Picture of the Sandisk Sansa Clip
Similar articles
Reviews section
Jargon Buster

More from Computeract!ve
ADVERTISEMENT
Reviews Disclaimer
Readers are reminded that the opinions expressed, and the results published in connection with reviews and/or laboratory test reports carried out on computing systems and/or related items are confined to, and representative of, only those goods supplied and should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase.

Review: Sandisk Sansa Clip portable audio player

A stylish music player on the cheap

Price: £35
Manufacturer: Sandisk



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Rate this product
Verdict

Good points

  • Lots of features
  • Impressive audio quality
  • Good value for money

Bad points

  • Design is a little bland

Overall

If you’re not too concerned about aesthetics you’ll find the Sansa Clip performs well and offers a range of features to keep you entertained on the move


Paul Lester, Computeract!ve 03 Mar 2008

ADVERTISEMENT

The Sansa Clip is about the same size as the Creative Stone and but is rectangular and includes a removable belt clip as standard.

A 1in four-line display shows tag information (the artist and title of the playing song) and along with being able to play digital music files it includes an FM radio and voice recorder. The recorder can also be used to save radio broadcasts directly to the player's internal memory.

At 2GB this is enough for a nice collection of music, transferred either by dragging and dropping it in Windows or using Windows Media Player 11, which can also be used to build playlists of your favourite songs. In addition to MP3 it can also play WAV, WMA and audiobook files. All of these features are accessed and controlled using the simple directional pad.

A Home button returns you directly to the main menu and there's a side-mounted volume control, all of which, along with the clear, adjustable display, make the Clip easy to use. Ratings can be added to songs (so you can build a list of favourite tracks) and a Go list allows for on-the-fly playlist creation (creating a playlist while other songs are playing).

There is also an equaliser for tone control, with several presets and a custom setting. The FM radio automatically scans for and stores up to 40 stations. There's no support for RDS, which shows the station name, so you'll have to remember the frequencies of favourite stations.

We were impressed by the clarity of the audio and pleasantly surprised by the quality of the supplied headphones, which are significantly better than those supplied with other models in the Sansa series. We gave the Clip a workout with a set of Shure SE210s as well, to see what it was capable of, and continued to be impressed: it's clear and loud enough to get the most from your music.

The Clip certainly isn't as stylish as the Zen Stone or iPod Shuffle, but it performs well, includes nice features and is cheaper than either.

See also:

image: Veho VMP-008A really tiny music player  09 Jan 2008

All Mobile Technology

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links