• Year
  • 1986/1987 ?
  • Category
  • Sound/Video Recorder and/or Player
  • Radiomuseum.org ID
  • 322363

 Technical Specifications

  • Number of Transistors
  • Semiconductors present.
  • Semiconductors
  • Wave bands
  • - without
  • Details
  • CD-Player, -Writer, MD, MOD (audio); Hi-Fi equipment
  • Power type and voltage
  • Alternating Current supply (AC) / 117; 220-240 Volt
  • Loudspeaker
  • - For headphones or amp.
  • Material
  • Metal case
  • from Radiomuseum.org
  • Model: PCM 4000 - Mission Electronics ;
  • Shape
  • Book-shelf unit.
  • Dimensions (WHD)
  • 430 x 85 x 300 mm / 16.9 x 3.3 x 11.8 inch
  • Notes
  • A hi-fi stereo compact disc player with PCM (Pulse Code Modulation) Linear Phase Full Digital Processing.

    Features

    • 4x Oversampling, full 16 bit.
    • Twin DACs (Philips TDA1541),  VLSI technology.
    • Random order 20 track/index programming
    • Single laser pickup system (Philips CDM2/10)
    • Program review-add/correct facility
    • Three speed search -10dB attenuation
    • Full function interactive Fluorescent Tube Display
    • Electronically generated display of:
    •   Track/Index numbers;
    •   Elapsed/Remaining/Total time;
    •   Play, Pause, FFW and REW;
    •   Repeat, Store; Track/Disc errors etc.
    • Motorised loading, anti-jamming protection
    • Output headphone jack
    • RCA phono Line Output
    • Standard format digital output
    Specification  
    Frequency response 20Hz-20kHz
    Signal-to-noise ratio (20Hz-20kHz) 96dB
    Output Level 2V nom.
    Total Harmonic Distortion  
     At 0dB
     At -10dB
    0.003%
    0.008%
    Intermodulation distortion  
     At 0dB, 19kHz/20kHz
     At -10dB, 19kHz/20kHz
    0.002%
    0.003%
    Channel balance ±0.2dB
    Channel separation 90dB
    Error correction capability 900µm

    Made in Belgium

     See also the similar Mission PCM 7000 which has more features and remote control.

  • Mentioned in
  • -- Original prospect or advert (Mission The Human Touch catalogue)
  • Author
  • Model page created by Howard Craven. See "Data change" for further contributors.

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