• Year
  • 1929 ??
  • Category
  • Sound/Video Recorder and/or Player
  • Radiomuseum.org ID
  • 158837

 Technical Specifications

  • Number of Tubes
  • 2
  • Main principle
  • Audio-Amplification
  • Wave bands
  • - without
  • Details
  • Record Player (not changer)
  • Power type and voltage
  • Alternating Current supply (AC) / 195-255 Volt
  • Loudspeaker
  • Permanent or electro-dynamic (moving coil), system not known yet.
  • Material
  • Wooden case
  • from Radiomuseum.org
  • Model: Panatrope - British Brunswick Ltd., &
  • Shape
  • Console, Lowboy (legs < 50 %).
  • Source of data
  • -- Schematic
  • Literature/Schematics (1)
  • Paul Stennings DVD
  • Author
  • Model page created by Keith Staines. See "Data change" for further contributors.

 Collections | Museums | Literature

 Forum

Forum contributions about this model: British Brunswick: Panatrope

Threads: 1 | Posts: 1

The British Brunswick LTD. London wrote about the Panatrope on a record sleeve: "This instrument holds you spellbound and makes the music of any record leap into life so marvellously that you think the original performance is beeing re-played. It can also be used as a perfect loud-speaker to your wireless set."

They detailed the difference between "The Old Method" (mechanical recording and reproduction)

and "The Brunswick Method":

Obviously there was also a difference between advertisement (frequency range 16Hz-21kHz for recording!) and truth - even if Brunswick records of those times was of similar quality as of some other major record companies. But they wrote about electrical reproduction with the Panatrope "There are no limitations to electrical recording."

Georg Richter, 23.Oct.09

Weitere Posts (1) zu diesem Thema.