Fat Crip wrote:
Not wanting to knock anyone's sale, but CD multi changers are, perhaps, out of vogue. Does it have a MP3, iPod or AUX input? If so, might be worth highlighting. It's no use to me either way so only saying this to help you market it more effectively.
I'd guess it's that more and more cars have odd shaped and sized units that are integrated with the climate controls, gps, rear camera, etc and new units don't fit nor integrate with it at all.
Me. I like having an actual CD player. While many new cars can play MP3, WMA and FLAAC files, not all can play their full bitrate but at a lower one. I'm guessing licensing fees to those powers is the reason. I'd rather listen to a CD than a lossy file. My wife's Jeep can play full lossless WMA so we're happy with that. My son's Nissan can only play lossy files, but he's not an audiophile asshat type, so it's ok. I'm still in my '03 Kia SUV with no digi file capability, just CD, that I'll be keeping for another 10 years if I can. CD's rule, MP3s drool.
![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)