Philips CD 960
Data[edit]
General
- Manufacturer: Philips
- Model: CD 960
- Type: CD player
- Years of manufacture: 1987 - 1989
- Made in: Japan Marantz
- Color: Black
- Dimensions: 420 x 100 x 378 mm
- Weight: 10 kg
- Original price approx.: 2'000 DM / 1987
Technical data
- Sampling frequency: 44.1 kHz
- Quantization: 16 bit linear/channel
- Frequency range: 2 to 20 000 Hz
- Amplitude linearity: +/- 2° (20 - 20 000 Hz)
- Phrase linearity: +/- 2% (20 - 20 000 Hz)
- Dynamic range: 96 dB (20 - 20 000 Hz)
- Signal-to-noise ratio: 101 dB (20 - 20 000 Hz)
- Channel separation: 100 dB (20 - 20 000 Hz)
- Distortion factor: 0.0015% (20 - 20 000 Hz)
- Coincidence fluctuations: Quartz Precision
- Digital to Analogue Conversion: 4x (176.4 kHz) Oversampling with "SAA7220p/A" Digital Filter and a "TDA1541" 16-bit D/A Converter
- CD drive: CDM 1
- Error correction system: Cross Intereaved Reed Solomon Code (CIRC)
Special Features
- Title program playback
- Random playback
- Repeat of a title or the whole CD
- FTS memory
- Automatic insertion of blanks
- Digital output optical and coaxial
- Cinch output gold-plated
Remarks[edit]
- Other models in the same series:
- Integrated amplifiers:
- Philips FA 960
- Tuners:
- Philips FT 980
- A/V receiver:
- Philips FR 980
- CD player:
- Philips CD 960
- D/A converter:
- Philips DAC 960
Pictures[edit]
- Image: Philips CD 960
Courtesy of audioScope. A use of the pictures by third parties, e.g. in forums or on eBay is not permitted! |
- Image: Philips CD 960
- Excerpt from US advertisement: Philips CD 960
Reviews[edit]
- The Philips CD-960 is largely identical in construction to the Marantz CD-94, CD-95, CD-99, CD-12, the Philips LHH-1000, the Micro Seiki CD-M2, CD-M100, CD-M2000X, and the Wadia WT-3200, and ran off the assembly lines of the Marantz manufacturing facilities in Japan along with them.
The CD-960 is the most expensive CD player ever sold by Philips. The massive chassis is made of die-cast zinc, the power supply is more likely to be found in a mid-range integrated amplifier today, and two icons tower above it all - the indestructible Philips CDM1 turntable, also made of die-cast zinc and with glass lenses by Rodenstock, and probably the most musical digital/analogue converter ever, the Philips TDA1541.
Links[edit]
- Link and pictures: http://www.dutchaudioclassics.nl/philips_cd960_cdplayer/