CD-ROM Drives that Can Be Used as Standalone Players?
An anonymous reader asks: "I am using an older, standalone CD-ROM drive as my audio CD player in my sound system. It is a NEC 4X SCSI in a small case with power supply. The case outputs very clean analog audio, great headphone output and a SPDIF coax link which plugs directly into my receiver. It works great standalone, it has a complete front panel, ie backlit LCD display, stop, play, pause, next and previous track buttons. But it doesn't read CD-RW, it uses a caddy and it heats up the CDs quite a bit. I know that all recent CD-ROM drives have only the eject button, not all of them output SPDIF (and with DRM who knows what the future holds) and who knows if they will work with only the power connected? Which CD-ROM drives, old or new, support being used standalone, have a decent set of front panel controls (at least a play and a skip button) and output SPDIF?" Generally for this type of purpose, I'd use a regular old portable CD player, but these generally do not output to SPDIF, either. Has anyone managed to find decent examples of either piece of hardware?
Get a CD Component piece for you system or at least look at some models of players, I know my Sony CD player had an optical output and that model was a few years old.
Hello slashdot. I have a great vcr that takes beta tapes. It has Beta I-III speeds and works great. The problem is it doesn't play dvd's. I've looked and looked but can't find a beta player that plays dvd's. Does anyone know where I can get a beta vcr that plays dvds?
I've got this great little thngy I use to play my CDs. The case outputs very clean analog audio, great headphone output and a SPDIF coax link which plugs directly into my receiver. It works great standalone, it has a complete front panel, ie backlit LCD display, stop, play, pause, next and previous track buttons. It has a cabeled remote, plays CD-RWs wonderfully, and dosen't heat up. It can run directly with only a power supply, and can even run without the power supply if needed!
Know what? It's a Sony D-EJ815 Discman.
Cue The Sun...
the old portable 'clam-shell' has all you want for the audio end but spdif out, right?
if you could find a used (ebay, maybe) radio shack cd3400 portable you might be happy. the line outs were supposed to be some wicked clean and accurate signal. and it had a 1/8" mono jack for coax spdif out.
we (dat-heads, back in 1994 era) loved this deck, except for its clicking in the phones out. if you don't insist on perfect phones out and really care more about the line out and the spdif out, this is your deck.
google cache search result
now go hunt one down.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
http://www.xenatera.com/bunnie/proj/cdhack/cdhack. html
But looks fun nonetheless.
Many moons ago, in the dark ages, I obtained a semi-broken iNFRA54 creative cd rom drive. It has
1) Earphones output
2) volume (up/down buttons)
3) Remote with numbered buttons etc.
4) play/next/rewind/prev buttons
5) Stop/eject button
6) Mode button (?)
7) Windows software which enables the remote to be a mouse etc.
On the back is a normal large 12V/5V/GND power socket, IDE port, master/slave jumper, analog audio out and didgatl audio out (2 pin cable thing).
The thing the laser sits on and moves kept sticking whenthe case was on though, but worked ok with the case off.
As mentioned elsewhere, a cheap AT power supply would work it great, I bet ebay as a few. Dunno if the digital out is the same as a coaxial digital out on DVD's and tuners etc.
Actually, I've never owned a CD-ROM that *didn't* output SDPIF (sp?). The Creative 12x DVD and AOpen 20x10x40 both have it on my computer, the dead CDROM in my tiny server has it ... no, wait, I have a crazy old Panasonic drive that doesn't have it, but it doesn't support IDE either. It's one of dem crazy weird buses.
ANYWAY, my point is that most CDROMs have a two pin "digital output" on the far left side, and that is a SDPIF output. With a little creative wiring, you should be able to hook it into a stereo. And I believe most IDE CDROMs work with only power. Of course, I'm talking internal drives here but you should be able to hammer something together.
I guess it's finally my turn to feel the thrill of seeing my 'ask slashdot' question posted, and feel the wrath of the kiddies slamming me! Yay! I feel like I'm part of the gang now! :) ) , as quiet as I'd want, really, and the coax SPDIF output went straight into the previously unused coax input on my receiver. /. the hacker mentality would prevail. I thought people would be happy that I'm recycling a useful, if old, CD-ROM player as a standalone CD player.
OK, let me clarify. I used to have a decent A/V system years ago, consisting of a stereo VCR, Laserdisc player with optical SPDIF, carousel CD player and Minidisc recorder. I got most of it stolen 6 years ago, leaving me with only CDs and my Minidisc recorder (MZ-1).
This left me somewhat bitter and paranoid. Eventually I bought a Sony portable CD player with optical SPDIF output, the D-E805.
It's a piece of crap, it skips randomly on my CDs, which all look like masters, ie there's not a scratch or speck of dust on them, and this even on a stable surface with the AC adapter. And we all know about how wall warts take up too much space on a power bar, right?
One day I'm at a used computer store and spot a nice NEC external CD ROM case with internal power supply. I figure for 30$ canadian I can do something with this, thinking the 4X SCSI CD ROM is going to fly in the garbage. At home, I realize the headphone output on it sounds better than most Walkmans I've had, the analog line outs are dead quiet (except for the music, of course
Plus the CD ROM itself is unusual for the complete control panel and LCD display on it. Like I said, most CD-ROMS have an eject button, if that.
All in all, I was so impressed with this thing, it became my main CD player. The fact that it's only 7 inches wide by 12 inches deep was pretty cool too. It's also a neat conversation piece as I discovered.
I don't want a standard 19 inch wide CD player. Those things are flimsy, empty boxes. I don't see why this size still exists.
I'd have thought that at
The fact that it's smaller, uses a standard 120V power connection and only needs one cable to connect to the receiver are the reasons why I like it.
It raises the question why CD-ROMs don't play back MP3's natively, most DVD players seem to do it. That would be even cooler.
So no, I don't want to connect a portable CD player to my receiver. BTDT. I don't watch enough movies to justify a DVD player (another 19 inch empty box). I like the small form factor, OK? I want a newer CD-ROM that plays CD-RW and has enough buttons for standalone use, OK?
Yes I called all the local big boys in Montreal for computer crap, there simply are NO CD-ROMs with anything more than an eject button, OK?
And yes, I use my computer for ripping and playing MP3s and the occasional DVD, I just don't want to have to turn on the damn machine (at 200+ watts and fans) just to listen to some music. The NEC is quiet and fast.
That's all I want for crying out loud. I just want CD-RW read capability with buttons... Waahhh!!!
Oh and yes, I used to use my Hi-Fi stereo VCR to record 6 hours of music at a time, have you seen the specs of these machines lately?
Thanks to isorox and malraid for some of the only relevant posts so far!
How do you play a 16-bit PCM stream with a 1-bit DAC? It's not like SACD where you have a ~2.5MHz 1-bit stream. So what exactly does it mean to have a 1-bit DAC?
Additionally, there is absolutely NO reason to ever buy anything but the cheapest digital audio cable. Why? It's DIGITAL! If there's degradation of any kind, you'd hear it extremly well. There aren't multiple levels degredation. It's either total signal loss/corruption, or perfect signal. Just buy the cheapest cable you can find that works. Heck, for coax digital, even a cheap composite video cable would work. An audio cable might work, but it might not have enough bandwidth. A composite video signal needs about the same bandwidth as a digital audio signal. For optical cables, you'll want to find something that isn't going to snap if you drop it while you're installing it. There's a new method for making plastic optical conduits, that have a smaller minimum bend radius than the current cables.
A solution to the problem with music today
Another guy wants to recycle a CDROM player in his audio set. Seen on the debian-user list : http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2003/debian-us er-200301/msg00942.html
Better get yourself a used CD player on Ebay !
The problem with computer CD drives is that they won't work with the current copy control methods, like Midbar (=desert in Hebrew) or Sony's vicious key2audio - unless someone writes a firmware upgrade for them.
The upgrade should be very simple, and will consist of the following pseudo-code:
IF (cd is printed) AND (cd has audio tracks) THEN read_only_the_first_session
Slashdot community, please notice: I am looking for a girlfriend.
Nave H. Weiss
I have tested many joe CD-ROM drives by just putting in an audio CD-R, power suply and listening thru SPDIF. I havent seen many drives without an SPDIF out and I believe about 90% will play audio off CDRs with no major problems.
Now they should REALLY make CDROM drives with build in MP3 and Ogg decompression. These modular drives could then be inserted into car and home theatre players with no problems. I certainly wouldnt mind paying extra to have mp3 processing off my processor.
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I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.