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Meridian F80 Compact System - Radio/CD/DVD Player A Secrets Radio/CD Player DVD Player Review |
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| Written by John E. Johnson, Jr. | ||||
| Thursday, 24 July 2008 | ||||
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Introduction You are about to discover what may be the best compact system in the world. A couple of years ago, Meridian and Ferrari got together and decided to make something with both their names on it. The result was a compact all in one system. But wait, this is not just any old table top system. It has a powerful amplifier and sound that rivals bookshelf speakers. It also has a CD/DVD player. Specifications
The Design The F80 is designed and manufactured in the UK. The Ferrari co-brand essentially means that the colors are by Ferrari, so you can get it in Ferrari Red, Yellow, Black, or the Silver that I had for the review unit. The front of the F80 has the Ferrari trademark horse just above the Meridian name. The co-branding is subtle and conservative. Besides the colors and the logo, Ferrari has added their technical expertise in materials engineering to produce a chassis of unique alloy-injected composite material. It is a high mass, low resonance, mineral filled composite just like in the bodies of their world-renown automobiles. There are three speakers in the F80. Two are for the stereo sound, and there is a single subwoofer (elliptical 6"x4"). Power to the three is 20/20/40 watts respectively. Here is a photo of the Ferrari Red version, with the optional iPod dock.
You can turn the system on by pressing a button at the top left or pushing the knob in on the far right.
The rear panel has numerous inputs, including two antennae, optical in, analog in, and - yes - an iPod dock connector. This allows you to play music from your iPod, as controlled from the F80. For outputs, there are composite video, S-Video (remember I said it has a DVD player built-in), and optical out. A retractible rod antenna and wire antenna are included. You simply connect the one that you like. If on a table, then probably the retractible one. If on a shelf, then the wire.
When powered on, you are greeted by green LEDs that tell you the status. In the case shown below, I had set the unit to play FM stations, and I had put several stations in the memory.
Using the up arrow button, you can move to the input menu, shown below. You can select the radio or CD/DVD player.
If you select Adjust, this takes you to a menu for changing various things, as shown below.
Selecting Audio takes you to a menu from where you can adjust the amount of bass and the "Tilt", which is basically an EQ curve for changing the sound based on where you place it. Obviously, since it is an executive table top music system, you could be putting it on a shelf in front of a wall. Or, on the coffee table. The Tilt is for that purpose.
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