

🎶 Elevate your audio game—because your playlist deserves the best.
The Surfans F20 HiFi MP3 Player delivers high-resolution, lossless audio with advanced DSD decoding and a powerful PCM510xA DAC. Featuring Bluetooth 5.2 with aptX for two-way wireless streaming, it supports up to 512GB expandable storage, enabling you to carry an extensive music library. Its 2.0" HD screen and tactile ALPS scroll wheel offer intuitive navigation without touch controls, all housed in a durable zinc alloy frame. With up to 10 hours of playback, the F20 is designed for audiophiles seeking premium sound quality and practical portability.












| ASIN | B07VWK4FP3 |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Metal batteries required. (included) |
| Best Sellers Rank | #14,459 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #72 in MP3 & MP4 Players |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars (4,954) |
| Date First Available | July 31, 2019 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 6.3 ounces |
| Item model number | Surfans-F20 |
| Manufacturer | SURFANS |
| Product Dimensions | 3.7 x 2.2 x 0.6 inches |
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 WAV I 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.
P**S
Surfans F20 has been good enough, no failures
This system can take accidental drops but be careful because I would not guarantee that. This system does allow portable beautiful music to be shared on speakers or listened to totally privately alone somewhere like on a train or city bus. There may be better systems out there. It may just need mega base boosting headphones if there is such thing. I found that the way I set the EQ causes sound on head phones lacking the full bass that I wrote into my digital remaster song. It would be nice to have EQ memory 1, 2, 3, but it has none. I set the EQ to match my cool Bogasing speakers. On speakers, bass is no issue. I can get a very acceptable amount of bass with the music player and the speakers. I don't have to use super bass mode. I doctored songs with editors. Each song is written to sound perfect. I never have to adjust anything on music players or speakers after rendering a track. I have better speakers now than when I first bought this device. The sound is more rich now. They are bigger speakers and not so easy to carry around my neck the way I was doing with little speakers. I can also use a scarf to wrap and tie the speakers up and attach them to any bicycle handle bar on the left and right and I had no choice to do something because the speaker hangers broke with hard bike riding, but the wide scarf does a pretty nice job. No EQ setting is satisfactory for bass on head phones, but I can use my computer head phone port and Windows Media Player to get the sound I expect on head phones with and without a Soundblaster card. The fact is I have never needed F20 for head phones. I will give it 5 stars because it works well. I have remastered every song I listen to to play as loud as it can without distortion second by second, and bringing out the sound of instruments and voices much better and with excellent flow and volume balance. I have made old Christmas songs sound so good, even kids like to hear me play it. It is amusing to travel on side walks with speakers. I would be nice if people would appreciate all the work I did. It is more real to try to go savage and carry speakers without a car or a motorcycle and I want people to like it because of the beauty in it. The music is not just for me. It is also for people outside to get a drift of what I thought was something good. Much of the songs are just sweet love songs. I have been a little tempted to listen to my old favorite death metal songs, but those songs could be offensive to people. I have had issues with my computer and the micro-sd card getting corrupted at times but it can be fixed and I can export or copy the songs I wanted over any corrupted file from backups or the source. I've never really lost anything. I am familiar with command prompt on Windows and I like using it. I have various sound mastering programs, that are some free progs and some professional software. The main thing is I like the songs and can listen to it in my bedroom too even when nobody is there.
F**Z
Lo primero hay 2 versiones, una con el micro USB antiguo como sale en la fotos y otra con USB-C, se puede leer esto en foros, a mi me ha llegado desde Amazon la nueva del USB-C. Me gusta el buen sonido pero no quiero gastarme mucho dinero en ello. Este es el ideal para esta situación. Lo estoy probando con unos cascos Sennheiser HD 599, que no son muy caros pero son decentes, y espectacular. Pistas Ogg de 320kbps. No suena enlatado, y mucho mejor que cualquier iPod Classic, tengo el 5a gen y este Surfans le gana en calidad de sonido. El sistema operativo trae muchas opciones y me gusta, está diseñado bien para audiófilos. La calidad de construcción es normalilla, y la rueda no es del todo buena la experiencia aunque se puede usar bien. Yo no usaría este aparato para hacer deporte, lo voy a usar en casa.
H**E
This is a simple MP3 player that sounds good and is easy to use.
A**N
This is an awesome DAP. No need for apps, logins. Does exactly what it needs to do in an exceptional way for such a reasonable price. If there is one drawback and it’s irrelevant really, it’s that you cannot control sound unless screen is active. A small issue that is easily overcome. It’s hardy, it’s battery life is brilliant and I’d fully endorse this as a great entry and beyond app. Buy it. Then see if you need an upgrade. I’d guarantee you won’t. Well done Surfans.
P**N
Built quality, Sound and Battery everything is good, value for money.
F**G
Transferred all my songs from my old iPod and it works great
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