Cortex HDTT-5000

Cortex HDTT-5000

anyone ever tried one of these?

http://www.proaudiostar.com/dj-gear/cd-media-players/cortex-hdtt-5000-digital-music-controller.html#images

I wouldn’t do it.

get a pioneer cdj-400 on ebay or something for the same price…cant go wrong with em…

if you’re going that way buy any of these:
Pioneer CDJ-400 or maybe CDJ 350 or 200 but these are worst
Numark NDX400
Denon DN s700
Numark NDX800
American Audio Radius
different option would be Denon DN-SC2000

Anyone actually played on these? You can get them dirt cheap now.

they are great for at home use do not let it get her and never drop it. they’re made pretty cheap. I have. homie who has a pair. they’ve lasted him a while.

Haha, I was actually part of the design of those-the hardware was frozen long before I got there, but the user interface/workflow was re-done as one of my first “big” projects. So, some things to know-

  1. There are a lot of confusing things about the user interface. This is because the hardware was made to work with the software in a way that made no sense. What we did was a band-aid. It worked way better post-changes, but it was never as good as it could have been if we had the time to work on it right from the start.

  2. It was painfully slow analyzing. Like, out of control slow. The librarian was Windows only, and I’m pretty sure it has not been updated since 2008.

  3. When testing, I settled on the equivalent of 45rpm for the scratch speed. The wheel was not the most responsive, and it was mostly a way of compensating in a way that felt best for cutting. Some might not like it. That said, you should have felt 33rpm… :scream:

  4. The effects were straight up bad.

  5. We had a bug with the media link/drive share. Basically, whatever you were sharing with was always frustratingly slow compared to the master deck. It got better, but I was personally never happy with it.

  6. The jog pressure sensitivity had a tendency to get pretty wooly over time. Be aware.

  7. It should have done MIDI, but didn’t. In retrospect, we totally were dumb in guessing which way the market would go.

At the end of the day, its one of those projects that I’m glad to have under my belt, but I left feeling more let down that it was not better. Working on SCS.4DJ at Stanton, I was left mostly feeling like we did everything we wanted to do back then with the HDTT, and Gemini’s CDJ-700 is also a much better representation of what we were dreaming of doing back then. I guess what I’m saying is that either would be a much better choice. (And I’ve moved on from both companies, so I have zero interest either way in what way you go.

Thanks for your detailed response, the idea of them is good. I just wanted something for my mates to come round with a usb stick, plug it in and jam. Guess I’ll be going for a cdj with usb. Cheers

Might be worth looking at the Gemini CDJ-600, the Reloop RMP-2.5 Alpha, or the DJ Tech uSolo FX. All around the £250-300 mark. The DJ Tech is probably the “best” of the bunch, features-wise, although the jogwheels are smaller (almost half the size) than the Gemini and Reloop decks. It also lacks a CD drive, although the unit is significantly smaller as a result; if you’re using USB sticks, that might be something to bear in mind.

The CDJ600 and the RMP-2.5 don’t have on-board FX, but if your mixer does - or you’re using Traktor - that’s not really an issue. The CDJ600 doesn’t offer USB/MIDI support, so you’re stuck either using analog audio or timecode; the RMP-2.5 and the uSolo FX both have MIDI support.

ALL of the above are significantly cheaper than even the lowest model of CDJ (the 350), and do everything that that unit does and more. The RMP-2.5 and CDJ600 also have a jogwheel almost twice the size of the 350, which is always nice.

Anyway, good luck!

Numark is usually the way to go for cheaper CDJs that aren’t complete junk. Check out the NDX series.

Otherwise have a browse around for some used Pioneers.

We got a pair of NDX400s for the DJ society I’m a part of a few weeks ago, and there aren’t words to describe just how nasty they are, although the terms of “plasticky” and “rattly” certainly help. The NDX800 might be better although I haven’t seen a pair of those in the flesh yet.

The NDX 400 is only $111 now so it’s hardly a surprise about the quality. The NDX 800/900 costs over twice the price of the 400 so they should be somewhat better.

Check out the Gemini CDJ-650’s. Basically stripped down, smaller CDJ-700’s. You can find them for relatively cheap and they handle USB and MIDI no problem. Like someone else said, if you want effects you’re going to want to use Traktor’s or your mixers effects.

Too bad the CDJ-700 didn’t go the route of having linking between multiple units. It seems to do everything else right… well, other than the screen being vertical, I guess. They could always make the waveform vertical or vinyl-like.