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Sanyo CRSR-10 Sirius Satellite Receiver with Car and Home Kit | 
| Brand: Sanyo Category: CE
List Price: $149.99 Buy New: $115.00 You Save: $34.99 (23%)
Rating: 22 reviews Sales Rank: 5968
Media: Electronics Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Includes MP3 Player: 0 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.5 Dimensions (in): 13.9 x 9.8 x 3.7 Warranty: 1 year warranty
MPN: CRSR-10 Model: CRSR-10 UPC: 647132003877 EAN: 0647132003877 ASIN: B0006PY226
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new in manufacture sealed box, no shipping to Canada, PO, APO/FPO, HI, AK, PR address.
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| Features:
| • | Complete satellite radio kit for listening to Sirius programming in car or at home | | • | Tuner with 6-line display offers 20 station presets and 3-digit direct tuning pad | | • | Song seek memory stores 10 artist/song titles and alerts you when one is playing | | • | Built-in FM transmitter; includes home stand, car suction-cup mount, and home/car antennas | | • | Built-in clock with alarm; tuner measures 4 x 4 x 1.81 inches (W x H x D); 1-year warranty |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description After subscribing to Sirius Satellite Radio Service, the Sanyo CRSR10 allows you to enjoy this revolutionary radio service at home or in your car. The plug-and-play package allows you to take the satellite signal practically anywhere you have an FM radio. 20 Presets with preset scan mode. Song-seek feature that remembers and searches for up to 10 favorite songs. Channel search by Category, Channel Name, Preset, Artist Name or Song Title. Time Based Features - Satellite-updated real-time Clock with alarm, sleep mode and auto shut down. Brightness and contrast control. Program alert remembers and searches for favorite programs. Direct tuning allows for quick access to all 120+ channels.
Amazon.com Product Description Enjoy up to 120 Sirius satellite radio channels (65 of them commercial-free) in the car or at home with the Sanyo CRSR-10 plug-and-play tuner. The package, which includes such items as a suction-cup car mount, a car antenna, a home stand, a home antenna, and much more, gives you everything you need to set up your Sirius system right out of the box. It all starts with the tuner, naturally, and its variety of valuable functions. The CRSR-10 offers four search methods: by category (pop, rock, country, hip-hop, R&B/urban, dance/electronic, jazz/standards, classical, Latin and world, news, traffic and weather, sports, and talk and entertainment), channel, artist name, or song title. Once you've selected a channel, the tuner's blue backlit readout displays up to six lines of information, including the three-digit channel number and name, the artist name, the song title, the category name, the satellite signal strength monitor, and more. On those occasions when you want to hear a specific tune, you can turn to the "song seek" memory, which stores up to 10 song and artist names and tells you when a saved song is playing on a given station. And old-fashioned channel surfers will delight in the three-digit direct tuning pad and the 20 station presets (in two banks), which make it a breeze to quickly access your favorite channels. The CRSR-10 even adds a bit of style to your car or living room with its three interchangeable faceplate rings in chrome, metallic blue, and glossy black. The rings let you match the tuner to its surroundings while also varying the display color. The tuner offers a couple of interface options with your audio equipment. The built-in FM transmitter broadcasts the satellite signal to any unused FM frequency--from 88.1 to 107.9 MHz--so you can listen without connecting cumbersome cables to your stereo receiver. This option is particularly convenient for car stereos that don't have auxiliary inputs. To output the best possible sound quality, however, the tuner offers a 3.5 mm auxiliary output and a patch cord that connects directly to compatible car and home receivers. Other terminals include a power input that accepts a plug from either a home AC adapter or vehicle cigarette lighter adapter (both included) and a jack for the included home and mobile antennas. Additional features include a password option that restricts channel access (ideal for families); a built-in clock with alarm and sleep timer functions; and a program alert that automatically switches to a select channel at a specific time. The CRSR-10 receiver measures 4 by 4 by 1.81 inches (W x H x D) while the home base measures 4 by 4.8 by 3.73 inches. The car mount, meanwhile, checks in at 3.41 inches in diameter. The entire bundle comes with a one-year warranty. Note: You must subscribe to Sirius satellite radio to receive the satellite radio signal. What's in the Box Sirius satellite radio tuner, chrome faceplate, metallic blue faceplate, black faceplate, home stand base, home stand upright, 1/4-inch screw, home antenna with 19.75-foot cable, car base with suction-cup mount, 70.5-inch audio patch cord, 6-foot cigarette lighter adapter, power connector adapter, home AC power adapter, magnetic car antenna with 21-foot cord, 6.5-inch mobile antenna rubber tail, 6.5-inch dual-sided adhesive strip, antenna installation manual, user's guide.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 17 more reviews...
junk January 19, 2007 have had quite alot of trouble with the receiver...i have nursed it through 2 years having replaced 2 home antennas and now something else is now plaguing it i'm guessing its the power connector and the power adapter is on its last leg also...it has very flimsy cables (power and antenna)...i refuse to spend more money on it(sanyo)so i will buy another sirius radio just not a sanyo product...
Utter garbage!! Avoid at all costs!! December 2, 2006 The Sanyo CRSR-10 is quite possibly the single worst piece of electronic equipment ever created. If I could force Sanyo to send me stars in return for the putrid quality of this complete pile of junk, I'd give it -100 stars!
I received it as a Christmas gift in 2004, and made the mistake of not signing up for service until January 2006 (when Stern debuted). Big mistake! The display burned out the very first hour I used the radio at home. Good thing I set the FM transmitter before this happened, as I had no display and could not access any features after this malfunction. The buttons on the face are incredibly awkward and unintuitive. Trying to change the channels is about a 50/50 bet; you either misfire going for the clunky buttons and hit another function, or the button just do nothing at all. The radio ran so hot that you could not touch the casing, and this caused the power to cut out at random intervals. Reception at home was about 40%, despite placing the antenna on a metal dog cage pointed westward. Of course, Sirius told me to put it on the roof, but I'd rather not fall and die trying to get radio reception.
The power and antenna inputs? Sanyo had the great insight to force you to use an adapter plug between the radio and the AC and antenna wire. Why they did this I'll never fathom, but it certainly did nothing but create another loose-fitting connection that would generally fail. The AC insert fit poorly and became very loose, and if you touched the radio for any reason or went over a bump in the car, the power cut off.
The car experience was a whole new nightmare. Sanyo gives you a suction cup (yes, that's right) to mount your radio in the car. Great idea! Why not rubber bands and strings? The car antenna wire seperated from the magnetic antenna for no other reason that intended use after about 2 months, so I had to use the home antenna in the car (not about to give Sanyo another penny for parts). The incredilby cheaply crafted cigarette lighter adapter was another bundle of joy. It's so cheaply made, the cheesy plastic threads on the tip of the adapter stripped out because it didn't fit in the lighter snugly, causing the metal tip and fuse cap to fall apart when inserted, shorting out fuses in two different vehicles. Car recpetion was a bit better at about 50%, but go over a bump and the power would cut off, so you only get to enjoy about 30% of what you paid for. Sadly, the store no longer carried the unit and I could not get any kind of refund.
After the lighter adapter broke for good, I decided to buy a Sirius Starmate and it is 1000 times the qaulity of the garbage junk Sanyo. I get great reception now, the unit is sturdy, all plugs fit snugly, and the display still worked after Day 1! Please, hitting yourself in the head with a claw hammer is a more relaxing experience that dealing with the toilet Sanyo Sirius radio. Avoid at all costs! Sanyo should apologize and immediately fold their terrible company!
sirius sanyo crsr-10 boombox and receiver November 15, 2006 I purchased the boombox reciever home and car kit as a whole package as a christmas '05 present to myself. Everything worked wonderfully until 6 months into it, the receiver started turning on and off, posessed like, and stopped playing. Unfortunately for me, the warranty requires to ship EVERYTHING back as it was purchased together. what a pain. However, Sirius customer service rules and I got them to refund shipping costs plus a little extra, including free online listening while my regular account was on hold. Then a month later (June) my antenna (that was working just fine -- which for some reason they decided to replace -- stopped working. Once again, I need to send the whole package back to get one antenna working. they told me this item was on backorder since it seems everyone needed to get theirs fixed. (shocker) So they told me to continue to enjoy listening in my car -- which I was rarely driving, and they would inform me when I could send my entire package back as soon as they had a replacement in stock for me. In October I got the call, we willno longer make these, you can get a free upgrade. That same week, my car was broken into and my receiver gone. More calls, and "sorry, we can't give you that replacement anymore with out you returning your whole kit" !! Now I have this stupid boombox and broken antenna. and spent another $300 on a new kit, and missed 4 months of quality sirius radio time, and almost didn't get a refund for all that time they had let me listen "in my car" for free, since warranty wasn't responsible anymore for issuing a 4 month refund for time lost waiting for a broken piece of s. do I sound pissed? But I just lovvvvve my new receiver and boombox!!! yeah Sirius still rules.
Works Good October 8, 2006 I've this system over 1 year now and I can seriously say I've had no problems. But I do keep it in the car it's not remove much. It works for me plus I take care of it,
Worked great for quite a while, then...... August 22, 2006 I had the unit for close to 2 years, with absolutely no problems. About a month ago it went bad. Unit will no longer start up consistently. If the unit does come on- it can not be turned off and restarted without allowing it to cool off, for an extended period of time. Explored trying to get the unit repaired, but figure the cost will be close to a new unit of different make. Would like to think that it should have lasted longer than two years, but from the other reviews, it sounds like I was lucky it made it that long.
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