Sony CDX-GT510 – Radio / CD / MP3 player – Xplod – in-dash – 52 Watts x 4
- CD player with built-in amplifier (17 watts RMS/52 peak x 4 channels)
- plays CDs, CD-Rs, and CD-RW discs, including discs loaded with MP3, WMA, AAC, and ATRAC3plus music files (except Digital Rights-protected files)
- EQ3 (seven preset tone curves and a 3-band equalizer)
- compatible with Sony’s iPod adapter
- front-panel auxiliary input
Product Description
The CDX-GT510 CD receiver is made for drivers who want to take their digital music collections on the road. It gives drivers more solutions for playing their burned CDs or music from their MP3 players in their vehicles.This CD receiver plays ATRAC3plus and non-DRM AAC digital music tracks. It has a flip-down detachable faceplate and a 13-segment fluorescent display with switchable red and green key illumination. Plus, it features front and rear selectable subwoofer preamp outputs.
Average rating: 4.0
Price: $84.95
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Sony CDX-GT510 – Radio / CD / MP3 player – Xplod – in-dash – 52 Watts x 4
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Tagged with: CDXGT510 • InDash • PLAYER • Radio • Sony • Watts • Xplod
Filed under: Sony















I should have researched more, but I’ve owned Sony products before, and they were all great designs. Not this unit.
PROBLEMS:
–Small buttons that you can’t read – All aftermarket units do this, (not just Sony). Invariably, the stock units have much better button layouts that can be operated with gloved hands, and labels you can read.
–You have to open the faceplate to load/eject the disc. While this may be common among aftermarket units, it’s annoying if you’re used to regular front load units. It also distracts you from driving.
–Resetting the clock isn’t intuitive. You have to mess around too much for what should be a simple task.
–WORST FEATURE: When you turn the unit off, after a minute or so, the unit plays a commercial on the LED screen! I couldn’t believe it! Passengers get “treated” to Sony marketing with scrolling text about the “features” of the unit. The only way to switch off the commercial is to keep the unit on and simply turn down the volume. Sony obviously designed the display to attract buyers in the showroom, but once you buy it, it keeps advertising to you! I bought it to play music, not to play commercials!
POSITIVES:
–It does sound pretty good.
–It remembers the last input and defaults to it each time you turn it on.
I’d never buy this unit for another vehicle. I don’t recommend it to anyone. Granted, if I’d spent more time comparing features when I bought it, I may have been a better informed consumer, and I could have avoided it.
Rating: 1 / 5
Very good stereo, worth the price.
Purchased from Crutchfield, through their Amazon store. Crutchfield’s printed instructions for my 2000 Pontiac Grand Prix were not correct. A quick phone call took care of the problem.
Also purchased the Sony HD radio tuner. It works fine, but is a little too big. I had trouble finding a space to put it.
Rating: 4 / 5
This is just one of the few ATRAC CD players still available for purchase. Get it before it’s gone forever.
ATRAC: A technology that has revolutionized the way we listen to music.
Just like the “electric car” was taken away because it was a threat to the oil industry, Sony’s ATRAC CD burning program has been discontinued probably because the music industry doesn’t want too see an artists entire music repertoire burned onto one CDR.
Are you aware of Sony’s SonicStage and the ATRAC CD format available through this car stereo? If you’re interested, I’m gonna tell you just how wonderful this CDR burning program really is. It has truly changed the way I listen to music, and the fact that I have put over a thousand of my CD’s onto just a small box of CDR’s to be played at work on my Sony ZS-XN30 boombox, my Sony D-NE10 Walkman, and my Sony CMT-HPR99XM home stereo in my bedroom, and my Sony MEX-1GP car stereo, similar to this unit here.
Today, we take for granted that we can carry a whole music library with us and listen to it wherever we like. It was Sony that first made this possible with its audio compression technology ATRAC (Adaptive TRansform Acoustic Coding), which was introduced with the MiniDisc in 1992.
ATRAC uses a variety of advanced technologies to analyze digital sound data, allowing it to reduce the size of that data while maintaining superb sound quality (ATRAC compresses music data to approximately 1/5 the data rate of a CD; ATRAC3 and ATRAC3plus are able to compress music data to approximately 1/10 and 1/20 the data rate of a CD, respectively). This ability to reduce the size of data has enabled recording media to be made smaller and more tracks to be recorded on them, changing the way we listen to music.
First of all, having an ATRAC CDR player for the car is the greatest thing because when you have ATRAC CDR’s, you don’t have to change CD’s and endanger yourself while driving because it will seem like you won’t have to change CD’s for many weeks. One ATRAC CDR in the car will play practically forever. This one particular Sony car stereo, the MEX-1GP, has a removable faceplate that you can hook up to your computer and load up to one gig of your mp3′s directly from the computer just in case you don’t have a CD with you, at the time. So with this unit, you can play either, the radio, XM satellite (a program you pay for), the mp3′s in the giga panel, or your CD’s. What more do you want?
Sony’s SonicStage and ATRAC CDR burning program has been discontinued. Like I said, probably for legal reasons because it was just too damn wonderful to allow the world to continue to embrace. The music industry must have felt a whole new threat in new CD burning technology.
All the boomboxes seem to have disappeared or they are selling at either a give-away cost, or at an extremely high price because some people out there know just how valuable they really are. A few years back, Sony created the program called SonicStage. You set this program up in your computer just like you would load Nero, or MusicMatch or any other way that you can burn CDR’s on your computer. SonicStage is totally a Sony program where you can put all your CD’s and your MP3′s into a library and then burn CDR’s that will hold up to nearly 33 hours of music on to one CDR, and with excellent sound quality. Actually, sounding far better than just transferring MP3′s to a CDR as a data transfer.
Now, all of a sudden, these Sony ATRAC CDR playing stereos (which include boomboxes, walkman’s, and car stereo’s) are suddenly discontinued and I believe it’s a conspiracy to stop a fabulous music sharing option, however, that’s not why I love the invention of the ATRAC CD player. Back in 2004, I bought my first ATRAC CD playing boombox (Sony ZS-XN30), not yet knowing what ATRAC even means. But the booklet instructed me to set up SonicStage in my computer so that I can now put lots of music on one CDR. Their advertisement was “Atrac3plus: 490 songs on one CD. Burning software supplied”. That caught my interest so I set it up right away into my computer. Now I’m ready to burn some CDR’s to play at work. To set up my library in SonicStage, I just started caring over a few mp3′s that I had, but then I started to load a bunch of CD’s of music that represented a certain theme. I put all my “blues” collection CD’s, plus some James Brown, Ray Charles, and other important blues singers into this SonicStage library. After I put all I had into the library, I ended up with about 27 hours of music. All “blues”, and about 550 songs. I selected the burning option of 48 kps so that all my songs can be put on to one CDR. I carried all the songs over to the burning option and started the burn. This CDR took about 2 and a half hours to burn. Sure, that’s a long time, but it was worth it. When the burn was complete, I put this Blues CDR into my Sony ZS-XN30, and pressed shuffle. After about 25 seconds of the unit needing to read the CD, song number 312 started to play. It even displayed the name of the song and the artist on the LCD screen. After that, it jumped to like song number 185, and that song played. It was suddenly so wonderful to hear songs shuffling without hearing CD changing noise and having a long delay like a multiple CD player (shuffling whole CD’s). Instantly, this new CDR that I just made became the most valuable CD that I owned because it had so much on it. So, that Monday, I took my Sony boombox and my “blues” ATRAC CDR to work. Set it up, and hit shuffle. It played all day long. When I turned it off at my lunch hour, I came back, turned it back on, and it continued to play where it left off. That was great because this allows me to play the whole CD without hearing even one song repeated, all week long. By mid Thursday that week, the last song on the CDR finally played then the CD stopped. I’ve come to realize that Sony’s SonicStage and the ATRAC CDR burning program is the greatest invention for storing music on a single hard copy unit. This is better than just floating all your mp3′s in an inferior sound carrying unit like an ipod. How much music can your ipod hold? 60, 80, 100 hours? With Sony’s ATRAC CD burning program, you can make 33 hour CDR’s, and as many of them as you want. And all my ATRAC CDR’s can be played on any Sony ATRAC CD player. I now have about 100 ATRAC CDR’s and no reason to play any of my other CD’s. I boxed them all up and put them away, never really needing them ever again. That is, not until the day I lose my last Sony ATRAC CDR player.
So this is why I’m buying up as many Sony ATRAC CD players that I can so I can be set for life to always be able to play my ATRAC CDR’s. It seems now (as of June 2008), Sony’s car stereos that play ATRAC CD’s are still only available through independent sources. You can’t get them directly from Sony anymore. These units are discontinued. I don’t know if you can set up SonicStage in your computer anymore as a new user. Call or write to Sony and learn more about ATRAC and see if we can bring this back, because this truly is the greatest breakthrough in storing and preserving all our favorite music. I don’t think it got promoted very well. I’m loving my Sony MEX-1GP, and I’ve got three more Sony CDX-GT710 (W) car stereos in my closet for my cars I’ll have in the future. I can’t let ATRAC go. This is just as wonderful as the “Electric Car” was before Bush and the ever-threatened oil industry took that technology away.
Here are other Sony ATRAC playing car stereos still available through independent sources selling though Amazon. In many cases, selling far cheaper than their original intended price because Sony has currently discontinued supporting and pushing its SonicStage (Atrac CD) technology. You’ll have to type these in individually.
CDX-GT500, CDW-GT420U, CDX-GT510, CDX-GT81U, CDX-GT610UI, CDX-RA700, CDX-GT710, CDX-F605X, CDXF5510, CDX-GT620UESRP, R5515X, MEX-1GP, SNY-CDXR5715X.
These are the ones I’ve discovered through Amazon. If you have any questions, call Sony at:
1-800-222-7669 (Use 1-866-456-7669 for Digital Music Players)Hours: Mon-Fri 8:00AM-12:00AM (Midnight) / Sat-Sun 9:00AM-8:00PM EST
1-866-962-7669
Rating: 5 / 5
Great cd mp3 deck without the high price. I bought it for the mp3 player front input which works great with my 20gb mp3 player plus all the extras xm satellite radio & sirius satellite radio ready SN ratio over 100db 17 watts ture RMS X 4 @ 4 ohms and the wireless remote too the whole thing is very nice the only downer is it didn’t come with a face plate holder
Rating: 5 / 5
Short UPDATE after more then a year of using this product.
Still very happy! Although lost the remote control and can not set up time. Experienced no problems so far. It is very functional, I still recommend it to anyone who is looking for good quality stuff for reasonable price.
My initial review below (written more then a year ago):
I bought this one to replace my default factory installed Bose. I read on Internet about how great Bose is and how it is important to fix it, not replace. People on-line offer to fix it for bew hundred $. Well, this is not true. Bose’s real advantage over rivals is not so much in the system itself, but in the built-in amplifiers in each Bose speaker. If you are lucky, and your Bose the amplifiers are working, you will have great Bose quality sound with this product! I was not 100% lucky, front left speaker has distorted sound, but I just turned it off using potentiometer on “SCOSCHE FAI3A” (see below), and still have amazing sound!
The system has many features: it is ready for satellite radio plugins, you can set green or red lights of the panel. Green looks really good in my Maxima’s interior. I never had problem with any beeping about which I read in some reviews. Remote control is nice, and many other nice features. And the button size is ok. I just love it!
The only issue with Bose speakers is that you need “SCOSCHE FAI3A Factory Amp Interface” or similar to attenuate the output of the system before you apply it to the speaker’s built-in amplifiers. Do not forget about antenna adapter and Nissan wiring harness. All available in Walmart. SOLDER and heat-shrink-tube all the connections! Do not rely on supplied connectors that does not require soldering even if it looks like they provide good contact. Solder! I had to take it out few times because of these connectors.
Rating: 5 / 5