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RCA RD2850 20GB Lyra Audio HDD Digital Audio Player

RCA RD2850 20GB Lyra Audio HDD Digital Audio Player
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RCA RD2850 20GB Lyra Audio HDD Digital Audio Player

 
 
 
SKU:  

RCA2850AB

Availability:   Out of stock
 
 
Out of stock


Features
  • 1.8-inch HDD - 20 gigabyte capacity

  • FM Record MP3 Encoding

  • USB 2.0 Connectivity

  • Playback support for multiple codecs - MP3 - MP3Pro - WMA

  • Backlit graphic display


Description

RCA RD2850 -- Put your entire music collection on this ultra-portable Lyra series player, and enjoy it virtually anywhere. Supports ID3 tag display HDD SmartTrax Navigation Built-in Lithium Polymer Rechargeable Battery


Product Details
Product Weight:0.69 pounds
Package Length:3.3 inches
Package Width:2.8 inches
Package Height:0.9 inches
Package Weight:2.0 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 18 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:2.5 ( 18 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

29 of 29 found the following review helpful:


4A solid HDD Audio player  Dec 02, 2004 By J. Coty "book and music enthusiast"
Had I not been able to resolve several issues that did come up in using the player initially, I would consider the RD2850 a below average player. As it is, I would consider it a solid audio file player with a few limitations.

As I was searching for a hard disk digital audio player, I noticed the Lyra RD2850 came with everything you need to use it universally: ear clips, rca connector for stereos, car adapter kit, and usb to connect to your computer. This and the size and weight were major motivating factors which resulted in my purchase. Some of the other hard drive MP3 players force you to purchase these items separately, and virtually all of them are larger and heavier than the Lyra.

Unfortunately, upon purchasing my Lyra and loading it with music files, I discovered a few problems.

Problem 1 - many of my WMA files wouldn't play. Apparently, the Lyra is not compatible with WMA files created by Media Player 10, which included those purchased from Microsoft's music download service.

Solution - I had to burn all those WMAs and rip them as MP3s.

Problem 2 - when jogging the player would give me a fatal error and shut down. It would then take several minutes to reload. Since my primary use of the player was for exercise this was an issue.

I called RCA, and was told to reformat the Lyra, but that didn't work, so I sent it back and received a new one within ten days. The new one was slightly better, but still gave fatal errors as I ran. I called again, explained everything, and was told that because it's a hard disk player it will have difficulty being bounced around. I wasn't excited about this explanation, but I will say that it was never difficult to reach technical support. I reached a technician within a minute on each call.

Solution - I have since found a remedy by holding the Lyra as I jog, not ideal but it works. I believe that an arm strap would probably do the trick as well.

Problems with the bundled software - MusicMatch 8.2, which comes with the Lyra, won't put any Windows Media files onto your Lyra. However, you can download Musicmatch 9 for free. My experience was that Musicmatch 9 froze up constantly when I tried to upload songs to my Lyra, besides the fact that every button I pressed seemed to give me a pop-up telling me to upgrade to MusicMatch Jukebox Plus.

Solution for me- Use the LyraSync software instead of Musicmatch.

Musicmatch is good for one thing, if you pay for the twenty-dollar upgrade. If you have old MP3s with no ID3 tag, it will find them and tag them for you very quickly. I decided it was worth it, because the Lyra groups the songs into categories from the ID3 tag.

Overall, I decided that I could handle all of these issues and I love the sound of the player.

Pros

Many accessories

Great sound

Windows treats the Lyra like an extra disk drive, so you can quickly copy any song (or other file for that matter) to it.

Decent Technical Support

Size and weight (small and light)

Cons

Shuts down with a fatal error when jogging (unless held by hand).

Not compatible with WMAs made by Media Player 10

Bundled software (MusicMatch) isn't very useful

13 of 13 found the following review helpful:


4Space, Size, and Solid  Oct 04, 2004 By Scott F. Smith "madrush"
I had spent over 3 months researching players and finally settled on the RCA2850. There isn't much bad to say about this model, although a few things kept it from getting 5 stars. My principle concern was space and having 20Gb makes the difference. I've got over 1200 songs on it already and still have over 14Gb to spare. Keep in mind however, the majority of my music is ripped 128K WMA. I've found MP3 at the same rate to be slightly more expensive spacewise, and I personally haven't noticed a sound quality difference. So obviously higher bitrates will result in more used space.

Physically, the construction is solid. Metal is the primary material (instead of cheaper plastic) and the controls don't feel flimsy. The one minus is that sometimes it takes a few times for the control to register with the player. Don't know if it's a firmware or a hardware issue, but every now and then it can become annoying. The size surprised me. It's much smaller than I would've thought and I am very happy with it.

Integration with PC. Since it's a portable HD, my PC (Windows XP) recognized as such and had no trouble dealing with it as a normal drive. Drag and drop files as you choose. Most of my music is already in folders since I've ripped my entire CD collection on it using Windows Media Player and it puts everything in self named folders. The profiling tool (either on the player itself or the software) does a GREAT job. If your tags are correct, it'll sort them all for you.

The other minus I see is that when you have so many songs and artists, navigation can slow down. Albeit, it's still easy to browse, it's just not very fast. Clearly nothing beats the iPod on physical navigation. Some pluses. The display is fantastic. It's backlit and sizable so normal sized song and artist names show entirely on the display. While playing, there is a visible progress bar that shows where you are in the song as well as time elapsed, song, artist, genre, year, format, and bitrate. All very informative. The sound quality is very good and I haven't noticed drop offs in playback versus the CD. 128K seems to be fine.

The controls. It would certainly do RCA well to include a manual as there is a bit of a learning curve. The online manual is fine, but there's something about reading a book that makes the difference. I have yet to figure out if there's a way to randomize the entire contents of the player rather than by folder (artists, genre, etc). The are some other quirks with the firmware (as probably all do). I've had it freeze up once, particularly when using the pause feature when shuffle is enabled. Again, not often enough to make you mad but sometimes enough to be annoyed.

The FM-record is a nice include. However, in practice it probably doesn't give you much considering the quality is only so-so. My primary use for it is to record songs off the radio that I want to remember to acquire. A voice recorder would do better for this purpose and another minus is no line-in functionality.

Packaging of the player is very good. RCA did well to include all of your necessary peripherals. A soft cover case, cassette adapter, audio plugs, headphones, power supply, and car power adapter, and USB cable. The cassette adapter was very cheap and did not sound good. I would recommend getting a good one. And obviously the headphones as well (as most of them are when bundled with players).

Overall, I'd highly recommend this player. If RCA could improve the navigation speed and fix some of the quirks, I would say it's right up there with the iPod (Obviously, I'm saying the iPod is the top at this point). I'd also appreciate more format support. Right now it supports WMA/Secure WMA/MP3. But if you've been agonizing over a decision, let me sway you toward this model. This choice wouldn't be good for you however if you needed line-in capability. Otherwise, go with this model.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:


3Thomson (RCA) Lyra - Used with Linux  Aug 06, 2006 By Colin Smith
ok I'm using this thing in an unsupported Linux environment, but basically it works. Plug it in and it appears as a USB drive, drag and drop mp3 files onto the device. They play fine.

The battery life is good, a day's play no problem, the capacity is 20Gb and it can handle any type of file so is useful for data transfers between machines etc. It's capacity actually makes audio books worthwhile though it doesn't play Audible's .aa files.

Audio quality is very good, but the earphones you get with the device are cheap, get a decent set.

The user interface on the player kind of sucks. It profiles the M3s into genre, year, artist, album etc based on the mp3 tags, so make sure they're correct or it's a mess to use. If you use Linux, get hold of easytag and set all the tags correctly or use something like Grip which will fill the tags in from freedb.

The big niggle and why it's only getting 3 stars is that you can't play music *while it's charging*. If you try to, it crashes with loud buzzing and has to be switched off/on. It's been back to the manufacturer with the problem but it still exists. This is stupid and down to poor quality control, it makes the car charger useless and it means I can't play music while transferring stuff to it. It just doesn't multitask. Otherwise, when not charging, it's actually reasonably reliable for me. The little niggle is it can't create playlists of it's own, you have to create them on the attached system and copy them with the mp3 files, again something like easytag or rhythmbox can create playlists.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


1DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT!  Sep 27, 2005 By AVB
It was finicky from the first day (2/05). Thought it was our inexperience...should have returned it. Now it is completely frozen, even the Off button will not respond. Called RCA customer support (580-634-0115). Even though I am willing to pay, they will do NOTHING because they don't repair them only exchange. However, they don't have any in stock to exchange. They're only advice....call back in 10 days or so and try again. Amber's supervisor would not even take the time to talk to me directly.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


4Good for the price, but not intuitive  May 30, 2005 By J. Katzenstein
I purchased an RD2850 about six months ago, mainly because of its price, and the accessories that came with it (namely, a cassette adaptor and car charger). A comparable IPod with those accessories would have been around $150 more expensive. While I saved a good deal of money, and am happy with the Lyra, it has a number of problems that one should watch for:

1.) The interface and overall design is completely counter-intuitive. It took me a long time to figure out how to even learn how all the buttons worked.

2.) The device tends to freeze every now and then, and when it does, it lets out a deafening buzz. By far the most annoying aspect.

3.) The headphones that come with the player are awful. While most headphones that come with mp3 players are of poor quality, these are exceptionally bad.

4.) If you subscribe to most music download services (Napster, MSN, etc.), the music format won't play on an RD2850.

If you're looking to save money on a 20GB mp3 player, the RD2850 is a good buy. It has its problems, but it does what you need it to. If money isn't an issue, buy an IPod.

See all 18 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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