Sanyo Hi Fi System sold in UK in 1994 Product code Sys 994 I have lost the user manual...

G

georgewbell

Guest
Good afternoon,

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around 1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the United Arab Emirates.

At this time I was often in all three places so anything is possible.

Does anyone know when Sanyo was taken over and by whom. If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad to pay for it to be copied It ended up in a container. That is where I have recently found it and I do not think it was ever used, it looks brand new. It was a fairly popular item.

Any ideas? Thanks George.
 
On 6/14/2020 9:56 AM, georgewbell wrote:
Good afternoon,

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around 1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the United Arab Emirates.

At this time I was often in all three places so anything is possible.

Does anyone know when Sanyo was taken over and by whom. If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad to pay for it to be copied It ended up in a container. That is where I have recently found it and I do not think it was ever used, it looks brand new. It was a fairly popular item.

Any ideas? Thanks George.
Did you try this site?
https://www.sanyo-av.com/us/support/download.php
 
On Sunday, 14 June 2020 17:56:45 UTC+1, georgewbell wrote:
Good afternoon,

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around 1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the United Arab Emirates.

At this time I was often in all three places so anything is possible.

Does anyone know when Sanyo was taken over and by whom. If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad to pay for it to be copied It ended up in a container. That is where I have recently found it and I do not think it was ever used, it looks brand new. It was a fairly popular item.

Any ideas? Thanks George.

Thanks for the link Mike, however it did not react to either of the two product codes. I have the 1994 25th anniversary of Sanyo, hand out issued in UK and this Wi Fi system is featured, but on all the handbook sites this code SYS 994 and the actual one on the back of the unit is DC-X994 and the fact that it was made in Singapore. It really looks like something I could put to good use if I had the instructions and it is like new, having been stored in a 20 ft. container for the last 16 years. The container is crammed with the result of three house fulls of mostly furniture and will take ages to unpack. Regards George.
 
On Sunday, 14 June 2020 17:56:45 UTC+1, georgewbell wrote:
Good afternoon,

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around 1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the United Arab Emirates.

At this time I was often in all three places so anything is possible.

Does anyone know when Sanyo was taken over and by whom. If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad to pay for it to be copied It ended up in a container. That is where I have recently found it and I do not think it was ever used, it looks brand new. It was a fairly popular item.

Any ideas? Thanks George.

Thanks for the link Mike, however it did not react to either of the two product codes. I have the 1994 25th anniversary of Sanyo, hand out issued in UK and this Wi Fi system is featured, but on all the handbook sites this code SYS 994 and the actual one on the back of the unit is DC-X994 and the fact that it was made in Singapore. It really looks like something I could put to good use if I had the instructions and it is like new, having been stored in a 20 ft. container for the last 16 years. The container is crammed with the result of three house fulls of mostly furniture and will take ages to unpack. Regards George.
 
georgewbell <georgewbell@hotmail.com> wrote:

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above
equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around
1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was
made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks
like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the
United Arab Emirates.

What exactly is a \"Hi Fi System\"?

Is this a stereo receiver for the home or some kind of ghetto boombox?

If it\'s the latter, I\'d give up now.

Most of those things from the 80\'s and early 90\'s were probably built from
boards/modules cranked out by chinese or korean white box companies and just
assembled by companies like Sanyo, if they had anything to do with it in the
first place.

Plus what is so complicated with it you need the user manual?

On/off, selector knob or switch for the input, after that, volume and tone
to taste. What else do you need to know?

-bruce
bje@ripco.com
 
georgewbell <georgewbell@hotmail.com> wrote:

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above
equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around
1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was
made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks
like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the
United Arab Emirates.

What exactly is a \"Hi Fi System\"?

Is this a stereo receiver for the home or some kind of ghetto boombox?

If it\'s the latter, I\'d give up now.

Most of those things from the 80\'s and early 90\'s were probably built from
boards/modules cranked out by chinese or korean white box companies and just
assembled by companies like Sanyo, if they had anything to do with it in the
first place.

Plus what is so complicated with it you need the user manual?

On/off, selector knob or switch for the input, after that, volume and tone
to taste. What else do you need to know?

-bruce
bje@ripco.com
 
On 14/06/20 17:56, georgewbell wrote:
Good afternoon,

Does anyone know who might be able to supply the user manual for the above equipment which I recently found in a lot of things we bought in around 1994 It says on the back that it is called a DC-X994 and it says it was made in Singapore, but I do have the Sanyo advert in UK in which it looks like a salesman selected it for me and I actually purchased it in the United Arab Emirates.

At this time I was often in all three places so anything is possible.

Does anyone know when Sanyo was taken over and by whom. If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad to pay for it to be copied It ended up in a container. That is where I have recently found it and I do not think it was ever used, it looks brand new. It was a fairly popular item.

Any ideas? Thanks George.

Both the operating guide and service manual are listed on this page at
£7.49 each:
<http://mauritron.com/sanyo.html>

--

Jeff
 
Jeff Layman:

You serious?

You think anyone would pay the equivalent of USD$12 for three to four sheets of
paper folded over and stapled double??

Instructions should always be FREE. They\'re included in the cost of the product,
FFS..
 
On 6/20/20 11:24 AM, thekmanrocks@gmail.com wrote:
Jeff Layman:

You serious?

You think anyone would pay the equivalent of USD$12 for three to four sheets of
paper folded over and stapled double??

Instructions should always be FREE. They\'re included in the cost of the product,
FFS..

Instructions are like locks.
They\'re only worth what you pay for them.
You can buy a Kwikset door lock for $15 and open it with a pair of
Channel Locks or you can buy a Medico for $300 and sleep at night.

--
\"I am a river to my people.\"
Jeff-1.0
WA6FWi
http:foxsmercantile.com
 
No lock is any better than the frame it is in. Nor do most thieves come at night.

Out on the Main Line (look it up!) there was a group that worked out of a large box-truck. They would pull up into a driveway (no sidewalks out there), put a large sign in the yard: House And Yard Clean-Outs, Fast Personal Service

Then, do just that.

Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
 
On 20/06/20 17:24, thekmanrocks@gmail.com wrote:
Jeff Layman:

You serious?

It\'s a source of the info the OP wanted.

You think anyone would pay the equivalent of USD$12 for three to four sheets of
paper folded over and stapled double??

Instructions should always be FREE. They\'re included in the cost of the product,
FFS..

To quote the OP: \"If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad
to pay for it to be copied\"

If nobody has a copy, or they are not willing to photocopy it, and the
OP really wants the info, then somebody has the market cornered if
/they/ have a copy. How do you think all these websites selling this
info survive?

--

Jeff
 
On 20/06/20 17:24, thekmanrocks@gmail.com wrote:
Jeff Layman:

You serious?

It\'s a source of the info the OP wanted.

You think anyone would pay the equivalent of USD$12 for three to four sheets of
paper folded over and stapled double??

Instructions should always be FREE. They\'re included in the cost of the product,
FFS..

To quote the OP: \"If anyone has one of these handbooks, I would be glad
to pay for it to be copied\"

If nobody has a copy, or they are not willing to photocopy it, and the
OP really wants the info, then somebody has the market cornered if
/they/ have a copy. How do you think all these websites selling this
info survive?

--

Jeff
 
On Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 12:53:44 PM UTC-4, Peter W. wrote:
No lock is any better than the frame it is in. Nor do most thieves come at night.

Out on the Main Line (look it up!) there was a group that worked out of a large box-truck. They would pull up into a driveway (no sidewalks out there), put a large sign in the yard: House And Yard Clean-Outs, Fast Personal Service

Then, do just that.

I like how in the early 60\'s a US satellite focused all the way in on a single golf ball. I wonder how much of that photography (or other ground detail replications) prosecutors can get their hands on.
 
On Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 12:53:44 PM UTC-4, Peter W. wrote:
No lock is any better than the frame it is in. Nor do most thieves come at night.

Out on the Main Line (look it up!) there was a group that worked out of a large box-truck. They would pull up into a driveway (no sidewalks out there), put a large sign in the yard: House And Yard Clean-Outs, Fast Personal Service

Then, do just that.

I like how in the early 60\'s a US satellite focused all the way in on a single golf ball. I wonder how much of that photography (or other ground detail replications) prosecutors can get their hands on.
 

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