NAD’s Little Hi-Fi For When You Just Run Out Of Room December 12, 2007
Read more Digital Audio , Entertainment , Gizmodo UK , Hi-fi , Home Entertainment , MP3 , Music

What do you do if you have a small space that needs a small hi-fi with a big price tag? Talk to audio specialists, NAD. For £325, the diminutive C715 is a mini hi-fi with a hi-spec. It comes with AM/FM radio - or DAB radio with 99 presets for another £100 - and spins various types of CDs.
It also plays back tunes from a USB stick or drive and, more importantly, allows you to transfer CD-based music or DAB tracks to said stick or external hard drive. The C715 supports MP3 and WMA file formats. There is a wide range of connection options including 3 analog stereo inputs, headphones, 1 analog output for hooking up to tape recorders [remember those?], a digital output for digital recorders and a subwoofer input for attaching a self-powered sub.
The unit boasts multi-way speaker binding posts for use with high quality speaker cable and, despite its size, can throw out 25W per stereo speaker. Just remember, speakers are not included. -Martin Lynch
[NAD]












Editor and Contributor | Martin Lynch
Contributor | Tamlin Magee












Comments
And exactly how does this mythical subwoofer *input* work. Sounds good but my onkyo Cr505 does 95% of that and good speakers were included, for a few hundred less. 3 analog stereo inputs .. including one for record players? (probably not).
Hunter-killer with Polaris D5?