🎶 Elevate your sound game — because your playlist deserves the best!
The Surfans F20 is a high-resolution portable MP3 player featuring advanced DSD decoding and a premium PCM510xA DAC for lossless audio playback. Equipped with Bluetooth 5.2 bi-directional connectivity and APT-X support, it streams flawlessly to and from compatible devices. Its compact 2-inch HD screen and ALPS scroll wheel offer intuitive control, while a sturdy zinc alloy body ensures durability. Starting with a 64GB SD card, storage is expandable up to 256GB, allowing you to carry an extensive music library. With up to 10 hours of battery life, the F20 is designed for audiophiles who demand superior sound quality on the go.
Color | Grayish Black |
Battery Average Life | 10 Hours |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth 5.2 |
Supported Media Type | SD Card |
Supported Standards | MP3;FLAC;WAV;WMA;AIFF;DFF;OGG;DSF;APE |
Screen Size | 2 Inches |
Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
Additional Features | Hi-Res Audio |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 0.6"D x 2.2"W x 3.7"H |
Item Weight | 0.24 Pounds |
P**S
This is a fantastic product
It is amazing all of the advances over the years have allowed such a genius system for under $200. I still buy compact disc for a good home stereo, even though I know I could have switched to all USB/Tf. But I have so many CD's from when I was in high school and I converted all of my most favorite songs to .WAV, and I am aware this can also play .MP3. I believe I may have a little more lossless audio with .WAV. Connected to 2 paired speakers of the release of "DOSS Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker with Big Sound," I have easy wireless stereo. I could have bought better speakers but I needed everything to fit in pants and or shirt pockets. Thank you. I did convert CD music as well as rip some YouTube videos, and I end up having to convert .mp4 to .wav, or .wmv to .wav, or if all I have is a .mp3 song I guess I don't need to convert it but I still do some like DJ edit and convert it to .wav again. I did not have any connection loss through the entire time I was riding the Ebike when I keep the speakers near the music player. I had to buy this system or some system, because I was attracted to pairing speakers and it only works with a Bluetooth transmitter. My speakers work with TF card but cannot pair 2 speakers without this lovely Surfans F20 or other Bluetooth transmitter. I know I got my money worth out of this. You all could just accept that this is an inexpensive portable system, and it is good, but it has limits. I did a lot of leveling myself with many songs in Sony Vegas Pro and Sound Blaster Creative WaveStudio, so I can just play my songs "as is," preloaded with my effects. I'm not going to bs. There is more than enough high tech features with Surfans, but not as incredible bass as my more costly super power movie pc and its extreme sound card, with the big bass headphones. Honesty, for deep rich bass to be heard in a wide open public space, it requires larger speakers, and nothing I can carry in my pocket, and I never intended to use this with headphones. I can be low key with the Surfans player and the small speakers I got. Now I might try to test out better speakers in the future, but I don't need it because I have big home speakers and I would get a big bumping car stereo if I had the time, although I would like to lock any car subwoofer down so I can race the car without it shifting. I like to be extreme and on the edge. I'm not going to lie. I couldn't find any Bose bluetooth pairing speakers on Amazon until after I bought a pair of DOSS, but with my extreme desires, I would find a way to be unhappy with small Bose speakers. This product is worth it because the cost is fair and it is very advanced. When all is said and done, all I wanted was something that would play music and did not want to pay more for a chance for anything better currently. There are ways this system might be able to get better sound but I'm not going to bother to try to attach sound reprocessing hardware. Anything might be possible in theory. I like how small Surfans is. I attach my little speakers to my clothing and avoid using headphones. I fit Surfans in my pocket. I have listened to my waltz mix while plugging the big home receiver into the little music player through the headphone port as if it was an AUX port, and it sounded fine. I have large Bose Stereo speakers in my room but no current connected subwoofer because it was damaged. Surfans F20 is not bad. It is everything that I thought it would be and more. I could even use this to put on a table in any room where there is no speakers and use my little easy to move speakers, or humble myself to using some headphones and use it like a walkman. I don't want to discredit how good a $30 speaker can be, because nobody is paying much money to start with. Songs can be edited with audio software to maximize a particular music player and or speaker's sound quality and max volume, and it can sound more fine tuned with no distortion, and it can help me not have to adjust EQ and Volume from one song to the next. It is a lot of work but I am doing that and as a tribute to this music player. I am making remixes of many songs I have never worked on before, so I can celebrate what I think is good music and is a lot of lovable songs where people play either electric, acoustic, and other instruments, and really sing. I really don't care what people think about me. Some singers have a great voice and I enjoy hearing it loud. Nobody cares what kind of speakers I have. What matters more is that I have good sweet songs that can be heard alone, and or by anyone to share it with. I sold my Oldsmobile and sold one sub to somebody and then used one in my room until I accidentally fried it. What I like about this Surfans music player is how I can continually listen to music while traveling and while each song is in an editing process, without having to waste recordable discs. I can write 24bit music or maybe 32bit, to 48hz & 44hz better sound files, but I'm not sure if this system can play higher than 44hz/24bit/32bit, or if it would downscale it from 48hz to 44hz? It had no trouble smoothly playing my 24bit 48hz (.wav) compilation I've recently been making of a beautiful waltz, march, and sweet sound replays; it's an extremely edited mix, preserving the original songs in the classical characteristic, adjusting paces to maximize dance potential. It is symphony and orchestra as well as instrument people doing nice covers of those things. It has all the wonderful human manual instruments including drum, piano, brass, and strings. This assembly song takes up over 424 Megabytes and is 25m&46s length long. Most songs I saved as 44hz 16bit stereo. The battery does last a long time. I can enjoy the no gap feature of the music player and write the audio like it is in dvd chapters or can render it as whole whole piece. As of 9/17/24 I have created multiple folders of songs and I inserted myself singing too in one of those folders, with certain good songs, and it is fun and seems real if I get a good voice recorded not only because that is sweet, but because I can find songs where any person(s) do instrument backgrounds with no singer and then I can be the one to sing it; it is beautiful knowing that I didn't do all of it myself even though I can play the piano. I don't have a good piano at home and that sucks when I want to record. I have a keyboard that has had some technical problem lately but it is pretty good and it cost way more than the piano my parents bought. I also have my own style and other people have different style. I've never thought about pressing the same key over and over again when I cover music, but the way one woman does it I swear it is absolutely gorgeous. She covers rock songs.
M**N
Very Responsive Player with great controls and sound(Identical to Walker H2)
I've been searching for the last couple years for a portable music player that suited my needs. I've wanted a player like my old Sansa Clip Plus with rockbox; Very fast and responsive User Interface that is also Easy to navigate through music files by file name alphabetically(NOT file tags), and all buttons with no touch controls. Obviously sound quality is something to consider but the interface issues mentioned above take priority for me personally.I ordered the Surfans F20 a week or so after I had ordered the HiFi Walker H2 as I was curious if it was the same player and I wanted a spare music player to experiment with. Much to my surprise he F20 is Identical to the H2 outside the physical styling.The F20 has an aluminum frame with a plastic back while the H2's entire housing is metal(probably aluminum. The F20 has metal dimpled scroll wheel with light buttons that stick out of the housing noticably while the H2 has a rubber coated scroll wheel and much firmer buttons that are closer to flush. The F20 uses a Micro USB port to charge and transfer data with it's Micro SD slot being recessed while the H2 uses a USB C port and a more flush Micro SD slot. The H2 weighs considerably more than the F20 and has a lanyard loop in the lower right corner where the F20 is noticeably lighter with no lanyard loop.For all practical purposes the F20 is an H2 minus some weight, the lanyard loop, and has Micro USB instead of USB C. That being said, everything that I said about the H2 applies to the the F20; It ticks all the right boxes;* The controls are are buttons and the scroll wheel has indentations in it. In most cases you can use the Back or Skip track buttons on the right side of the player instead of the scroll wheel if you so choose.* The user interface is very intuitively laid out.* The user interface is very responsive and fast.* The player firmware works with 1TB micro SD cards* The player supports multi folder deep file structure* The volume control is very precise giving a scale of 1-100 with increments of 1* The player sound quality is Noticeably better many older cheap players I've used in the past* When browsing music by folder; the files actually appear in alpha-numeric order.* The screen is reasonably bright. It seems a bit dim in daylight but its usable with brightness set to max.* The battery life seems pretty good(15ish hours give or take)* The player plays MP3, OGG, WMA, M4A, FLAC, and WAVI cannot speak for the people looking for some premium HIFI experience, but I can say from a practical stand point; the player is easy and practical to use if you have a large music collection sorted by folder(no tagging) and sounds great even on my janky old headphones and car speakers.It would be disingenuous not to include any criticism of the player so are are a few niggling issues myself and a friend have noticed;* The player seems to have a cut off point somewhere for displaying song files by file tags. I dont use file tags to sort any of my collection but a friend does and he said the H2 only showed about half of his collection (36K songs) from a 500GB micro SD card. When we switch to folder browsing we found everything showed up. If you have a large collection you want to browse through by file TAG then the H2 is probably not for you.* The font/theme/interface is very limited in it's customization. You get like 2 different themes and 3 options for font size. Other than that you cant really customize how the player looks.* The scroll speed doesn't accelerate when browsing by folder when you scroll the wheel or hold down a navigation button(back or forward). This makes going through a large collection a little slower but its not horrible unless you have like a thousand files or folders to go through in a single directory.* The anti-aliasing on font in the player makes it seem slightly blurry at times. There is no way to turn it off.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 days ago