Subscribe to Outside Magazine
advertisement
2009 Winter Buyer's Guide
View the entire 300-plus collection of must-have gear items tailor-made for your adventurous lifestyle. PLUS: A special section on womens gear.
Gear Guy

Today's Question
I'm looking for the lightest breatheable bivy sack out there, any suggestions? answer

What is the best way to carry water on a hike? answer

Gear Girl

Today's Question
What's a good women's analog watch for under $200? answer

What equipment should a new mountain biker buy? answer

Workbench

Skin Care

Gear Upgrade

Make a Ski Sling

User Reviews

User Reviews

Browse Outdoor Gear

Online Favorites

Special Issues

Photo Galleries

outdoor gear review
January 11, 2005

outdoor gear question
What's a trail-worthy MP3 player?

outdoor gear question
outdoor equipment
Rio Cali
(courtesy, Rio Audio)

What's a good, trail-worthy MP3 player? It's got to be light and needs lots of storage space since I'm out in the woods for days at a time. I've looked into the iPod mini, but if the battery dies, I can't swap it out for a fresh one. Any ideas?

— Matt
Shasta Lake City, California


Got your own gear question?
outdoor equipment question
Express yourself in the Gear Forum
outdoor gear answerSure, several. How about a Rio Cali 256? It's an MP3 player that's designed for outdoorsy use, with an armband strap so the very compact device (it's the size of a fat wristwatch) can ride along with you. It's digital, so storage is more limited than an iPod—60 MP3 songs in its standard configuration, up to 120 if more storage is added. The advantage of this player is that it has flash-based memory, meaning no built-in playback delays and no skipping as you bomb down some scree field. Plus, it has an FM tuner so if you can hit a signal you still have something to listen to once you're tired of the on-board tunes. Best of all, for your purposes, the Cali plays for up to 18 hours on one AAA battery. That's pretty good—just a few little batteries should last you on a weeklong trip. And the price ain't bad at $140 (www.rioaudio.com).

Look also at Rio's Forge 256, another sports-specific flash-based unit with the same easy packability, selling for a marginally pricier $170. With that you also get the capacity to record radio files to your player, though. Want to catch that Terri Gross interview you missed with Philip Roth as you're exploring the Adirondacks? No problem.

A similar unit to the Rio Cali is the Creative Nomad MuVo TX FM 256 ($169, www.nomadworld.com), which is a digital unit that runs off a single AAA battery (Creative bills one battery as good for 15 hours). Storage capacity is basically on a par with the Cali. It looks more like a mini tape recorder (or iPod, for that matter), whereas the Cali or the Forge have more stylin' lines.

Lastly, SanDisk's slimline MP3 ($200) has a rather substantial one gigabyte of storage, so you can load up to 16 hours of MP3 tunes on it, which is in the order of around 240. And it runs on a single AAA battery, so it's easily re-powered. So, tough choice—Rio's snappy, compact styles, SanDisk's storage... I think it'll come down to your budget—the above cost less than the iPod Mini ($249), all are more trail-worthy, yet they will also pack less of your CD collection with you on the trail.

MP3 players and other electronic wizardry reviewed in Outside's 2004 Buyer's Guide.

 Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift!
 Give the gift of Outside Magazine!
 Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more.



RECENT QUESTIONS

I'm looking for the lightest breatheable bivy sack out there, any suggestions?

What is the best way to carry water on a hike?

Are there any high-def cameras that can zoom into a six-foot square—from 60,000 feet?

What’s the best pair of winter running shoes?

What shoes provide light-and-fast performance and support?


Search the Gear Guy

GEAR GUY FEATURES

Check out the bio of Douglas Gantenbein, aka the Gear Guy.

Readers' Mailbag: The Gear Guy digs into some of your more bizarre, obscure (and let’s face it, downright weird) posts from years gone by to see if he can make sense of it all, or if it’s just time to run up the white flag. Previous column: Beat the Cost of Gear.

The Gear Guy reports from the 2005 Outdoor Retailer summer trade fair, with his rundown of ten products to watch in 2006, plus the inside scoop on what shook down at the bi-annual gearapalooza.


MORE GEAR

The Outside Gear Blog

2005 Buyer's Guide

State of the Art: 2005 Bikes



Many of the items reviewed by the Gear Guy can be found at REI.com. Click here to find the internet's biggest selection of outdoor gear and apparel.