Martin Ranger Karaoke Systems
DVD Players, Wireless Microphones & Amplifiers for Home Karaoke
- Region-free DVD players read karaoke discs from any country and output 1080p over HDMI
- UHF wireless microphones reach 150 feet on the 900 MHz band with rechargeable lithium batteries
- Amplifiers deliver up to 1,500 W with built-in DSP for echo, reverb, and key control
Our Karaoke Equipment
From entry-level microphones to professional 4-channel wireless systems
1080p HDMI Multi Region Code Free DVD Player with USB Playback and Karaoke Functions
1080p DVD Player with USB Playback, 2-Way Active Speakers and Two Wired Microphones
U-6800R Metal Dual Channels UHF 900MHz Wireless Microphone System
SW-112 Powered 12" Subwoofer - 1000 Watts, Piano Black Finish
MA2500DSP 1500W Professional Karaoke Amplifier with DSP, Optical, Bluetooth
500W Stereo System with Amplifier, 8" Speakers, DVD Player and Microphone
900MHz UHF 4-Channel Wireless Microphone System with 2 Handheld and 2 Table Microphones
Dynamic Microphone Bundle with Wireless Transmitter, Receiver and Stand
U2800R 2 Channels UHF Wireless Microphone with USB Recharging Lithium Battery
PF1000-AC Power Filter Conditioner with Surge Protection
U6800R-MINI Portable UHF Wireless Microphone, Ideal for Karaoke, Church, Weddings
900MHz UHF 4-Channel Wireless Microphone System with 4 Handheld Microphones
Stage Music 3-Way 3-Unit Karaoke Speaker System (12") with Speaker Cables
1080p HDMI Region-Free DVD Player with Karaoke Functions and One Microphone
DM68PRO Dynamic Vocal Microphone with XLR Cable and Desktop Stand
Why Martin Ranger
Karaoke equipment that connects in minutes and fills any room with stage-quality sound
Play Karaoke Discs from Anywhere
Load a CDG or DVD from Japan, Europe, or South America. The player reads every region code and disc format without adapters or workarounds.
Wireless Freedom for Singers
UHF microphones operate on the 900 MHz band with a 150-foot range. Walk around the room, pass the mic to guests, and stay connected.
Ready to Sing in Minutes
One HDMI cable to your TV, one power cord, one microphone. No AV receiver, no software setup, no technical background required.
Gift-Ready Bundles
Several packages ship with microphones, cables, and stands included. Open the box, connect two cables, and start a birthday or holiday party.
Crystal-Clear Picture on Modern TVs
HDMI output delivers 1080p video to any HDTV. Song lyrics appear sharp and readable, even on 65-inch screens across the room.
Options from $40 to $600
A wired microphone for casual use costs under fifty dollars. A four-channel wireless system for church services sits below six hundred.
How It Works
From unboxing to your first song in four steps
Pick Your Setup
Choose a standalone DVD player for an existing sound system, or grab a bundle with speakers and microphones included.
Connect to Your TV
Run the included HDMI cable from the player to your television. Plug the power cord into any wall outlet.
Pair Your Microphones
Plug a wired mic into the front jack, or power on a UHF wireless unit and it locks onto the receiver within seconds.
Load Music and Sing
Insert a CDG disc, DVD, or USB thumb drive. Select a track with the remote and lyrics appear on screen.
Built for Real Karaoke Sessions
Four features that turn a living room into a stage
Play Any Karaoke Disc from Any Country on One Machine
A friend brings over a CDG box set from the Philippines. A relative ships a DVD compilation from Germany. You slide each disc into the Martin Ranger player, and the lyrics appear on your TV within seconds. The region-free drive reads DVD, DVD-R, DVD-RW, VCD, CDG, MP3, CD, and Photo-CD formats without menu changes or firmware patches.
- Region-free drive accepts discs from all six DVD regions, so an imported Japanese CDG plays the same as a domestic disc
- Multi-format reader handles ten disc types including CDG and VCD without swapping players or installing codecs
- Built-in USB port reads MP3+G files from a thumb drive when you run out of physical discs mid-party
Sing Across the Room Without Tripping Over Cables
You hand one microphone to a guest on the couch and carry the other to the kitchen doorway, twenty feet from the receiver. Both voices come through the speakers with zero dropouts. The UHF system operates above 900 MHz where household Wi-Fi routers and Bluetooth devices do not compete for bandwidth, and each handheld holds a USB-rechargeable lithium cell that lasts five hours on a single charge.
- 150-foot operating range on the 900 MHz UHF band lets two singers roam separate rooms during a house party
- Plug-in USB rechargeable lithium batteries replace disposable AAs and deliver five hours of continuous singing per charge
- Dual independent XLR outputs feed each mic into a mixer or amplifier with separate volume control per channel
Shape Your Voice with Studio-Style Echo and Reverb
You step up to the microphone and your voice sounds flat in the living room. One turn of the DSP knob on the MA2500DSP amplifier adds concert-hall reverb. Another adjustment dials in a short echo that fills gaps between phrases. The 1,500-watt amplifier pushes processed audio through a pair of 12-inch speakers, and the room sounds like a dedicated karaoke lounge instead of a carpeted den.
- Built-in DSP processor applies echo, reverb, and key control without an external effects pedal or laptop
- 1,500-watt output drives large speaker pairs for rooms up to 2,000 square feet with clean headroom
- Optical input connects to a Smart TV so you can stream karaoke apps and process the audio through the same DSP chain
Back Up Your Entire Karaoke Library to a Thumb Drive
You own three hundred CDG discs stacked in a closet. The Martin Ranger DVD player rips each disc to MP3+G format on a USB stick with one button press. After a weekend of ripping, your full library fits on a single 64 GB thumb drive. You plug that drive into the front USB port at the next party, scroll through tracks by title, and leave the disc binders at home.
- One-touch CDG-to-MP3+G ripping converts a single disc to digital files in under five minutes
- Front-panel USB port reads MP3, MP3+G, AVI, and JPG files from any FAT32-formatted thumb drive
- Digital library eliminates disc swapping mid-song and protects original CDG media from scratches and handling wear
About Martin Ranger
Martin Ranger designs and manufactures karaoke equipment under the KaraokeSky brand umbrella. The company sells direct through KaraokeSky.com and stocks its full catalog on major retail platforms.
The product line covers every component of a home or small-venue karaoke rig: DVD players with built-in CDG decoding, UHF wireless microphone systems operating on the 900 MHz band, professional amplifiers with DSP processing, powered subwoofers, 3-way speaker cabinets, wired dynamic microphones, and rack-mount power conditioners.
Martin Ranger products carry an average 4.65-star rating across listings. The brand targets someone setting up a first karaoke system at home, outfitting a church fellowship hall, or running a mobile KJ operation on weekends.
Customer Reviews
Hear from karaoke enthusiasts who built their setups with Martin Ranger
Perfect for Our Filipino Karaoke Nights
We have a collection of CDG discs from the Philippines that our old DVD player refused to read. The Martin Ranger HDDVD600 played every single one without any settings changes. The picture quality over HDMI looks sharp on our 55-inch TV, and the lyrics are readable from across the living room. My parents visit every weekend for karaoke, and this player has not skipped a track in three months of heavy use. The USB port is a bonus for our MP3+G collection too.
Church Uses These Every Sunday
We bought the 4-channel UHF system for our 200-seat fellowship hall. Four wireless microphones cover our worship team with zero interference from the building's Wi-Fi network. The XLR outputs run straight into our house mixer, and the rechargeable batteries last through a full two-hour Sunday service with power to spare. The individual volume controls on the receiver let our sound tech balance each vocalist independently. Worth every dollar for a church setup.
MA2500DSP Changed Our Home Karaoke
The DSP effects on this amplifier turned our flat-sounding living room into something that feels like a real karaoke bar. My wife tested the echo and reverb settings for fifteen minutes before she settled on her favorite combination. The 1,500 watts push our 12-inch speakers without any distortion, even when my brother-in-law cranks the volume past reasonable levels. The optical input from our Smart TV lets us use karaoke streaming apps with the same speaker system.
Wireless Mics with Real Range
I tested the U-6800R during a backyard BBQ. One mic stayed by the grill, the other went to the patio table twenty-five feet from the receiver. Clear signal both directions with no dropouts. The USB-rechargeable batteries lasted our entire four-hour cookout. The metal body on these handhelds feels substantial, and they survived being dropped on concrete twice without damage. One star off because the receiver takes about four seconds to lock on at power-up.
Great Starter Mic at This Price
The DM68PRO replaced a plastic microphone that broke after two months. The zinc alloy body on this one feels like it could survive years of weekend karaoke. The cardioid pattern picks up my voice and ignores the TV speakers behind me, so feedback is not an issue. The included desktop stand works well for our coffee table setup. At under forty dollars with the XLR cable and storage bag included, this mic represents solid value.
Complete System in One Box
The 500W stereo bundle gave us everything for our bonus room karaoke setup: DVD player, two speakers, amplifier, and a microphone. We went from an empty room to a full karaoke system in about twenty minutes. The speakers fill the 300-square-foot space without strain. The optical module connecting to our Smart TV means we can switch between physical CDG discs and streaming apps. The FM tuner is a nice extra for background music between karaoke sessions.
How Martin Ranger Compares
Side-by-side with the competition across six key criteria
| Criteria | Martin Ranger | JVC | Pioneer | Singtrix |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region-Free Playback | All 6 regions, all disc formats | All regions (select models) | All regions (select models) | No disc player |
| Karaoke Format Support | DVD + CDG + MP3+G + USB | DVD + CDG + USB | DVD + USB (no CDG) | Streaming app only |
| Wireless Mic Range | 150 ft, UHF 900 MHz | No mic system | No mic system | Wired only |
| Amplifier Power | Up to 1,500 W with DSP | No amplifier | No amplifier | 40 W built-in |
| Microphone Battery | USB rechargeable lithium, 5 hr | N/A | N/A | N/A (wired) |
| Price Range | $40 - $600 | $80 - $150 | $60 - $120 | $150 - $350 |
What You'll Get
Your karaoke journey from unboxing to a two-thousand-track library
Unbox the player, run one HDMI cable to your TV, insert a CDG disc, and sing your first song within fifteen minutes of opening the package.
Rip your CDG collection to a USB thumb drive using the one-touch converter. Test wireless microphone range from every corner of your home to find the best singing spots.
Host your first karaoke night with friends. Dial in your preferred DSP echo and reverb levels for the room size. Build a party playlist on a dedicated USB stick.
The rechargeable microphone batteries still hold a five-hour charge after weekly sessions. Your digital library has grown to two thousand tracks on one thumb drive, and the original CDG discs sit untouched in storage.
Problems Martin Ranger Solves
Common karaoke frustrations and how this equipment addresses each one
Bought a karaoke disc overseas and your player refuses to read it
Standard DVD players lock to one region code. A CDG compilation from the Philippines or a concert DVD from Japan sits in your collection unplayable. Martin Ranger players read all six DVD regions and every CDG format without firmware hacks or region-unlock codes.
Microphone cable too short to reach past the couch
A six-foot wired microphone keeps singers pinned next to the TV stand. Guests pass the mic awkwardly instead of performing freely. Martin Ranger UHF wireless systems cover 150 feet on a clear 900 MHz channel, so singers walk anywhere in the house.
Tinny speakers drown out vocals when the bass kicks in
Small all-in-one karaoke machines compress audio through a single 3-inch driver. Vocals disappear behind the backing track at higher volumes. Martin Ranger 3-way speakers separate bass, midrange, and treble across dedicated drivers up to 12 inches.
Spent an hour connecting cables and still no sound from the TV
Multi-component audio setups require AV receivers, optical cables, and input switching. A missed setting leaves the room silent. Martin Ranger bundles ship with one HDMI cable and a remote control. You plug in two cables and press play.
Disposable batteries die mid-song at the worst possible moment
AA batteries in wireless microphones fade after two hours of continuous use. A dead mic during a birthday toast kills the energy in the room. Martin Ranger wireless handhelds run on USB-rechargeable lithium cells that last five hours per charge and top off from any phone charger.
Expert Recommendation
I have tested dozens of karaoke rigs in the sub-$500 range, and Martin Ranger stands out for one reason: you get a matched component system instead of a plastic all-in-one box. The DVD player, amplifier, and speakers share the same connector standards and power specs, so you avoid the mismatched impedance problems that plague mix-and-match setups. The DSP processing on the MA2500DSP rivals standalone effects units that cost more than the entire amplifier. For anyone building a first home karaoke system or upgrading from a toy-grade machine, this brand delivers serious performance without the price tag of pro-audio gear.
Daniel Park
Home Audio & Karaoke Equipment Reviewer
- Pair the MA2500DSP amplifier with the 12-inch 3-way speakers and set the crossover at 300 Hz to keep vocals crisp and bass out of the midrange drivers
- Rip your CDG discs to MP3+G on a USB stick before your first party so you never fumble with disc binders mid-song
- Charge the wireless microphone batteries the night before each event and you will get five solid hours without signal fade
Who It's For
Four types of buyers who get the most out of Martin Ranger equipment
The Family Entertainer
You clear the living room furniture every Saturday night, hand one mic to your teenager and another to grandma, and rotate through a playlist of oldies and pop hits until someone calls bedtime. You need a system that sets up in five minutes and survives sticky fingers and dropped handhelds.
The Church Worship Leader
You run sound for a 200-seat fellowship hall where four vocalists share the stage during Sunday services. You need four wireless channels on a clean UHF frequency, XLR outputs for the house mixer, and rechargeable batteries that last through a two-hour service without fading.
The Party Host
You throw birthday parties, holiday gatherings, and housewarming events three or four times a year. You want a karaoke rig that stores in a closet between events, sets up before guests arrive, and plays CDG discs your relatives bring from overseas trips.
The Mobile DJ / KJ
You load equipment into a car trunk every Friday evening and set up in a different bar or community center each weekend. You need a 1,500-watt amplifier, a portable wireless mic system, and a USB stick loaded with two thousand MP3+G tracks instead of three boxes of CDG discs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the most common karaoke equipment questions
A home karaoke DVD player should read CDG discs, output HD video over HDMI, and include at least one microphone input. The Martin Ranger HDDVD600 meets all three criteria at $99. It plays ten disc formats region-free and reads MP3+G files from USB, which covers physical and digital karaoke libraries in one unit.
Region-free DVD players are legal to own and use in the United States. Region coding is a licensing scheme created by the DVD Forum, not a law. Manufacturers choose whether to enforce it. Martin Ranger builds all of its DVD players without region locks, so you can play discs purchased anywhere in the world.
Most karaoke discs use the CDG (CD+Graphics) format, which stores audio on a standard CD and embeds lyrics in the subcode channels. Some karaoke discs use DVD-Video with on-screen text. Martin Ranger players read both CDG and DVD karaoke formats, plus MP3+G files on USB drives.
Run an HDMI cable from the player's HDMI output to an available HDMI port on your TV. Switch the TV input to that port. The Martin Ranger players output at 1080p, so lyrics and on-screen menus appear sharp. If your TV lacks HDMI, use the included composite AV cables instead.
CDG stands for CD+Graphics. The disc plays audio like a normal CD, but stores low-resolution graphics in the subcode area of each audio frame. A CDG-compatible player decodes these graphics and displays synchronized lyrics on your TV. Martin Ranger DVD players decode CDG natively and also rip CDG discs to MP3+G for USB backup.
Karaoke machines accept standard dynamic microphones with XLR or quarter-inch connectors. You do not need a karaoke-branded microphone. Martin Ranger includes wired microphones with several of its bundles, and its UHF wireless systems connect through standard XLR outputs to any amplifier or mixer.
For a living room or small party (under 500 square feet), 100 to 300 watts provides clean volume. For larger rooms, fellowship halls, or outdoor events, 500 to 1,500 watts keeps headroom above feedback. The Martin Ranger MA2500DSP delivers 1,500 watts with DSP processing for rooms up to 2,000 square feet.
Most consumer UHF wireless microphones reach 100 to 300 feet in line-of-sight conditions. Martin Ranger systems operate above 900 MHz and achieve 150 feet in typical home use. The U6800R-MINI model extends to 210-250 feet line-of-sight with its PLL frequency synthesis technology.
Yes. Every Martin Ranger karaoke DVD player functions as a standard DVD player. It reads commercial DVDs, plays CDs, and outputs 1080p video over HDMI. The karaoke mixing features activate only when you connect a microphone and load a CDG or karaoke DVD disc.
DSP stands for Digital Signal Processing. In a karaoke amplifier, DSP applies effects such as echo, reverb, and key control to the microphone signal in real time. The Martin Ranger MA2500DSP processes these effects internally, so you do not need a separate effects pedal or laptop running audio software.
Martin Ranger wireless microphones use USB-rechargeable C8 lithium cells rated at 800 mAh. Owners report five hours of continuous singing per charge, with battery capacity holding steady through weekly use over a year or more. The rechargeable cells outlast disposable AAs in both per-session runtime and long-term cost.
Martin Ranger wireless microphones use zinc alloy metal bodies and metal mesh windscreens that resist drops and handling wear. The DVD players have slim plastic housings typical of consumer electronics. Buyers report reliable performance through regular weekly use. The most common concern is USB thumb drive compatibility: not all USB drive brands are recognized by the player.
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