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Reviews (13)

31 July 2018
Lvpin is definitely not Lepai
1 of 1 found this helpful Had a Lepai branded version of this for five years of daily use. Great little amp. Loud, nice fidelity and virtually no distortion until recently when the left channel started going quiet and the right getting too loud. It was wearing out. This Lvpin, which looks to be an exact clone, isn't the same. A little too crisp in the highs to the point that it's trying to distort. Turn the volume up halfway and the sound distorts more than is comfortable. More so in spoken word videos than music. I guess because the music does a better job at drowning out distortion, so I can turn it up a little louder. The direct sound is almost useless, but using the bass and treble controls I can make the sound tolerable. One reason the controls are a must is because the bass is a little too overwhelming, to my ears and for my speakers, at normal settings, so it must be turned down. The left and right channels were reversed on my particular amp, so I had to put the RCA plugs into the "wrong" inputs on the back of the amp. I'm also not sure sure this is really 20 watts x 2. I was pushing two 30 watt speakers with the Lepai and it sounded great. Now with the same setup....yeah, it's just not quite right. Not great but it will do until I can get a better amp. I would have loved for this to perform as well as the Lepai. At over $20, this one costs a little too much.

17 March 2016
No real problems
I got 100 of these and have used about thirty of them so far as data disks to store more info. Out of all of them, on the 9th disk, the last two large files out of twelve were corrupted. I couldn't find a reason why it happened, no fingerprints or scratches, but I just added those last two files to one disk and slipped it into the same envelope. No big deal. It happens. The other burned disks have no corruption whatsoever. Great deal with more than half still left.

18 July 2020
May not be right the right choice for laptop/desktop use
1 of 1 found this helpful My headphone jack on my desktop computer was broken so I got one of these. It worked great for a few weeks, but I think this particular design of a USB sound adapter is a problem if you're using it on a device that you have to constantly plug and unplug it as on a desktop or laptop. It stopped working suddenly and I realized the USB connector end just gave out. The stress of plugging it in obviously puts stress on the soldering joints to the circuit board inside and it became loose and wiggles around instead of being firmly in place as it was. I do have a soldering iron but I'm just an amateur that only plays around with it and these are tiny soldering joints, so it's not really worth trying. Maybe if you're using it for other applications where you rarely ever have to unplug it, it would be fine, but if you're using it where you have to give up your headphones for the external speakers often, I definitely wouldn't recommend this particular DESIGN of adapter. I replaced it with one that has a short cable between the USB end and the casing that holds the internal circuit board relieving any stress to the soldering joints. I have no doubt that the replacement should last much longer, and those are just as cheap as these "3D sound" adapters.