![]() It uses a 1-bit digital-to-analog converter and Legato Link Conversion, which Pioneer claims adds third- and fifth-order harmonics to the CD audio, extending the frequency response up to 40KHz (CD audio stops at 20KHz). Insert a card into the MultiMedia Memory Card (MMC) slot, and you can store cue and loop data for up to 10,000 discs.Īudiophiles and vinyl addicts may never be completely satisfied with CD audio quality, but the CDJ-1000 sounds very good. The player lets you store cue points and loop points for up to 10 CDs in its memory so that you won't need to reset these every time you put the disc in the player. And you can set the three Hot Cue buttons for instantaneous access to any point in your CD. You can easily repeat a portion of a song, thanks to the Loop function. The Reverse switch lets you instantly play your CDs backward and forward. The CDJ-1000 has quite a few tricks up its sleeve, too. In the larger display, you can quickly glance at a graphic representation of a tune to easily gauge how much time remains, where a break is, and other necessary visual cues that you're used to seeing on an LP. The LED in the center of the turntable appears to rotate, giving you a crucial visual aid when you're cueing up a song. In our testing, the CDJ-1000 never stuttered or skipped no matter how fast we back-cued or how furiously we scratched. You can rotate the platter forward and backward, and the sound you hear is identical to that of cueing and scratching a record. Two knobs allow you to fine-tune the player's stop and start response speed, making it behave even more like a record player. Place your finger on the turntable, and the CD stops playing. The CDJ-1000 has the same sort of tactile and visual interface as the much-vaunted Technics SL-1200MK2 turntable. But that's where Pioneer really gets it right. Record players have survived for so long in nightclubs because no DJ-oriented CD player has been able to truly mimic a turntable. You can hear the whir of that high-speed drive when you're using the player, but it doesn't degrade the final audio quality. It has a 16X CD drive that reads CD and CD-R/RW data very quickly, and there's a large memory buffer, so you can scan flawlessly forward and backward through songs. Inside, this player is quite unlike most consumer CD players. Unfortunately, the player's professional price tag will keep many home DJs from owning it. But with its turntablelike interface and rock-solid performance, Pioneer's CDJ-1000 CD player deserves a spot alongside the record players in those DJ booths. In nightclubs around the world, old-fashioned vinyl turntables are still the tools of the trade.
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