy-coated aluminum chassis. Even the remote control—a heavy aluminum unit with multi-function, backlit buttons—screams "Quality!" Curiously, however, the remote is clad in chrome plate, rather than brushed aluminum or anodized black to match the player. The coup de grace is the CD-303/200's transport mechanism, a Philips CDM12, which is good enough as is; Cary addition of a thick, machined drawer warmed this metallurgist's heart.
Cary Audio Design CD303/300 CD player
Is it a trend or just a fad? That's what some of us want to know when we stumble over a new way of doing things, the implication being that a trend is somehow better than a fad.
CH Precision D1.5 SACD/CD player/transport
There's a school of thought that maintains that among all hi-fi components, the D/A converter is easiest to perfect or come close to perfecting. Just make sure that every sample is converted accurately, that there's little rolloff in the audioband, that aliased images are suppressed almost completely, and that background noise is extremely low, and you have a top-quality D/A processor. Use of a high-quality DAC chip is assumed.
Chord Choral Blu CD transport & Choral DAC64 digital audio converter
I was stumbling through the Denver Convention Center at CEDIA 2006 when I spotted John Franks, of Chord Electronics, and Jay Rein, of Chord's US importer, Bluebird Music, stranded in the basement purgatory for "niche" products. I couldn't resist asking, "What sin relegated you guys to this little hell?"
Classé CDP-10 CD player
With Super Audio CD and DVD-Audio four years old as established media this fall, the two-decades-old Compact Disc medium is still well-established as the primary carrier for recorded music. (Yes, it is experiencing a significant threat from downloadable music files, but that is outside my bailiwick as a hardware reviewer.) Stereophile has therefore been paying attention to the high-performance one-box CD players that are available. In May, I wrote about my positive experiences with the $2950 Ayre">http://www.stereophile.com//digitalsourcereviews/840/">Ayre CX-7 and Brian Damkroger favorably reviewed the $2999 GamuT">http://www.stereophile.com//digitalsourcereviews/839/">GamuT CD1, after having followed up his April 2001 review of the $5495 Simaudio">http://www.stereophile.com//digitalsourcereviews/343/">Simaudio Moon Eclipse player in April">http://www.stereophile.com//digitalsourcereviews/343/index6.html">April 2003.
Classé cdp-202 CD/DVD player
When, at the beginning of this century, the market profile of the high-end Mark Levinson brand took a dip due to the parent company's reorganization, one of the companies that took advantage of the opportunity was Classé Audio. Founded in 1980 by engineer Dave Reich (now with Theta Digital) and run by engineer-entrepreneur Mike Viglas since the mid-1980s, the Canadian electronics manufacturer's Omega line of high-end amplifiershttp://www.stereophile.com/solidpoweramps/878">amplifiers; and preampshttp://www.stereophile.com/solidpreamps/132">preamps; had universally impressed Stereophile's scribes, and its Omega SACD player (reviewedhttp://www.stereophile.com/hirezplayers/474">reviewed; by Jonathan Scull in November 2001) was the first such product to come from a North American company.
Cyrus CD 8x CD player
A week with the Cyrus CD 8x CD player
Cyrus CDi-XR CD player
In the 1990s, I was a globetrotter, interviewing musicians in diverse locales for several publications. My habit when arriving in London was to hit the duty-free shops for Cuban Montecristo cigars, move on to the newsagent for the latest issues of Hi-Fi News and Hi-Fi Choice, then take a leisurely romp through Oranges & Lemons, Richer Sounds, and Sevenoaks Sound & Visionthree major London audio stores.