910 Stereo
Emud, Ernst Mästling; Ulm
- Paese
- Germania
- Produttore / Marca
- Emud, Ernst Mästling; Ulm
- Anno
- 1959 ?
- Categoria
- Radio (o sintonizzatore del dopoguerra WW2)
- Radiomuseum.org ID
- 116943
Clicca sulla miniatura dello schema per richiederlo come documento gratuito.
- Numero di tubi
- 10
- Principio generale
- Supereterodina (in generale); ZF/IF 460/10700 kHz
- Gamme d'onda
- Onde medie (OM), corte (OC) e FM.
- Tensioni di funzionamento
- Alimentazione a corrente alternata (CA) / 110 Volt
- Altoparlante
- 6 altoparlanti
- Radiomuseum.org
- Modello: 910 Stereo - Emud, Ernst Mästling; Ulm
- Annotazioni
- Mono Radio mit Gegentakt-Endstufe, umschaltbar auf Stereo-NF-Verstärker mit jeweils einer EL84 pro Kanal.
- Letteratura / Schemi (1)
- -- Original-techn. papers.
- Autore
- Modello inviato da Pius Steiner. Utilizzare "Proponi modifica" per inviare ulteriori dati.
- Altri modelli
-
In questo link sono elencati 422 modelli, di cui 328 con immagini e 231 con schemi.
Elenco delle radio e altri apparecchi della Emud, Ernst Mästling; Ulm
Discussioni nel forum su questo modello: Emud, Ernst Mästling: 910 Stereo
Argomenti: 2 | Articoli: 7
Gregg Ruecker, 24.Jan.15
Greetings,
I am a new member with Radiomuseum and I live in the United States. I am a Ham operator and tube hobbyist. I have restored many amps and tuners form the US. I have just recently started to work on a beautiful Emud console stereo, model #910. I have the schematic and I have this question. The way the schematic is shown is a bit different from what I am used to here in the US. Can anyone help me understand the Europeon schematics. My main question is how the switches are displayed and identified. On the schematic that I have, it shows the switches with numbered circles and there is a table with dots that somehow correspond to the different switches. The switches are not actually named on the schematic. Can anyone help me understand how to put these two pieces of information together to identify the swiches in the schematic? Also, in the US we often have two seperate output transformers for a stereo amplifier. It appears that this chassis has only one OT. Am I to assume two seperate windings in this transformer? It also appears that the negative feedback is taken from a seperate tap on the transformer....is this also common? Anyway, I find the unit to be very nicely built and am looking forward to getting it operational...it's just a little different from what I am used to so any help would be greatly appreciated. Please excuse my dumb questions.
Thanks,
Gregg Ruecker
edited the title
Gregg Ruecker, 04.Mar.10