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Contributions to Siemens RS-806 (current version)

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Version
Version Date User
2015-04-09 05:29 Reli
2015-06-01 17:04 Reli
2015-06-01 17:03 Reli
2015-05-22 18:13 Reli
2015-05-22 18:11 Reli
2015-04-25 17:54 Reli
2015-04-09 06:05 Reli
2015-04-09 06:02 Reli
2015-04-09 05:57 Reli
2015-04-09 05:34 Reli
2015-04-09 05:31 Reli
2015-04-09 05:29 Reli

Statistics

Author Words Whitespaces Characters Printable characters
Used Deleted Used Deleted Used Deleted Used Deleted
Reli 173 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%) 128 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%) 972 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%) 726 (100.0%) 0 (0.0%)
Total 173 (100.0%) 0 (100.0%) 128 (100.0%) 0 (100.0%) 972 (100.0%) 0 (100.0%) 726 (100.0%) 0 (100 %)

Page changes

The <a class="wiki" href="Siemens" rel="">Siemens</a> RS-806 is an AKA of the <a class="wiki" href="Sanyo C7" rel="">Sanyo C7</a>. It is a 3-piece boombox, but it's also a true component system. That's right, the amp, tuner, and tape deck are all separate components that can be split apart. And they each had metal cases. Such a refreshing change from all the competitors who abused the word "component" or "compo" by slapping it onto low-quality 1-piece systems with lines cut between each "component" to make it look like it could separate, when it really couldn't.

It is dual voltage (110 and 220 volts), and can also operate on 9 D-cell batteries that go into a door below the tape deck. It is very heavy for its size (23 lbs without batteries), because of the separate component configuration. The tape deck has logic controls, Dolby, and music search.

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