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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!charnel!rat!ucselx!crash!cmkrnl!jeh
- From: jeh@cmkrnl.com
- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Subject: Re: Sony CDP-X111ES
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.113904.994@cmkrnl.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 19:39:04 GMT
- References: <6063@rosie.NeXT.COM> <1992Dec16.154014.980@cmkrnl.com> <1992Dec18.084412@trc.amoco.com>
- Organization: Kernel Mode Consulting, San Diego, CA
- Lines: 76
-
- In article <1992Dec18.084412@trc.amoco.com>, znpt01@trc.amoco.com
- (Norman P. Tracy) writes:
- > JEH is ready to damn all Sonys because his won't track one esp. difficult
- > scratched CD.
-
- Not at all. I didn't mention the other three Sony players that have been
- through my office system, each of which had occasional skipping problems that
- are not related to problems on the discs (ie the problem is not repeatable on a
- given spot on a given disc). Repair and adjustment efforts were unsuccessful.
-
- (In case you're wondering, I keep getting Sonys because these are loaners which
- are in effect not costing me anything... if I was to go out and buy a new home
- CD player it would be almost anything but Sony.)
-
- Nor did I mention the Sony XBR tv sets, 27" and larger, which are among the
- highest priced in each size category but which can apparently absolutely NOT be
- adjusted to eliminate pincushion distortion. (ask on rec.video)
-
- Nor did I quote the dozens of articles that appear here describing problems
- with Sony gear. (It has been asserted that *every* Sony CD player with the
- "linear tracking" mechanism will fail earlier than it ought to, due to problems
- in this component.)
-
- > I would like to advance the notion that the reason you see so many complaints
- > re. Sony reliability (the stuff of net "legends") is that Sony sells so much
- > product. There failure rate % could be lower than a smaller company but
-
- You have a good point, but...
-
- Nor did I quote the Consumer Reports reliability survey results which
- consistently show Sony to be among the worst brands.
-
- Nor did I mention the problems which my friends in the audio repair business
- have getting parts from Sony.
-
- > because they sell so many units it translates into a greater number of people
- > with problems. And we all know somebody with a bitch is much more likely to
- > post a slam than somebody who's happy as a clam will post a praise.
- >
- > Also keep in mind we're discussing a company here whose product range goes
- > from $9.95 Wallmart headphones to million dollar plus CD mastering factories.
- > Norman Tracy
- > znpt01@trc.amoco.com
-
- This also is true. As I mentioned, I have a Sony cassette/tuner head unit
- (XR-7280, if anyone cares) and accompanying CD changer in the car; couldn't be
- happier with them. (The RF performance on the tuner is nothing short of
- amazing -- in fact if you are looking for a home tuner that's good at
- weak-signal reception + adjacent channel rejection, but you don't want to break
- the bank, I'd seriously suggest that you look at one of Sony's better car units
- + a 12-volt power supply.) Ditto for the 75ES DAT deck. Ditto for the D-160
- CD player which still works reliably, even though it rode around in my car and
- suffered all kinds of abuse for something like five years before I got the
- trunk-mount changer,
-
- Back to the downside: To be fair, I should also mention that my friend who's in
- the used-equipment business is getting pretty discouraged about many of the
- Japanese brands, not just Sony. As long as the stuff works it works fine, but
- when it breaks, it's a bear to fix. Parts availability alone is a major
- problem. Companies will say that a part "is on backorder" for months, and then
- ship the wrong part, and then will only issue a credit (not a refund) when the
- part is returned. ease of servicing has gotten much worse in the past few
- years.
-
- > Like any product you have to look at the individual unit and decide for
- > your self if it has the quality you desire for the price you are willing to
- > pay.
-
- Unfortunately, reliability and repairability are not things which can be
- evaluated when you're buying. Manufacturers (not just Sony) have learned how
- to build equipment with subtle external cues that say "this unit is well made"
- to most shoppers, without necessarily building a reliable, repairable product.
-
- --- Jamie Hanrahan, Kernel Mode Consulting, San Diego CA
- Internet: jeh@cmkrnl.com, hanrahan@eisner.decus.org, or jeh@crash.cts.com
- Uucp: ...{crash,eisner,uunet}!cmkrnl!jeh
-