| Country: Netherlands | Manufacturer/Brand: Philips; - Eindhoven; Netherlands |
| Year: 1961 – 1963 | Type: Radio or Tuner |
| Valves / Tubes | 10: ECC85 ECH81 EF89 EBF89 EM80 EAA91 ECC83 EL84 EL84 EZ81 |
|---|---|
| Transistors | 1: |
| Principle | Super-Heterodyne (Super in general); IF-Freq. 452/10700 kHz |
|---|---|
| Tuned circuits | 6 AM circuit(s); 11 FM-circuit(s) |
| Wave bands | Broadcast, Long Wave, Short Wave plus FM. |
| Power type and voltage | Alternating Current supply (AC) / 110; 127; 145; 165; 220; 245 Volt |
| Loudspeaker/pwr.out | 2 Loudspeakers / 3 W / Ø 21 cm = 8.3 inch |
| from Radiomuseum.org | Model: Capella-Reverbeo B7X14A/00 [452 kHz] |
| Material | Wooden case |
| Shape | Tablemodel with Push Buttons. |
| Dimensions (WHD) | 712 x 265 x 292 mm / 28 x 10.4 x 11.5 inch |
| Notes | Transistor: OC71 (reverberation amplifier). Loudspeakers: AD3800AM (800 Ohm). Bi-amplifier, stereo only for pik-up and tape. Dial lamp 2x 8024N (6,3V/0,3A). |
This model was suggested by Antonio Martins-Pais.
All listed radios etc. from Philips; - Eindhoven; Netherlands
Here you find 2021 models, 1718 with images and 1356 with schematics.
Collection of Markus Müller (CH)
Collection of Ashis Mukerjea (CDN)
Collection of Antonio Martins-Pais (P)
Collection of José Manuel Silvestre (P)
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Hits: 239 Replies: 0
philips: B7X14A/00 ; Capella-Reverbeo
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David Schulman
23.Jan.09 |
1
Hello to all, this is my first post to these forums and I would be grateful to any assistance. I have a model B7X14A/04, however, the model here is the /00 model. Does anyone have any information on what the major differences are between the two. They do look different, but other than that, I really don't know what the differences are between the two models. I haven't been able to locate any information on the internet for the model I have either. A link to a photo of my set is below. Thanks for any input. David, WD0ERU |
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Bernhard Nagel
23.Jan.09 |
2
Please compare the dials from both B7X14A/00 and your ../04 model. 00 is an european version, FM reception is limited to 100 MHz and the MW (BC) range shows various station names of (mostly european) broadcasting transmitters. Your pictured model is an export version for the north american market: FM reaches to 108 MHz, and all AM ranges has no station names. Maybe also markings like CD appears above the BC kHz markings. CD stands for civil defense, this was important in the times of cold war... Please make a new model suggestion since your Philips B7X14A/04 isn't listed in the RMorg database. Thanks and best regards, Bernhard |
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David Schulman
23.Jan.09 |
3
Bernhard, thank you for the information. I will be making a new model suggestion in the next couple of days. David |