Apple iPod Hi-Fi Saint Louis MO

Apparently, Apple felt that third-party manufacturers were failing to meet the potential of the iPod as the primary music source of the home. The result, the iPod Hi-Fi, is about the same size and price as the mini systems that Apple hopes it will replace.

Local Companies

Clayton Computer
314-647-9999
1047 S Big Bend Blvd
St. Louis, MO
Miken Technologies
314-961-0501
7790 Watson Rd
St. Louis, MO
Americom Computer Systems Inc
314-894-1154
100 Green Park Industrial Ct
St. Louis, MO
Computer Problem Busters
314-878-2878
12384 Olive Blvd
St. Louis, MO
Jeff Computers
636-256-7901
14360 Manchester Rd
St. Louis, MO
Dimension Computer
(636) 527-9660
14560 Manchester Road
Saint Louis, MO
Bentech Inc
(314) 432-4013
9653 Dielman Rock Is
Saint Louis, MO
D P I
(314) 863-8008
8008 Carondelet Ave
Saint Louis, MO
Super Warehouse Gov
(314) 984-0428
1077 Chelsea Ave
Saint Louis, MO
Nsc Diversified
(314) 428-7031
9677 Page Ave
Saint Louis, MO

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Apparently, Apple felt that third-party manufacturers were failing to meet the potential of the iPod as the primary music source of the home. The result, the iPod Hi-Fi, is about the same size and price as the mini systems that Apple hopes it will replace.

Mounted in the speaker baffle are two 80mm cones, with a dual-ported 130mm woofer in the centre. Each driver is separately enclosed and the whole construction double-skinned to reduce vibration-related distortion. The quoted maximum sound pressure level is a respectable 108dB at 1m (or 102dB when running on battery power).

A universal iPod dock sits on top, with seven inserts supplied to accept all models bar the shuffle. Soft-touch volume controls are placed in front of that. At the rear, there's a mains input and a 3.5mm audio input able to handle both analog and S/PDIF signals. An infrared receiver and status LED are located underneath the baffle.

Bizarrely, the supplied Apple remote will only allow you to skip tracks and adjust the volume; for instance, to select a specific album you have to get up and prod at the iPod itself. Once there, you'll notice a new 'speakers' option on a connected iPod's menu. This offers tone control (normal and bass/treble boost), plus options for backlight and album art, which can be set to display in full-screen mode.

Sound quality is better than you might assume. The soundstage is surprisingly wide, but the stereo sweet spot is strictly limited. On the plus side, there's a commendable lack of distortion and the frequency response is full and balanced. The bass response is tight, and the top end sounds clear and airy. But mid-range, while crisp, lacks any real warmth.

To make claims of audiophile quality is stretching the term, particularly as it's all compressed music in the first place. But there's some good design here, from the lavish packaging to the battery enclosure. Even putting the baffle on and off is a joy.

Battery life on six D-cell alkaline batteries was just over three hours at mid-volume, after which the unit dropped the volume and played for another two hours. You've got to question the portability when it weighs just under 8kg fully loaded, but at least there's the option.

Despite the clever design touches, the iPod Hi-fi won't replace even a semi-decent mini-system. Given the price, as an overall experience it's mediocre.Universal iPod docking port; 3.5mm S/PDIF/analog audio input; 6 x D-cell battery compartment. Dimensions: 432 x 176 x 168mm (WDH). Weight: 6.6kg
Some good design touches and decent sound quality, but a staggering price tag

Author: Ross Burridge

Apple iPod Hi-Fi

Featured Local Company

Clayton Computer

314-647-9999
1047 S Big Bend Blvd
St. Louis, MO