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Sony MEX-N4300BT Built-in Dual Bluetooth Voice Command CD/MP3 AM/FM Radio Front USB AUX Pandora Spotify iHeartRadio iPod / iPhone Siri and Android Controls Car Stereo Receiver with ALPHASONIK EARBUDS

  • Based on 199 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: 16 left in stock
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Sunday, May 26
Order within 1 hour and 43 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Style: New


Features

  • Bluetooth audio streaming w/Simple Secure Pairing
  • Convenient One-Touch listening with NFC technology
  • App Remote with voice control for select smartphones

Description

Product highlights: CD receiver with AM/FM tuner plays CDs, CD-Rs, and CD-RWs, including discs loaded with MP3, WMA, and FLAC files Sound Synchronization pulses lighting in time to your music remote control Bluetooth Features: voice control with iOS and Android phones NFC offers instant Bluetooth pairing with compatible phones dual-phone Bluetooth hands-free calling and audio streaming Smartphone Features: (see Details for info on compatibility with specific smartphones and apps): built-in iPod, iPhone, and iPad control AOA 2.0 Android connection compatibility Siri Eyes Free with compatible iPhones, voice control with select Android models Quick-BrowZer and Jump Mode search features Audio Features: EQ10 10-band equalizer high- and low-pass filters Extra Bass boost Expandability: inputs: front panel auxiliary and USB inputs outputs: 4-channel preamp outputs (2-volt rear/subwoofer) Other info: built-in amplifier (17 watts RMS CTA-2006/55 peak x 4 channels) compatible with most factory steering wheel audio controls (adapter required) detachable face with blue key illumination


Item Weight: ‎1 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎10.13 x 8.88 x 3.88 inches


Item model number: ‎MEX-N4300BT + ALPHA


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Chassis Size: ‎Single-din


Preamp Voltage: ‎5 Volts


Display Type: ‎LCD


Wireless Remote: ‎Yes


Warranty: ‎B00JDJIQ9G


Expansion: ‎not_compatible, built-in_bluetooth, optional_satellite_radio, built-in_mp3_dock


Media Playback Supported: ‎MP3/WMA


Weight: ‎4 Pounds


Date First Available: March 31, 2014


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, May 26

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great aftermarket head unit with strong wireless functionality.
This stereo has been reviewed extensively already, so I'm going to touch on some of the more niche features people might be interested in. NFC pairing worked the first time I used the stereo. After that, for some reason active Bluetooth scan mode turned itself off (seriously, I didn't touch a thing in those menus), and NFC pairing no longer functioned, and I couldn't connect to the stereo. I turned Bluetooth scan back on and the NFC pairing / BT connection worked again. Weird glitch, probably a firmware issue. Because of the location of the NFC chip (the volume knob), some phones may have difficulty getting the positioning right. It would have been a lot better on a button near the middle and bottom of the unit. There is a manual pairing mode toggle in the BT settings of the stereo, and it's not terribly hard to find. Bluetooth audio itself works great, though the unit doesn't recognize track titles and often garbles track numbers on the display, so that's kind of a bummer (it may just be the music app I'm using on my phone). I've never had any weird disconnects or interference caused by the BT mode. I haven't yet tried the aux cable input, though I suspect like most it's not particularly great. Sound quality over Bluetooth is excellent, I'm very much satisfied with the advancements over earlier generations of Bluetooth head units. I did not install the microphone or USB cable, so I can't comment on those, and I don't use the Bluetooth phone functionality. The CD player seems top-notch, I've had no issues, and the sound quality is noticeably better than my previous Alpine unit (granted, that thing was 10+ years old). The menus, once you get used to them after spending 10-15 minutes looking around, are super simple to navigate and very intuitive. They're not perfect, but for a single-DIN block LED display I couldn't ask for a whole lot more in terms of ease of use. If you're not very tech-savvy, read the manual - you're going to need it, this stereo has a lot of options. I did have to read the manual for information on configuring the color of the display to a custom setting and the various audio tweaks that can be made to this unit. The most useful, I'd say, are the ability to stagger the firing of your speakers front vs. rear for more balanced audio and the Sony C-Audio mode, which amps up the dynamic range, bass, and treble of the audio. It's particularly good for radio, though I typically turn it off when using Bluetooth or CDs, since they sound good as-is. The EQ settings I haven't dabbled with much, but they seem as robust as anything in this price bracket. I did not opt for the HD radio model, and I don't use satellite radio, so I can't comment there. I also don't use the Pandora or USB modes, so I'm not much help on those. The Android control app for the stereo is moderately useful, but it's clunky and slow. I don't use it - it's generally easier just to dig into the menus once you've got a handle on them and do it that way. Using the app just takes too long, even if it is more visual / decipherable. The included physical remote is a nice add-on if you've got passengers, but otherwise I don't use it. Aesthetically, this is as good-looking a single-DIN aftermarket head unit as you're going to find. I drive an old Mercedes, and frankly, there's nothing modern out there that's going to fit the aesthetic of that car very well. But compared to the old Alpine I had in there, the Sony is 100x more subdued. Far fewer faux-chrome plastic pieces, less shiny plastic overall, and the carbon fiber trim along the top edge isn't all that noticeable. With a mild beige color scheme on the display, it fits in well enough with my old Benz that it doesn't immediately scream "AFTERMARKET RADIO!" like so many of the fashion disasters out there. Overall, I really like this unit, and at $180 it's priced right. Why 4 stars and not 5? Frankly, the control app needs work, the NFC chip location is a nuisance, and the fact that we're still using block LED displays in radios in 2014 is sad. You could put a full-color LCD in there, Sony - you're just too cheap. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 13, 2014 by R. Ruddock

  • Very Good.
This stereo (GS610BT) is about what I expected: It has everything except a large display for a very good price. Pros: - Excellent sound quality without replacing your speakers. I haven't even played with the custom 10-band eq yet, just the presets. - Good Bluetooth, with an external mike on an 8-9 foot cord. On the other end people hear me very well, on my end the phone sound quality isn't great but it's good enough. Maybe a custom eq on the BT Phone source would make it better. - RDS (though I generally hate the radio, RDS is one of those must-have features to me) - 2 USB ports, with the rear port providing 2.1A - Multi-color display, not one of those with a million shades though: I can get kind of close to the color of my dash lights, but I ended up just leaving the stereo basic white - USB media play: I have several hundred folders and several thousand files on a flash drive, it seems to see and play them all (in the manual it states a limit of 9,999 files, it doesn't tell you the folder limit). If you like to just throw a million songs on shuffle and let it go like I do, for some reason Shuffle-All took a few attempts to "catch", not really sure what I was doing wrong, but after that it was fine. It generally takes a few seconds to change songs on Shuffle-All, I assume that's related to the number of folders and files on my flash drive, and the age and speed of the drive. - Bluetooth audio works well, listening to iTunes Radio from an iPhone 5S; I haven't tried any other apps - Standard Bluetooth pairing was simple and painless, I haven't tried either the USB pairing or NFC The One Big, Glaring Con: the display blows. - It's a little dim and subject to glare in bright light, which I've seen with other Sony one-line displays (fine at night, though) - It's one-line, 13-character with a bunch of tiny, unreadable symbols around the letters - There is no setting that provides the clock and any other useful metadata on the display - It only scrolls once when auto-scroll is on - The available metadata to display is very limited: Album, or Artist, or Song, but there is no choice that combines them - There are no dedicated display buttons on the head unit: you can't just press a button and flash up the clock (no button), you can't just press a button and change the display info (long press required), you can't just press a button and scroll the display (no button on the head unit, there is a button on the remote) I had a pretty good idea what I was getting into when I bought this: I wanted lowest price possible for good sound quality, good audio playback feature set and good Bluetooth, and I decided to keep the price down by going with a one-line display. For the cheap car I installed this in, it's just about right; for a more expensive car I definitely would have paid more for a better display. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 27, 2015 by T. Towe

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