Philips/Magnavox vs other brands
I have always been trying to find a player that works best with my stereo systems. I have had quite a few players since CD players became available at horrendous cost originally in the '80s. I think my first was a Toshiba for about $700, which came with no remote!
Over the years I became enamored with Philips players, probably due to the TDA1541 DAC: they always seemed to work well with my electronics of the time.
Unfortunately I sold my Philips CD-473 in 1997 due to a suggestion I "hide" my rack of 150 CDs in a carousel player. Due to lack of funds and having a JVC surround amp and tape deck at the time, I bought their XL-MC222. I initially found it was not quite as good as the Philips, but live-able (it has a 1bit, non-P.E.M. DAC). It was feeding Mission 761i speakers with a Paradigm PS-1000 sub through an Energy passive x-over.
When I upgraded by system to an Onkyo tuner, Rotel preamp, Adcom amp and bi-wired Martin-Logan Aerius speakers, I felt the JVC CD player was not at the level I needed to match the quality of the rest of the new system (the tape deck hasn't been played for some years now).
Again, as I had an even smaller amount of cash to devote (I'm now retired), I began hunting for used equipment in thrift stores and installed the following in sequence:
Magnavox CDB-492 (TDA1543 / CDM4)
Philips CD-614 (TDA1543 / CDM4)
Denon DCD-1420
Sony CDP-950 (aka CDP-307ESD) (uses a TDA1541)
After weeks and sometime months of A/B/A listening, I settled on the CD-614. The Magnavox had too harsh a treble (IMO), and the Denon and Sony had too full and muddy a bass response and were too "forward" (in my system). I attribute these effects to the analog output circuits, not the DACs. As the latter two have had some good reviews, I assume they work fine in other systems, just not mine.
Unfortunately, a couple of years ago I found a Philips CD-880 at a thrift store for $20, but it would stick on some tracks of all CDs (but sounded great on the tracks it DID play). As I wasn't willing to pay the $85 to have it checked out professionally (plus any repair costs), I returned it to the thrift store for a refund. Several weeks later I found a user forum that showed how to fix this problem in 5 minutes: the player has a trap door on the bottom to allow access to the laser sled for lubrication: it even listed the correct lubrication type. arrrrggggg.....maybe I'll find another 880 someday.
I have just obtained a copy of Robert Harley's The Complete Guide to High-End Audio and agree with his assessment that an audio component must be MATCHED to a system: that magazine/user reviews or specs can't tell how a device will sound within your specific system. Like most enthusiasts, I expected the better specs of the Denon and Sony to result in them outshining the Philips and was disappointed somewhat when they didn't: I liked the motorized variable audio out/headphone and CustomFile features of the Sony.
Strangely, the JVC would be my second choice after the CD614 (it is still in my system as a backup unit) and continues to function as a storage device for the original 200 of my 500 CD collection. Of course, it could be placed in random program mode and provide background sound for a month