








🎶 Vintage vibes, modern power — your cassette revival starts here!
The FiiO CP13 Cassette Player in blue combines classic analogue audio with modern engineering, featuring the renowned JRC5532 op-amp for superior sound fidelity, a robust 1800mAh battery offering over 13 hours of playback, and a sleek aluminium alloy body designed for durability and style. With large, easy-to-use controls, USB-C fast charging, and a high-quality headphone output, it’s the ultimate device for millennials craving authentic retro audio with contemporary convenience.











| ASIN | B0CV7S58TK |
| Best Sellers Rank | 33,284 in Electronics & Photo ( See Top 100 in Electronics & Photo ) 64 in Portable Cassette Players |
| Item model number | CP13 |
| Manufacturer | FiiO |
| Package Dimensions | 19.71 x 15.8 x 4.29 cm; 531 g |
C**5
Quality Product
The Fiio CP13 was promptly delivered and exceptionally well packed. Feel/Quality The Fiio CP13 is a delight to hold and feels like a well-made quality product. It has a simple design and solid buttons which should hopefully last a long time. Operation The operation is simple and manual with strong chunky buttons for play, rewind, fast forward & stop. It has an auto stop on play but not on rewind or fast forward so please be aware of this if you have a weak or fragile tape. I found this to my cost when it chewed one of my 1970’s tapes. Cons There is no button to open the cassette door so this may prove difficult if you have limited manual dexterity. Sound Quality (dependent upon how recorded) The sound quality has proved to be good when replaying my cassettes recorded in the 70’s, 80’s & 90’s (could do with a little more high-end response but that could be my recording) however, 2000’s onwards the quality has been excellent. Please note this can also be dependent on the headphones used. To maintain best sound quality, it is advisable to clean the cassette heads regularly. Cons Due to limited space (the cassette case does not open very far) it is difficult to clean and demagnetize the cassette heads. Earphone Socket I used the Sennheiser CX300 S ear canal headphones and found that if the supplied ear tips did not provide enough bass, you could use ‘Aiivioll’ silicon ear tips instead. I used cheap Philips over ear headphones and they gave excellent bass. When using ear canal headphones, the volume is very good requiring minimal adjustment to increase the volume. This is handy as it saves battery life giving more cassette playing time. Note: If you are using over ear headphones, you will have to drive them a lot more and turn up the volume considerably. Cons Using ear canal headphones, it is likely that you will have to pull the jack out of the Fiio CP13 headphone socket a fraction (0.5 to 1mm). This was not necessary when using over ear headphones. Charging Battery life depends upon headphones used and volume selected. Ear canal headphones give at least 9hrs 10mins. Over ear headphones give about 7hrs 45mins. The cassette player gives no warning when it runs out of power – just stops! Thankfully charging is easy and quick in about 2.5hrs.
M**R
Holy FFFFFFFFFFFF Moly
I was expecting it to be good but Crickey Mickey, it's the Bizz. I recorded Jeff Wayne's War Of The Worlds vinyl album onto a BASF CEII Chrome Extra 120mins. back in 1980, just two years after it was released and I accept that my ears are not as tip top as they were back then and played it on my new toy the Fiio CP13 through a 3.5mm good quality cable to the input of a pair of M-Audio BX4 BT's and FFFFFFFFFFF I'm blown away by the total precision of the sound, bass is full and deep, mid is superb and the treble is bright and crisp like I have not heard in so long. I will be digitising all my tapes now via the Fiio CP13 to an Olympus LS-P4 all singing and dancing field and studio micro recorder and then SD to PC or direct LS-P4 to PC using Audacity or one of my better audio software programs to tweak anything if needed but so far the speed replay is extremely accurate and the head azimuth seems to be perfectly aligned too. For £95 you'd be crazy not to get the Fiio CP13 if you value your old cassette tapes before they lose quality or go west completely. A Untouchable 10 out of 10 . Congratulations Fiio , you should be proud of this little gem.
K**R
No wow/flutter noticed; but a small gotcha with the earphone socket
Being it's the cheapest option I bought the blue FiiO CP13 as a portable backup for my old Sony Walkman Professional WM-D6C which is going in for service. Most points encountered already covered in other reviews e.g. motor does not shut off when tape reaches its end, no tone control, no auto-reverse optional setting, no line out, battery is not user-replaceable. (Some of these are good for simpler mechanics so maybe more reliability). Bottom line and most important: I experienced no wow/flutter with tapes, some nearly 60 years old, and the tempo/speed seemed right at least from recollection of items I'd previously played on other audio units. Sound reproduction not better for me than the old Sony WM-D6C and not as good (no surprises) as the (only mid-range) Sony Double Cassette Deck TC-WE475. Main issue otherwise: it drives my Shure SRH840A Over-Ear Wired Headphones BUT the sound was MONO! And that after checking jack fully inserted. The Shure 3.5mm jack is a 4-pole of the modern type which afaik is now standard for headphones whereas it seems that the FiiO CP13's jack socket is the old style 3-pole jack - see jpeg for jack comparisons. Having established I was hearing mono only (and it also sounded materially flat/flanged not just single channel), I plugged in an old pair of Sony over the ear phones with their 3-pole jack and trying eg Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon (lots of oscillating between channels including on track 1) I found it rendered stereo. So to use the Shure or other 4-pole jack I need to get an adaptor which I'm not ecstatic about since theoretically it might put extra leverage strain on the socket. As some adverts claim an adaptor is only for mic 4-pole to 3-pole and won't work for phones, I'm also in the position of having to guess the right type and tentatively think maybe https://www.amazon.co.uk/Creative-Stereo-Connector-Female-Adapter-As-Shown/dp/B0FHJLTHWL It's a solid, chunky unit but has no fasteners for a lanyard. The optional unshielded magnet-fastener (sic) case doesn't look a good idea. Personally I would not travel with this item and given the unit's mass and potential for dropping it eg dragging from a work surface absent-mindedly while phones connected, I'd establish a routine for using it only at home unless someone can point out a good case with a lanyard or (en bandoulière) cross strap to secure its weight. Good enough to keep, only item in prospect now is how long the battery lasts before it no longer takes a charge.
I**D
Superb quality!
This must be the Rolls Royce of new personal cassette players - it is so beautifully made. Long before CDs became my passion, I built up my classical music collection by buying tape cassettes. Literally hundreds of them - many of which have barely been played more than once and have been boxed up in the loft for the last few decades. As I write this, I am listening to a Debussy Eminence tape dating from the mid 80s. It sounds fantastic. The fact that there is no Dolby NR makes absolutely no difference to the sound. I am looking forward to exploring all my old tapes once more!
E**P
This pocket dynamo is a pleasant surprise with very hi fidelity sound. The next iteration of this machine would be dual capstan as it adds more stability to the tape contact and tension. It would also be great if user can make the azimuth adjustment easily as the current model proves to be difficult to action. All in all very happy with this pocket player that can product excellent playback with stunning clarity and minimal nosie.
C**G
Very happy w this cassette player. Nostalgic. Most importantly it looks good n sounds great to me. Built quality is solid. N it has auto stop. Need to get smaller headphones. I look silly w the Fostex. Looking for a matching carrier case.
A**.
I've been recording and listening to cassettes on home decks and portable players since 1980 and have been looking for a newly manufactured Walkman-style player for the day that all of my vintage units inevitably fail and can no longer be repaired economically. So, is this player worth a try? SHORT REVIEW: The build and sound quality of this model is equal to or better than nearly any other portable player currently in production. Newly made options are limited, so that's not an unqualified thumbs up. Still, recommended. Casual listeners: If you're NOT an "audiophile" and just looking for a portable cassette player to enjoy commercial cassette tapes, the sound quality of this Fiio CP13 will far exceed that of those tapes, which mostly sound pretty mediocre. I know, because the music label and audiobook company I work for produced cassette tapes for years. Though, for maximum enjoyment, do see my headphone tests below. Discerning listeners: If you've got great-sounding chrome or metal tapes that you've made yourself with a quality home cassette deck (this is me), you'll find this player better-sounding than many entry-level portable cassette players and even some entry-level home decks—with some tweaks required. Recommended, with caveats. See long review. LONG REVIEW: Warning: This goes on forever, so it's only for obsessive tape-lovers (or those with insomnia). :D First, THE COST: $99 is a fair entry-level price. I paid $60 for similar entry-level players in the late 1990's, with lesser build quality—though with more features like bass boost and auto-reverse. That's about $120 inflation-adjusted to 2024. I paid $200+ (about $400+ inflation-adjusted) for better players, mostly Panasonic and Sony. * MECHANICAL PARTS: Contrary to some of the negative talk online, this upgraded Japanese-designed, Chinese-made Tanashin style tape transport mechanism is very good compared to my vintage players, many of which have been professionally restored. No, it's not as good as a Sony Walkman DD direct-drive player, but the various upgrades are audible. Per Fiio, those include a heavier copper flywheel, a more powerful power source and motor that exerts more torque for speed control, and cherry-picked playback heads (similar to the way that Grado phono cartridges and Intel i3/i5/i7 processors are sorted and marketed post-manufacture). * WOW & FLUTTER: Very low, virtually inaudible even with 30-year-old cassettes. I've seen test results from 0.15% to as high as 0.24% online, but my unit tests at 0.13%. This is as good as my Dual 606 direct-drive turntable and better than my Technics 1991 mid-tier home deck and refurbished vintage players. Yes, my Nakamichi MR-1 professional deck tests at 0.03% (!), but anything better than 0.18% should sound fine to most people. Though note that some kinds of W&F will sound much more annoying than others, even if it measures low—it all depends on the frequency, amplitude, and "random-nicity" of the warbling, which varies from player to player. TIP: My favorite test is to play a tape containing long, sustained solo piano notes, which reveals W&F like nothing else. A good choice is "Thelonious Himself" (1957), which sounds smooth as glass on my Fiio unit. * WOW & FLUTTER WHEN JIGGLING THE UNIT OR WALKING. This has ALWAYS been an issue for portables (except expensive direct-drive players like top-end Sonys, which have gear failure issues all their own). With all units, including the Fiio, you're going to hear a bit of warble when grabbing your player off the table and definitely when jogging, but much less when just walking. TIP: When out strolling, get your player (and hands, lol) out of your pants and into a fanny pack or shoulder-sling pouch. * MECHANICAL TRANSPORT NOISE: Some posters have complained about this. Well, I can tell you that this player's motor is VERY quiet—as quiet as any belt-driven portable player that I purchased new from 1990 to 2000 in the $70 to $300 range (inflation adjusted). And it's MUCH quieter than those refurbished-but-still-aging units are today. NOTE: Many cheap blank or commercial music cassettes are quite noisy. That's why high-end blank cassettes like the TDK SA/MA and Maxell MX/XL series say "Anti-Resonance Mechanism" on them—even 30-year-old ones are nearly silent compared with cheaper blank and most commercial cassettes. TIP: If you are playing a noisy, rattly old cassette, put the player on a soft towel or coaster (plastic and wood tables act as natural noise amplifier-resonators). * AMPLIFIER POWER: Stronger than average. With various 32-ohm (typical) headphones, I've got the volume knob set around "3" for 80dB output (right on the edge of hearing damage). At "10" this unit drives all of my home receivers and integrated amps (with 200- to 200,000-ohm input impedance) perfectly, with no distortion. What about fancy high-impedance headphones? I don't know: please post your results if you test them with the Fiio! * LEFT-RIGHT BALANCE: Perfect on my unit, tested with monophonic audio recording. * FREQUENCY RESPONSE. This is the Fiio's weak point for me. While one user tests this as nearly flat from 40 to 18,000 Hz (graph here: https://www.reddit.com/r/cassetteculture/comments/1ap2o6q/fiio_cp13_a_first_impressiot n_and_detailed_review/), I found the bass response thin. My old top-tier Panasonic playback heads (rated at 5-20,000 Hz) sound much better, but so do my Panasonic entry-level players (rated at 40-16,000 Hz). I wish this player had a bass-boost or EQ function. A solution? Pick the right headphones (see below). * TAPE TYPE SELECTOR? No Normal (Type I), Chrome (Type II), and Metal (Type IV) settings—so chrome and metal tapes will sound brighter—though interestingly less trebly than on any of my other vintage portables without tape type EQ. If this is a deal-breaker for you, see "HEADPHONES" recommendations below. I'm listening only to chrome and metal tapes on the Fiio, and they sound fantastic with the right headphones. * DOLBY B, C, or S? Nope. But commercial tapes have such poor high-frequency EQ that the treble boost of dolby-encoded commercial tapes actually sound better to me than ones without (when played back on a player without dolby decoding). * SPEED & AZIMUTH: Both were calibrated near-perfectly at the factory (speed within 0.5%). But amazingly, you can adjust BOTH without cracking open the case! When I hear reviewers complaining that these adjustment screws are "such a pain to access," I have to laugh. I have spent hours taking apart my old players to get to the speed adjustment screw inside (when they even had them). And AZIMUTH adjustment? This is a true "audiophile" feature: Nearly all old portables at this price point had no such option. In the old days you'd have to keep buying and returning units before you got one with proper azimuth (i.e., that sounded clear in the treble range and not "muddy" or "muffly"). Or we'd bend the metal head frame when possible. Even my many home cassette decks lacked this feature (though the Nakamichi has it). See Fiio's video instructions: https://youtu.be/gcqCSET-EXU?si=a9izz_H0Kenau06V. TIP: Tape speed may drift as the belts break in, so use it for 10-20 hours before adjusting speed. At 18 hours, mine is still within 0.5% accurate. You can get a calibration tape with standard frequency tones online and pair it with a free frequency-measuring app on your phone or computer). * REWIND SPEED: Slow compared to vintage players and home decks, but perfectly acceptable. With a 100-minute tape: Fiio 3:49 (min:sec) | Panasonic RQ-E20V (typical entry level vintage player) 3:21 | Nakamichi MR-1 deck: 1:44 * "BUT I CAN'T REPLACE THE BELTS OR BATTERY!" - I haven't taken this apart but there are screws inside the cassette bay (hidden under little sticker dots). In all my old Sony and Panasonic units, this is how I've gotten inside—so the Fiio looks serviceable. Removing the spring-hinged cover is the hardest part, but Fiio posted a video in Mandarin Chinese showing how to do so (sorry, can't find the link, but their rep on a hi-fi audio site says they will post an English-language version soon). -- MISC TIPS FOR THOSE NEW TO CASSETTE PLAYERS: * Clean and demagnetize after every 10 hours of playback, or when you hear HF (high-frequency) attenuation or W&F. See Fiio video for cleaning the rubber roller, capstan, and PB head. BUT, if your unit still sounds muddy in the high frequencies, it's time to demagnetize the head. You can use either a demagnetizer wand (best) or cassette (adequate). Wand: https://www.amazon.com/Universal-DEMAGNETIZER-Cassette-Recorder-Track/dp/B003ZKLP4 | Cassette: https://www.amazon.com/CASSETTE-CLEANER-DEMAGNETIZER-WET-TYPE- * If your player (any cassette player) stops while playing a tape, forward fast and rewind it completely 2-3 times. The base layer of old tapes can get sticky. And also ... * Always hit "STOP" as soon as your player is done rewinding/ff-ing (there's no auto-stop). Reason: you can stretch, shear, or over-tighten the tape spool, damaging it. In play mode, this player DOES auto-stop at the end of the tape, so no worries when just listening. * Be mindful of getting your headphone cord stuck on doorknobs etc. and yanking it while plugged into the player! Over time, faulty headphone sockets have been the death of HALF of my players, not the belts or heads—and the main reason I bought this Fiio replacement. * Break in the capacitors and mechanicals before you decide on the sound quality - I've played this unit for about 18 hours now and the bass and treble balance is already sounding better. This seems true for many audio devices. -- *Updated 6.1.2024* HEADPHONE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THIS PLAYER: After trying 9-10 different headphones, I've found three that sound very good with the Fiio—with all types of tape, but especially chrome and metal. And I found a few that TRULY SUCK with this player. Of course, all ears are different so your mileage will definitely vary. Just offering some ideas: * BEST (*****): Samson SR850 $40. Gigantic AKG clones. Best headphones that I've tried for this player: Near-neutral treble and bass, and very low tape hiss with chrome & metal tape (with no Dolby). Also pretty good with commercial normal tape encoded with Dolby B. High sensitivity (very loud at low settings). Also great EQ and sound with phones, DACs, etc. https://www.amazon.com/Samson-SR850-Semi-Open-Back-Reference-Headphones/dp/B002LBSEQS * EXCELLENT SOUND (****). Sony MDR-G45 (discontinued, wah). I got these "behind-the-neck" cheapies for $15 a few years ago and they sound custom-made for the Fiio. They now go for $90 on eBay—sheez! The Sony MDR-G52 "classic" walkman-style headphones look similar (and cheaper). With chrome and metal tape, better-than-average bass with the Fiio (but not as strong as the Samsons) and more accurate treble EQ than anything else I tried. High sensitivity (loud). * V. GOOD/EXCELLENT SOUND & CHEAP (****). Panasonic RP-HT21. $8 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00004T8R2. Marketed with "XBS bass boost", lightweight walkman style on-ear headphones. These sound just a tiny bit less lower-resolution than the Sony MDR-G45 but still very enjoyable listening. 24-ohm, 30mm drivers. Sensitivity: 100 dB (loud). * V. GOOD SOUND & CHEAP (BUT NOT VERY LOUD) (***): Maxell 190316 behind-the-neck style walkman headphones, $17. With the Fiio, sounds as good as the Sony MDR-G45 above but requires volume set at 9 or 10 for 72 dbA listening volume. https://www.amazon.com/Maxell-190316-Stereo-Neck-Bands/dp/B00006JPRP. The Maxell 190319 $6 (what a deal!) looks similar https://www.amazon.com/Maxell-High-Quality-Headphones-Adjustable-Lightweight/dp/B00006JPRN/ HEADPHONES I DO *NOT* RECOMMEND FOR USE WITH THIS FIIO PLAYER: * Bose QC25 or equivalent. The active EQ makes these very frequency-neutral (accurate): which means that with the Fiio, excessive treble with chrome/metal tape and weak bass. Also, this inline-microphone headphone doesn't seat quite right into the Fiio's 3.5mm input so the right channel will cut out unless you jiggle it just right. Finally, most active noise-cancelling headphones use DSP (digital sound processing), which kind of defeats the pure-analog point of this player, right? * Grado SR60 & SR80. My favorite high-resolution headphones but way too "bright" for chrome or metal tape and weak bass with the Fiio. * V-Moda LP crossfade2. Renowned for huge bass but sounds very muddy with the Fiio. * Koss Porta Pro. You'd think these retro walkman-style headphones with famously fat bass were made for the Fiio, but they sound horribly muddy with this player. * Panasonic RP-HTX7-K1 - These retro "ham radio style" headphones (as seen on "Stranger Things") sound just awful on a high-end system—and even worse with the Fiio. Just mentioning to save you the disappointment. * Shure I2C-M in-ear monitor headphones (similar to many current entry-level IECs without bass boost) - These are also neutral-EQ headphones with no bass emphasis. They sound clear but tinny/trebly with the Fiio player. * Apple earbuds, iPhone 6-11 (the hard plastic ones, not the kind with soft in-ear seals) - For me these sound tinny/trebly with all music players, and very weak bass with the Fiio. I can't believe you read this whole review, thanks! Hope this helps, and happy listening whatever you're using to play music. Note: I am in no way affiliated with Fiio, Amazon, or other manufacturers mentioned, nor have I received this product in exchange for a review. Just a music lover who also likes to write epically long posts. :D
J**T
Exactly what i needed
M**S
Sull'onda dei ricordi ho deciso di acquistare questo lettore di cassette Fiio CP13. Si presenta ben costruito e rifinito con cura, a parte i pulsanti un po' plasticosi. Bella la manopola del volume che risulta "pastosa" nell'utilizzo. Le dimensioni sono decisamente importanti per un lettore del genere, niente a che vedere con i walkman degli anni passati che erano decisamente più slim. Ho collegato la mia cuffia HiFiman ed il suono è sufficientemente nitido e corposo, non ho sentito flutuazioni di velocità o tremolii vari e questo è un buon segno... Gli strumenti però hanno un po' tutti lo stesso suono e anche utilizzando nastri di qualità più di tanto non sono riuscito ad ottenere. Non dovete aspettarvi la qualità degli altri lettori Fiio digitali in alta definizione... tutta un'altra storia! Ma come scritto all'inizio volevo avere in casa un lettore del genere per le (poche) cassette che sono sopravvissute negli anni. Il prezzo è coerente con la qualità del prodotto... che dire un bel giocattolino da acquistare sull'onda dei ricordi anni 80!!!!
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