580
Item nr.


Philips L3X86T Evette Chassis

Sharpie/Evette with Tropical Band


Data for Philips L3X86T
ProductionBelgium, 1958.
BandsMW (512-1635kHz), TB (1.61-4.1MHz).
Semi-
conductors
OC170 (mixer), 2x OC45 (IF amp), OA79 (det.), 2x OC71 (AF amp), 2x OC72 (output).
CabinetPlastic. Size 28x18x9cm (when complete). Weight 2.5kg.
PowerBatt 6xD, 14-30mA.
DocumentsSchema.

The Design

In 1957, when the first transistor radios appeared on the market, only Long Wave and medium Wave frequencies could be handled with the mostly used OC44 mixer. In 1958, the OC170 converter (found only rarely in 1957) became more common and Tropical and Short Wave reception became possible. To keep leads as short as possible, the OC170 converter is mounted on the back of the band switch.

Obtained4/2023 from Jan Broer.
Condition4; plays well, but just chassis.
Value (est.)3,3€.
NeedsCabinet and dial for L3X86T.

This Object

The chassis works, but is very incomplete. I have opened and cleansed the volume pot, after wich the radio worked fine on a 9V battery.

To my surprise, the radio is quite sensitive and receives pirate stations in the 180m band better than my other radio's. The pirate band stretches over more than 1cm over the dial pulley and I fetched a sticker with mini-dial there. It is illuminated by a small green LED, taking about 1.2mA, to help me remind to switch off the radio.


Part of Gerard's Radio Corner.
Generated by SiteBuilder on 26/2/2024 by Gerard (g.tel@uu.nl)