FiiO X Series

FiiO X Series
Manufacturer FiiO Electronics Technology
Type Digital media, Portable media player, USB audio interface
System-on-chip used Ingenic JZ4760B[1]
CPU Xburst1 (MIPS32)[1]
Removable storage microSD slot accepts SD, SDHC, and SDXC cards up to 128 GB
Input Physical buttons
Connectivity USB 2.0
Power Li-Ion rechargeable battery
Website www.fiio.com.cn

The FiiO X Series is a line of portable music players designed and manufactured by the Chinese company FiiO Electronics Technology.

Models

X1 X3 X3 (2nd gen) X5
Introduced End of 2014 Summer 2013 2015 Start of 2014
SRP at introduction (USD) $99 $299 $199 $350
Display TFT LCD 240×320 TFT LCD 320×240 IPS 400×360
SoC Ingenic JZ4760B Xburst1 (MIPS32)[1]
RAM 64 MB 128 MB[1] ? ?
Internal storage 128 MB for system only 8 GB ? ?
microSD (SD, SDHC, SDXC) slots One Two
Battery capacity 1700 mAh 3100 mAh 2600 mAh 3700 mAh
DAC TI PCM5142 Wolfson WM8740 Cirrus Logic CS4398 TI PCM1792A
Audio outputs Single 3.5 mm jack,
headphone/line-level selectable
Three 3.5 mm jacks: headphone, line-level, digital Two 3.5 mm jacks, headphone, shared line-level/digital Three 3.5 mm jacks: headphone, line-level, digital
Use as USB audio interface? No Yes
DSD support No Yes (software) Yes (hardware) Yes
Dimensions 96.7 × 57.7 × 14.1 mm 55 × 109 × 16 mm 96.7 × 57.7 × 16.1 mm 67.6 × 114 × 15.6 mm
Weight 106 g 122 g 135 g 195 g

Reception

FiiO X3 with headphones

In reviewing the FiiO X3, LA Times' music critic Mark Swed concluded it is a better alternative to an iPod. Swed noted that the X3 utilizes that same digital-to-analog converter that is found in much more expensive players, such as Astell & Kern models that are being sold for $699 and $1,299. In his opinion the FiiO X3 may not have A&K’s sweet and open sound, but it could be purchased for around $200 as of April, 2013.[2]

Steve Guttenberg of CNET compared the FiiO X5 to the Apple iPod Classic and the not-yet-released PonoPlayer. He found the "iPod sounded vague and blurry next to the pristine X5" when playing identical ALAC audio files. The review also noted that the PonoPlayer plays fewer formats than the FiiO X series players, but costs more than the X3.[3][4]

A review of the X3 in Hi-Fi World reported that the sound and amplification are good, but added that the interface was "least intuitive" and "inelegant." The conclusion was: "a fine budget starting point in high-resolution digital."[5]

X1

The X1 features physical buttons and a spin wheel which "clicks" when rotated.[6] Each "click" of the wheel moves the selected item up or down. There are three buttons on the side of the device, one is used to power up/down the device and put it in sleep mode, while the other two raised buttons function for volume. In addition, when in sleep mode and playing music, the volume up/down buttons can be used for skipping a song or going back a song in the selected album/playlist.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Undersys; et al. "Thread regarding FiiO X3 and X5 hardware on the Rockbox Technical Forums". forums.rockbox.org. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  2. Swed, Mark (29 August 2013). "New audio player Fiio X3 tops the iPod, and is cheaper too". LA Times. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  3. Guttenberg, Steve (14 May 2014). "Why wait for the Pono portable high-resolution music player? The FiiO X5 is here now". cnet.com. CNET. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  4. http://www.cnet.com/news/fiios-nifty-200-portable-high-resolution-music-player-is-a-knockout/
  5. Keywood, Noel (January 2014). "FiiO X3 Review". Hi-Fi World. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
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