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Home   Crosley Radio CR6007A-MA Recording Tech Turntable (Mahogany) | |
|  | |  | | | Crosley Radio CR6007A-MA Recording Tech Turntable (Mahogany) | | | | | | | |
List Price:
| $129.95 | |
Our Price:
| $96.07 | |
You Save:
| $33.88 (26%)
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| | | SKU:
111913 | | In Stock | | Availability:
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| | Features | LCD DisplayUSB/SD Encoding and USB/SD Card ReaderBelt Driven Turntable MechanismHeadphone JackRemote Control
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| | Description | Blast into the vinyl preservation revolution with the CR6007A Tech Turntable. Simply plug in a USB or SD card to transfer music from your records, giving you the flexibility to put the digital tunes on CDs or your MP3 player. The tech turntable's playback feature can also be used to listen to prerecorded MP3 files. Return to the days of platform heels and The Beatles' Abbey Road album as you admire the wood-styled casing, mirror faceplate, and streamlined dials. This Crosley turntable even features a PAR (portable audio ready) hookup for MP3 players, and an analog AM/FM radio for more listening enjoyment. |  |
| | Product Details | | Product Length: | 12.0 inches | | Product Width: | 12.75 inches | | Product Height: | 5.0 inches | | Product Weight: | 6.0 pounds | | Package Length: | 15.4 inches | | Package Width: | 14.0 inches | | Package Height: | 8.9 inches | | Package Weight: | 7.4 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 26 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 26 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 found the following review helpful:
Pretty, Petite, and Pitifully weak Dec 12, 2009
By Belle Howell I'll cover the good and bad since there is no "ugly" to this pretty little box.
Good: Compact size Easy set up Looks great on/off knob feels solid "wood" finish is convincing A+ for dust cover with gaps for 12" records Radio function works L/R line uots for external speakers (trust me, you'll need them) line in for CD MP3/SD slots for digital music Bright blue screen light weight
Bad: Sounds atrocious! Want some dinner music or after diner music? You'll have to cozy right up to the speakers to hear anything, and you won't be pleased with what you hear. Absolutely no lows, highs were treacherous, and the mids were spiked. Speakers are miniscule, point in opposite directions (seriously? Poor design) Switches feel cheap, light, plastic-y. Tuner knob is loose Smaller than it looks no stacking function cartridge arm feels frail no auto return function on arm N audio control other than a "bass boost" button
Overall: It's a shame this stereo sounds so bad. Crosley makes some great little bedside clock radios with impressive single speaker sound. They could've made this an impressive and affordable first turntable for a new generation of budding audiophiles. Vinyl is the future of physically packaged music. This little unit masquerades as a budding audiophile stereo system but be warned. Expect to spend an additional $200-$300 for a decent L/R Speaker & sub package to get good sound. Look at the entry line Polk Audio 10" sub and Monitor 30 bookshelf speakers. Run the L/R RCA cables into the subwoofer, then feed the signal to the shelf speakers. You will not enjoy this stereo unless you get external speakers. This would be a great little turn-table for the dorm room, bedroom, or apartment with some external speakers.
For $400 (stereo + Polk Audio speakers) you could easily track down an old Panasonic, Marantz, Dual, Sansui, Bogen, or other vintage stereo of good quality with real warmth and tone as well as EQ features.
All this being said, I really do like my little Crosley 6007.
35 of 40 found the following review helpful:
Very good for the price Sep 06, 2009
By Linda K. Anderson
"Audiophile"
The appearance of this unit reminds me of the turntables/record changers of the 70s, which in my opinion is a plus. I have a VERY large LP collection that I want to add to my iPod, and this looked to be perfect for that purpose. Haven't used it to transfer vinyl to usb yet, but I have listened to my vinyl and the radio, which, by the way, receives several stations I cannot get on my other radios. The only reason I gave this four stars rather than five is that the speakers are really awful. I solved this problem by connecting it to my Crosley Solo radio which makes it sound pretty darned good. I've also connected my iPod to the turntable, so now I have a really nice system for my bedroom. For looks and simplicity of operation, I highly recommend this little turntable, but remember that if you're going to listen to the radio or actually play LPs to listen to them, you will definitely need a set of speakers
9 of 11 found the following review helpful:
Crosley CR6007A-MA recommend it only for the tone deaf. Jan 08, 2010
By John Mark Martin
"DjJohnnyM"
Being that i'm an incurable audiophile..this review may be a bit prejudiced. I have listened to this compact little piece of junk in the store and would only recommend it for taking on vacation... Especially since i take in trips to exotic record stores on my vacations. Pushing that topic aside for now, let me get to the meat of this review. It has some handy features such as an analog radio tuner, for those who actually can listen to radio. The controls for the volume, and whatnot are just loose feeling and flimsy, like they'd break if you looked at them wrong. The built in speakers are toneless to my ears. There is no adjustment for weight on the tone-arm,nor an anti skate feature. Even with a line out feature to plug this one into a real stereo receiver, the quality of sound that the turntable would be able to deliver would be terrible. A good rule of thumb is to listen to any such product thru the headphones, i've found. THis model didn't pass that test. The quality of the turntable here is average for the typical low -end ,all- in- one tabletop stereos popular during the 1980s: cheap,short, straight tonearm, small platter on a shaky springy base, and cartridge and needle unable to faithfully reproduce sound. But then i'm prejudiced, like i said earlier, being an audiophile with a Technics 1210 and Ortofon cartridge. To me, as far as a portable travel turntable goes, is even subpar to the Vestax portable around the same price range, plus the Vestax is smaller and more suited to it's purpose. All in all, i give this product 5 thumbs down. (Sound Killer Van, anyone?)
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Excellent for price!!! Jan 26, 2011
By peanut I purchased this item after reviewing articles and customer reviews. It is a "turntable" with a radio. I purchased it to transfer my records (33, 45, 78) to the usb flash drive. So far I have transfered 150 45's and two 33. Those people who expected a DJ professional results from an inexpensive turntable had higher expectations than me. The sound quality is great for the price. It is a good as or better than my Dynavox record player that we used at my high school dances. The speaker location is the same as most record players. People today expect a DJ system out of a utility system and thus are disappointed with the results. You get what you pay for and I feel that I got as good as or better than I expected. That is why I rated it a five star buy.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Great record player at a reasonable price Feb 02, 2010
By A. Arnold Bought this as a Christmas gift and we love it! Plays all of our records great. Have it hooked up to our Bose speakers and delivers quality sound. Has a little trouble playing older, heavier records but otherwise it's fine.
See all 26 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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