OVERVIEW
The Teac Reference MD-X220 system is one of the neatest, and finest executive micro-systems I have seen for under $300, and also one of the heftiest. The system is comprised of a the CD/receiver unit (CR-H220) and a set of stereo speakers with 4" mid-bass drivers and a 1" textile dome tweeter (LS-H220).
BUILD QUALITY AND ERGONOMICS
With Teac it seems that their stuff is hit and miss in the build quality. Some of their products are rebadged units from Chinese off brands and others are exceptional for the money. Lets face it, some of Teac's sound systems are nothing short of completely helpless, with cheesy head units and even worse speakers, but the Reference series is something else entirely, as its name suggests, it is their best of mini-systems. It seems this series gets far more attention in Europe than in the States.
A couple notes, first this system is refurbished and has a few cosmetic flaws, no major ones that affect the sound and functionality of this unit. Second, this system is from 2004. The newer versions have RDS and DAB (Digital Audio Broadcasting) tuners as well as USB interface. The newer models that replace the head unit are the CR-H225 and CR-H250 (the CR-H250 is the only one that supports DAB. The main unit has a thicker aluminum face plate and a semi-busy front panel with about 15 buttons or so. It has a nice finish with cherry veneer wood panels on the sides that match the speakers. The receiver makes a solid click when standby is deactivated and moments later there is a second solid click. The head unit itself weighs around 10 pounds and the speakers weigh about 7-8 pounds a piece. The
rear of the main unit reveals the three inputs (aux 1 with loop, aux 2, and tape with loop), mono subwoofer output, Toslink digital output, and lastly the binding post terminals for the speakers.
This photo shows the rear of the speakers as well, they also have binding posts. The speakers are also very well shielded. Most speakers, even center channels interfere with my JVC TV when placed directly on top, these did not interfere. Surprisingly, the magnet structures where quite large on the woofer and tweeter, but the crossover was just a resistor and a small capacitor and the wires where soldered in place.
The
remote control has small, soft push buttons. Most functions can be accessed from the remote aside from a few features such as tonal controls and the dimmer option. This remote is not going to be good in the dark, but that is to be expected with most any micro-system.
Here are some more photos of the receiver unit from the inside.
Inside top
Inside heatsink
Inside, opposite to the heatsink side
The Sound
I decided to try Aimee Mann from the Magnolia Soundtrack. "One" revealed these speakers aren't very capable. The midrange was bloated, the lower to mid highs where way too low and the upper highs where grainy and bright. The sound is was very stale with no soundstage, very boring and tiresome to listen to these speakers.
I also tried U2 "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb. The results where similar, but the bass was decent for the speaker size, not great though, kind of wobbly but not boomy.
(I connected the receiver unit to my Infinity IL10 bookshelf speakers with significant improvement. The receiver sounds like a receiver with those speakers, and it has the lowest noise floor I have heard on any amplifier. The power is more than enough for my small bedroom, and unlike most other micro-systems I have used it doesn't force the low frequencies out of the speakers [the JVC FS-1000's amplifier did not perform at all with lower frequencies, and just as well the subwoofer output was cut off around 40 hz].
The CR-H220, CR-H225, and CR-H250 can be purchased separately without speakers, but given the price I paid for mine as a system it was better to get the speakers with it.)
CONCLUSION
For the price paid, and these are still available at Amazon and Ebay (AvantQ ebay store), the value for this system is pretty good. If you can, look for the newer models (CR-H225 and CR-H250) and use your own speakers with the CD player/Receiver. Any relatively efficient speaker with an easy load such as the Onix X-LS would work great with these receivers.
I will finish this review with a couple more pictures of the front of the system with grills on and then removed.
Grills on
Grills off