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Sony CMT-HX7BT Micro Component System with Bluetooth and Satellite Radio Capability | 
enlarge | Brand: Sony Category: CE
Buy New: See price in cart
New (4)
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 13504
Color: White Media: Electronics Shipping Weight (lbs): 19 Dimensions (in): 23 x 18 x 17 Warranty: 1 year warranty
MPN: CMTHX7BT Model: CMTHX7BT UPC: 027242709690 EAN: 0027242709690 ASIN: B000MXJFXI
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | 100 Watts of total power | | • | CD player with CD-R/RW MP3 playback | | • | MP3 ID3 tag display | | • | Built-in Bluetooth technology | | • | Satellite radio ready digital tuner |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description plays CDs, audio CD-Rs & CD-RWs, and MP3 CDs * streams music from compatible Bluetooth devices * satellite radio ready (requires an XM or SIRIUS satellite radio tuner and subscription) * play and sleep timers * 10 AM/20 FM tuner presets *
Amazon.com Product Description Sit back and let the Sony CMT-HX7BT Bluetooth Micro Component System fill your home with rich, quality sound. With the ability to play satellite radio and stream audio from a Bluetooth-enabled MP3 player, PC or mobile phone, the CMT-HX7BT is as versatile as it is powerful. Each speaker pumps 50 Watts of power while the bass reflex speaker design and S-Master digital amplifiers ensure deep bass and high fidelity sound. An AM/FM tuner with 30 presets and a simple, front-loading CD player are also included for your listening pleasure.
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| Customer Reviews:
Details, details. November 13, 2007 Jon Warshawsky (San Diego, CA USA) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
With 50 watts per channel, generously large speakers and a well-laid out remote, this should have been one killer bookshelf system. And it's certainly not a bad one. For starters, it has a simple drawer-loading CD mechanism that works nicely and inspires more confidence than the Rube Goldberg-style folding-doors on some competitors' models. The volume knob is a knob, not a maddening set of flat plates blended into the side of the cabinetry. And, unless you're on the verge of blindness, the display is readable from across an average-sized office. Perfect, yes? No. Considering we're 20 years into the "CD revolution", it's amazing that the controls for these systems keep getting worse. For example, matching the controls (black plastic) to the enclosure (black plastic) and making them all identical ensures you'll always have a bit of a hunt for the right one. To add to the fun, the play and stop buttons are separated by 'Audio In' and 'Tuner' buttons, giving a sort of randomness to the design. The controls are on top of the unit, which keeps the front free of clutter, but unless you put the system on a fairly low shelf you might not be able to read the icons near the buttons. As a bonus, they aren't lit or even luminescent. And they are all the same shape, so touch won't guide you. This is redeemed (sort of) by a remote control that will make you want to swear off the unit controls. Except that in a single CD player you'll be approaching the system to swap CDs, so those controls matter. Worse, the power and 'open' buttons are on the front and -- like all other controls -- are unlit and devilishly hard to find. Miss these buttons while groping and you'll add to the collection of fingermarks likely cover the impractically glossy front panel. Next, the power output ratings may have you thinking you should shake the plaster off the ceiling with this unit and a couple of rap CDs. Wrong. Sony has given us possibly the least efficient speaker system in its lineup, so it's hard to say what all of that amplification has actually bought us. For background music, it is adequate. However for active listening it is no match for a true home audio system. I've yet to use the Bluetooth capability, so can't comment, but that -- and the XM/Sirius capability -- would seem to be the primary benefit of this system. Using those through the remote control, it should be a good set for a home office. The sound quality is quite good for one of these smaller systems, and it dissipates heat well so that the components inside should be relatively long-lived. (A Denon unit I had earlier felt like a frying pan on top after an hour of operation.) If the XM/Sirius/Bluetooth features matter to you, and if you plan to use the remote control exclusively, the Sony CMT-HX7BT is worth a look.
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