wurlitzer-jukeboxes Real info on Musicmatch Jukebox 10

But as everyone else has stated…you get what you pay for. When it is working it is a wonderful player for the price. But it rarely works right. I haven’t had the same problems as everybody else stated (battery life, long indexing time, cutting off for no reason), mine will be playing a song and in the middle of it start up from the middle of another song. The title won’t change on the display, just the song being played. It will do it a few times and turn the song into a 15 minute remix of all the songs I have on the player. I like remixes, but this is out of control!! I have tried downloading the firmware to see if that fixes it…but no luck. I reccommend forking out a little extra cash and getting a better player. Too much hassle with this one.

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7 Responses to “Real info on Musicmatch Jukebox 10”

  • Lookabaugh says:

    A friend had the misfortune of buying this hunk of junk. She bragged to me about how much money she saved over buying an iPod. She finally gave it to Goodwill and spent the money for an iPod. She wasted 100 bucks.

    So what was wrong?

    First, she never could understand the cryptic menu system. Second the case was horribly made, it cracked in 3 places with fairly delicate handling.

    Battery problems and other random button problems did not help.

    If you are reading this review obviously you want advice, so here is mine….

    Consider this review a coupon for 100 bucks off an iPod. You will just throw this thing away and buy a real product later so save the 100 bucks to begin with.

  • Hinkley says:

    Let me start with the good things about the CHD500:

    1) Price!! (beats the crap out of other HD drive based products)
    2) Great for backing up stuff from u’r stuff and laptop with its large memory
    3) Sound is good (when it does play) and the line out feature is cool

    Now the bad things:

    1) It freezes often
    2) Baterry life sucks. I can barely get 1 hour after charging for 10 hours. (This might be a problem with just my player because I have read some good comments about the battery)
    3) Navigation is way too complicated. Cannot create playlists on the go, cannot play songs at random, cannot browse for other songs when a song is playing
    4) Takes a long time to load a new song

    Bottom line: If I could turn back time, I will pay the extra $100 and go for an Ipod.

    Also I’ve heard good things about the CHD1000.

  • Nadal says:

    -Wow 10GB for around $100
    $100 well wasted.
    -9hrs battery life
    Goodluck with getting 45-60mins of playing time,
    not including the mysterious shutdowns during play.
    -Uploading new musics
    While transfer is rated @ 1.1 Usb. Be ready with a new batch of coffee, for the complete index has to be updated on the player itself with every new file input.
    -Quality of craftsmanship
    Let just say things start to fall apart in less than a week. Exterior fixtures start to come apart. Interior sounded to have loose parts.
    ***NOT WORTH THE MONEY/TIME.
    ***NOT WORTH THE MONEY/TIME.
    ***NOT WORTH THE MONEY/TIME.
    ***NOT WORTH THE MONEY/TIME.
    ***NOT WORTH THE MONEY/TIME.

  • Faulkner says:

    This product is total crap.. It messed up almost immediatly after I got it the buttons fell in and the screen blurred.. Don’t buy it!

  • Bednar says:

    I’ve had this thing about a month now and I thought I’d update my original review “A versatile player at a very reasonable price.”

    It works fine with any mp3 file formats I’ve thrown at it including high bit rate CBR and VBR files. Reads ID3v1 tags flawlessly and deals with long filenames well. Too bad subdirectories/folders are just referred to by number as opposed to their names.

    Shock protection is excellent, used it snowboarding without a single skip and batteries lasted just over 4 hours. I was initially worried that the long cord to the remote combined with the long cord from the remote to the headphone would be a royal pain but it acutally came in handy. I was able to put the PM-1 in the inside breast pocket of my Burton jacket, route the remote down my left sleeve and clip it to the inside of my wrist and route the headphone wire back up the sleeve and out the collar to my head. This left the remote well protected and warm (good thing b/c the cold temp will make the LCD display very sluggish and appear faded, wonder what the freezing temp of the LCD is?) yet still workable through my sleeve’s fabric w/o taking off my gloves. Need to modify my jacket to have a transparent window and clip on pocket inside it for the remote for full functionality!

    The “hiss” you hear when this thing is on is still a bit annoying but isn’t noticable at all if you are in anything but a completely silent environment or active at all once the music gets going. Not exactly “Hi-Fi” but what the heck, we are talking about playing MP3’s after all, not DVD-Audio or SACD’s.

  • Koenig says:

    The best way to rate this product is mediocre.

    First, the construction quality is marginally acceptable. Made entirely of plastic it probably won’t survive many or any drops. The remote separated around the jack when I used my professional quality Headphones — Sony MDR-7506’s.

    The sound quality is satisfactory. As mentioned in earlier reviews there is a slight buzz, which is only noticeable in quiet situations — I’ve gotten used to it. Despite the buzz, the quality of the mp3’s is fully reproduced at whatever bitrate they were encoded.

    The product specs say 6 hours of music are possible on an 8 cm compact disc. This is only possible if your mp3’s are encoded at a very low bitrate.

    Another quirk that perturbed me was the fact the player would occasionally stop when my headphones were connected directly to the player, and not inline with the remote.

    If you can deal with some of the quirks and the mediocre construction then this is an ideal player.

  • Fenton says:

    It’s small, light weight, doesn’t look cool. The player can charge the included two batteries. The included software is useless to me, as I have more advanced, highly appreciated streambox ripper 2.009 which can encode to the low limit of 8kBps and 8000Hz and high limit of 256Kbps and 44kHz from wav,mp3,ram!. The player can play mp3’s of all the range above. The LCD can show file name, song title, and author name. I encoded 15 hours of music on a single CD. Of course they are 16Kbps and 50Kpbs.

    The most important part should be sound quality. I have read from amazon reviews that there is buzz background noise, and I did hear it and annoyed by it, and even intended to return it. However I tried to use a cheapist headphone for no reason, and the noise is complete gone. Then I put the original headphone back, and I heard the noise again. So I decided that the headphone must have been cheaper than the cheapist. Before I had threw it away, I plugged it in my computer and listened some music. Supprisingly there was no noise at all, and the sound quality was much better than my cheapist headphone. So I decided to keep it for other use except to use it with the mini CD player.

    My concludsion is that both the player and the headphone are of high quality, BUT they don’t match!!! What a mistake compaq made!

    My personal feeling about it is that it’s relatively cheap for its functions—value(5); the sound quality is good except they shipped with a mismatched headphone—performance(4);there is no LCD display on the play, making it unconvienient when not using inline remote—ease of use(4); and the average is rounded to 4. But for the player alone, 5 star.