I am astounded that some CD players insert gaps (or momentary pauses) between tracks. (Perhaps that shows my naivety.)
Another thing I noticed about the Cambridge One is that it uses a slot loading mechanism. I would never use a slot loading player, except in a car and with copy CDs.
My experience of slot loading was with a from cheap <cough> Meridian G92. When a CD is inserted into the slot it is grabbed by rollers, and later the same rollers are used when ejecting the disc. It is inevitable that dust will settle on the rollers. This causes the rollers to make faint scuff marks on the CD when they grab the disc and later when you remove the ejected CD from the rollers. In the short term the scuff marks didn't affect the playability of the disc but I was concerned about the long term accumulation of scuff marks. This was one of the reasons I moved entirely to streaming from HDD.
Another thing I noticed about the Cambridge One is that it uses a slot loading mechanism. I would never use a slot loading player, except in a car and with copy CDs.
My experience of slot loading was with a from cheap <cough> Meridian G92. When a CD is inserted into the slot it is grabbed by rollers, and later the same rollers are used when ejecting the disc. It is inevitable that dust will settle on the rollers. This causes the rollers to make faint scuff marks on the CD when they grab the disc and later when you remove the ejected CD from the rollers. In the short term the scuff marks didn't affect the playability of the disc but I was concerned about the long term accumulation of scuff marks. This was one of the reasons I moved entirely to streaming from HDD.
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