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Pioneer CD Receiver System Featuring FM/AM Tuner and USB $148 at DSE, Click & Collect availabel

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CD Receiver System Featuring FM/AM Tuner and USB(Black) X-HM11

Main Features

Plays CD,MP3, WMA files from USB and CD-R⁄RW
AM⁄FM Radio
Speakers - 2 x 2-way bass-reflex speakers
Terminals
      1 x CD
      1 x USB (Front)
      1 x RCA Line In
      1 x Headphones 3,5mm Jack Out
      1 x Tuner Antenna
Display - FL (White color & Dot matrix type display)
Finish - Aluminium Finish
Remote Control Unit - Remote control included
Dimensions (W x H x D)
Main Unit: 215 x 95 x 315 mm
Speakers: 130 x 211.5 x 240 mm
Weight
       Main Unit: 2.0 kg
       Speakers: 2.0 kg ⁄ speaker
       Total weight 6.0 kg
Power Consumption (in use ⁄standby) - 21 W ⁄ 0.5 W or less (Standby)
Power Requirements - AC 220⁄240, 50⁄60Hz
Speakers
         Speaker Type
         2-way Bass-Reflex Speakers
         100 mm Woofer
         Piezoelectric Tweeter
         Bass Reflex
Amplifier
          Amplifier - Class D Amplifier
          Power RMS Front - 15W + 15W (4O) 
Radio
         Tuner - Yes
         Presets - 30 (FM) + 15 (AM)
Audio
         Bass⁄Treble Control - Yes
         P-BASS - Yes
         Equaliser Presets - Flat, Active, Dialogue, Night

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closed Comments

  • Free? Price on title PLEASE.

    • Amended. Thanks.

  • +3

    Power RMS Front - 15W + 15W? A bit expensive for such low power.

    • +1

      Well, the power figure doesn't really tell you much, to be honest. And the size of the speakers should tell you enough anyway. THD and sensitivity of the speakers are more useful metrics, IMO.

      It would be nice if the USB slot played FLACs for the more anal FLAC collecters among us that don't wish to use a phone to play FLACs. For the price, what you get is acceptable. I still remember the 90s. 'Compact micro' systems like this were several times more expensive. It could be argued they were higher quality too, but that's another story.

    • +2
      1. RMS output is marketing jargon intended to dazzle the laymen with extraordinarily high figures (like PMPO); it doesn't actually correlate with better sound quality, better quality drivers, wider frequency spectrum, etc. Have a read: http://www.hifi-writer.com/he/misc/rmspower.htm

      2. At least Pioneer are honest; unlike your run-of-the-mil garbage from Sony or LG that claim 10,000,000 watt output and then in 4 point font in the manual list it as "peak power", lol (meaning it can sustain that output for a few milliseconds at most).

      I have a disappointingly poor-sounding Panasonic SC-AKX56 (1000W RMS) that was released this year and not only does it sound worse than my 12-year old Philips FW-C380 but it isn't even as loud as the 120W Philips which can rattle my windows.

      • Yep.
        Things need to be taken in context and the RMS figure alone is pretty meaningless.

  • What is the RRP if OP doesn't mind telling me?

  • Anyone who bought one, can they tell if the sound is any good? Does it handle mp3s well? Sub folders, unicode, long file names?

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