Grundig Satellite 400 User Manual

Grundig Satellite 400 User Manual 7,4/10 8928 votes

Foxconn n15235 harakteristika foto. The right name is P4M800P7MB-RS2H You should find the right model number printed on the board beside the RAM slot near the CPU and on small label above. Hi, I think there isn't a Foxconn mainboard called N15235 although this is printed on the board. The overview of specifications (from Foxconn site) is as under: - - Intel® Pentium D, Pentium® 4, Celeron D processors, Socket T (LGA775) - 533/800MHz front side bus (FSB) - Single channel DDRII 533 / 400 x2 DIMMs - 1 x AGP 8x, 3 x PCI - ATA x 2 + Serial ATA x 2 w/ RAID - 5.1 channel Audio, AC'97 interface (Realtek) - 10/100M LAN (Realtek) - 8 USB 2.0 ports From the above link from Foxconn Official site, you can download the detailed user guide/ manual.

Mods.dk -> Instruction, users and service manuals for Grundig Main Menu Manuals for Grundig This is the manuals page for Grundig. In this page you find schematic, users and instructions manuals, service manuals, technical supplement, leaf leads and other good stuff. If you have some stuff that not is listed here you can donate this.

This is the manual page for Grundig. Here you will find instruction manuals, service manuals, user guides. Satellit-400 Service manual.zip, 2.969 Kbytes. The Grundig Satellit 400 came as a completely reengineered successor of the. Operation and needs another three UM-3 cells to keep the microprocessor. Knob at the right hand of the radio (the display indicates HA (manual tuning), the.

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T THE GRUNDIG SATELLIT 210 A semi-technical, nostalgic step back in time As a lifelong radio hobbyist and professional, I have had the opportunity to check out many types of consumer radios, from the tube sets of the 40′s and 50′s through transistorized radios from the late 50′s and 60′s up through the present day offerings from China. The Grundig Satellit 800 does not spring from the European heritage of Max Grundigonly the name is the same. Although I admire the Satellit 800 for what it does well (which is considerable) this radio has nothing at all to do with the original European Grundig company which marketed many high quality audio products, and its famous “Satellit” range of radios (“Satellit” is the proper spelling) beginning with the Satellit 205 introduced in 1964 through the model 700 which ceased production in 1996. Interestingly I never saw too many Grundig or other European radios, and perhaps when I did I somehow didn’t lock into them as I would more familiar US and later Japanese manufacturers. I happen to belong to a small group of radio enthusiastsyes you could call them fanatics who have embraced the Grundig Satellit’s as among their favorite SW portable receivers ever made.

Many are really too big to be considered portables and actually are better as large table top sets, but they all operate on batteries or AC power and have built-in antennas and handles so they can be carried around and taken outdoors and so are technically portable. To try to get up to speed on what the excitement was all about I bought a copy of Thomas Baier’s chronicle of the Satellit line, “Grundig Satellit – All Models In Word And Picture” (available through Universal). As I read the book and followed the history of this ambitious line of radios, the pride of German engineering which went into them became evident. Perhaps one of the reasons they weren’t imported into the US in greater numbers had to do with their price. At a time when Zenith Trans-Oceanics were being highly promoted in print advertising and were considered premium radios selling for around $150, a Grundig Satellit would set an American customer back approximately $500 – $600!

Part of the high cost was the fact that they were imported from Germany, but they were intrinsically more complex, more highly engineered instruments and were still a luxury item even in Germany. Zenith A600L Trans-oceanic As a “Zenith Man” I will admit I’ve always been in love with Zenith’s better radios.