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Numark NDX400 Tabletop Scratch MP3/CD Player With USB

Numark NDX400 Tabletop Scratch MP3/CD Player With USB
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Numark NDX400 Tabletop Scratch MP3/CD Player With USB

 
 
List Price: $399.00
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SKU:  

Y71318

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Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
 
 

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Features
  • Rugged, tabletop, slot-loading MP3/CD player

  • Perform with CDs, CD-Rs, and MP3 CDs

  • USB input for performance with flash drives

  • Three hot cues for quick access to key points in the track

  • Anti-Shock(TM) buffered skip-protection technology


Description

NDX400 is an advanced scratch MP3/CD player that can also play from a USB flash drive for cutting-edge performance. Numark’s Anti-Shock buffered skip-protection technology keeps music playing, even when vibrations might cause other players to skip. Three hot cues and large scratch wheel empower your creativity.


Product Details
Product Length:8.3 inches
Product Width:11.7 inches
Product Height:4.3 inches
Product Weight:6.2 pounds
Package Length:15.5 inches
Package Width:12.0 inches
Package Height:6.6 inches
Package Weight:8.5 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 14 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 14 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 15 found the following review helpful:


4Not too Shaby  Sep 11, 2010 By Dj Stand Alone
1st off I've been dj'ing professionally for 13yrs. I recently moved to a new area and I'm setting up my mobile buisness as well as residenting at a club. I've carried vinyl around for a while now. Ever since archiving technology of vinyl to digital got better i started archiving. I'm a turntablist at heart and really can't afford shelling out a grand for bigger direct drive cdj's like denon's or standards like the cdj800's from pioneer.
I did a lot of research read reviews and really couldn't dig up much on these. So I took a gamble. I'm glad I did. Let me hit the high points.

Scratching on this unit is cheese. you don't have to worry about sample wandering around the platter. And even tho the platter's small it still feels right. If you haven't scratched on a CD player I'll tell you there's a learning curve with all of them. You just have to feel out your unit.

MP3 USB funtion. This is the greatest part of this unit. It tracks well. Picks up files fast, and never has a long lag time between track loads. Its pretty nice to carry my set for the night with me to the club around my neck on a couple of jump drives than it is to lug 100 plus lbs of records.

CD funtion. Very good. I've had no problems with the deck ejection like a previous review i've read. And if you read the manual the very number one thing listed is this unit is for "Finalized" CD's. Don't make the other guys rookie mistake. CD's load fast, and do not skip. I've ran this deck on a system pumping some high watts with enough vibration to make my feet numb at the end of the night and I've never encountered skipping.

All in all these are good jump from vinyl to CD. They've got an great easy layout. Versital to work into any setup. And easy to learn, and rehearse on. I do plan on trading up eventually to CDJ'800 or 1000, but for the price you can't beat this unit at all. I highly recommend this unit to everyone wanting to make the jump and looking for a good sturdy, performance capable unit.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


5Great for the price!  Sep 04, 2010 By Jesse Adams
I am not sure why the other review had so many problems with this product. I recently purchased two of them and I am really impressed for far. It came with an impressive set of features for the price and everything works very well. The unit is solid and I really like the overall design. The only thing that I was not pleased with is that it does not read mp3 metadata. It just shows the filename of the track. Other than that everything seems to be great! I would recommend this product to other people who don't have heaps of money to spend and are not a fan of Serato/Itch.

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:


2gets the job done....For awhile  Feb 14, 2011 By Skoolboy
so i've used these units in multiple house parties as well as live club performances. Over all they haven't let me down and always tracked every cd, mp3, or usb format i've thrown into them.
performance wise i have no complaints for this unit.

Durability is the issue.
Both of mine have had the Cue button break and literally fall down into the case of the unit. I am improvising by using the reloop as the cue and setting cue points using loop in, or recording a hot start to one of the 3 banks, by finding my cue point and holding with the scratch on.

If you get this unit, you're buying a well functioning device, just remember it isn't built like a tank and will need to be touched easily.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


4unfair comparison?  Dec 22, 2011 By Dr. VK
I've been DJing house parties on n off over the past 10 years. I started on a Gemini setup, moved to Pioneer CDJ800s with a Pioneer mixer, and now I'm on the Numark NDX400 with a Numark M4 mixer. Here, I'll compare the Pioneer setup with the Numark setup, based on my CD-only mixing preference.

First of all, there is a huge price difference between the Pioneer setup and the Numark setup (a few thousand vs. a few hundred).

Build quality - The Pioneers were about a 10/10 in craftsmanship- pretty much flawless. They felt sturdy and held up to moderate use over a few years. The Numarks appear to built surprisingly well. On close inspection, there is some barely noticeable sloppiness in build in the Numarks, but the equipment still feels sturdy and solid. The Numarks get 8/10 (way above Gemini).

Function - Between the Pioneer and Numark setups, the functionality is pretty much identical, except a few small features. The CDJ800 has a loop-out-adjustment, while the NDX400 does not. Paradoxically, the Pioneers don't need that feature, since the buttons are so responsive, that the loop comes out perfect every time. The Numarks take a bit more effort to get a loop right, but the loop can't be adjusted. The NDX has the cool hot-cue feature, which the CDJ doesn't have. I really like hot cues. Alternately, the CDJ has the Beat Cutter. Hot Cues are much more musical, while the beat cutter is much more psychedelic. I prefer hot cues, and I can usually get them right on the NDX, but the responsiveness of the CDJ's beat cutter was flawless. The Pioneer scratch wheel feels really light and spins a little after a backspin, while the Numark scratch wheel starts normal payback really quickly after a backspin. (Newer versions of the CDJ1000 had a feature to adjust how light or heavy a backspin is.) Pioneer 9/10, Numark 9/10

Sound Quality - The CDJ has this thing called Legato Link, which supposedly fills in the frequency range beyond 20to20, but I never noticed it. I did notice that the CDJ has an impeccable vinyl scratch sound. The NDX sounds fine, and I have no complaints, but when listening closely, I can hear a digital sound while scratching. The reason it doesn't bother me so much is that I like messing up tracks, as long as it's controllable. On a bigger system, it's not as noticeable. Pioneer 10/10, Numark 9/10

Reliability - The Pioneers started to slightly malfunction after about 7 years of moderate use. I am only speculating, but I think the Numarks will last equally or shorter. Considering the price difference, it's worth it. I just hope they last a few years. Pioneer 7/10, Numark ?/10

Conclusion - The price difference is not warranted, but if you want the best of the best, go with Pioneer and nothing else (the newer models are loaded with modern bells n whistles which I am not attracted to, but the performance is perfection.) The Numarks offer professional performance with only a small step down in quality, but there's a huge step down in price. From now on, I'm going to stick with cheaper decks. If by chance someone doesn't take me seriously as a DJ because I use Numarks, I'll take it as a cue to work on my chops, rather than empty my bank account.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:


4Much Better Than I Expected!!  Feb 11, 2011 By Selassie I "Dj Amp B"
I am a professional Dj/Selector for over 15yrs. I have never wanted CD/DJ tables. Tuntablist at heart (1200's all the way!!!). I switched to Serato about 3 yrs ago and left the crates behind! So when I saw great deal on a pair of these (found them on craigslist) i took a chance.

I'll start with the bad.... Does it work with Serato? Well kinda, I mean you start the tracks but the loop and sample functions will not work. My other complaint is being unable to needle drop(i know i know, these are CD tables) but its hard to find a cue point quickly, so I just scan it using Serato.

Now the good.... Wow for cheaper CD tables these are great. I was worried about latency and repsonse but these things are dead on point. I have sampled some crappy Geminis and Numarks when CD/DJ were new before. That definitely kept me from even thinking about getting CD/DJs. Scratching on these are impressive, military, hard trills, crabbing, digs you name it, the sample doeesn't get away from you at all(just have to get used to the non-spin of the platter). The USB feature is nice, reads a 16GB pretty fast. The varience in pitch control is nice, it has such a wide range. I can even make those crappy screwed songs people like. The on the fly looping is much easier than Serato's.

Definitley would recommend these!

See all 14 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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