Revox B225 CD Player
- Condition
- Good
- Location
- Saarland, DE
- Source
- Kleinanzeigen
- Posted
- 27 Apr 2026
- Last seen
- 19h ago
RADAR is a price search engine. We link to the original listing — we never sell direct. Transactions happen on the source site.
RADAR is a price search engine. We link to the original listing — we never sell direct. Transactions happen on the source site.
Revox B225 inkl Bedienungsanleitung und Kabel.
Voll funktionsfähig.
Zahlung mit PayPal oder Überweisung.
€450 is ambitious versus the current comparable market: it sits well above the median €305 and even above the 75th percentile €378, so you’re paying a premium rather than a normal used price.
That only makes sense if this one is unusually clean, fully serviced, or comes with sought-after extras. The B225 is a respected classic CD player with real collector appeal and a reputation for solid build and mature, musical playback, so a tidy example can still be worth chasing. At €450, I’d want strong reassurance on laser health, disc-read reliability, and any maintenance history before treating it as a buy.
Independent perspective — not a price guarantee. Always verify condition, accessories and provenance before purchase.
Revox traces its origins to 1948 in Herisau, Switzerland, when Willi Studer founded his company as a workshop for electronic equipment, initially producing high-voltage oscilloscopes and early reel-to-reel tape machines under the Dynavox name. By 1951, Studer launched the first Revox-branded recorder, the T26, marking the brand's entry into premium consumer audio while reserving the Studer name for professional studio gear. This Swiss precision engineering heritage propelled Revox through decades of innovation, from the iconic A77 tape deck in 1977—paired with matching amplifiers, tuners, and turntables—to speaker development starting with the AX series in the 1970s, all designed to deliver studio-grade fidelity to discerning home listeners.
The brand's product focus centered on high-end analog playback, excelling in reel-to-reel tape recorders like the legendary A77 and B77, which became staples for audiophiles. Revox expanded into complete hi-fi systems, including integrated amplifiers, FM tuners, turntables sourced from partners like Thorens, and loudspeakers manufactured in their Black Forest facilities. While digital components like DACs and modern streaming gear emerged later, the core legacy remains in meticulously engineered tape machines and matched system components that prioritized sonic purity over mass-market appeal.
Today, Revox holds a revered position as a high-end vintage icon and collector's favorite, synonymous with uncompromising Swiss build quality and studio-derived performance. Though separated from Studer in 1994, the brand endures as a niche boutique force, recently reviving reel-to-reel production in 2016 with partners like Horch House, appealing to purists who value heritage engineering in an era of digital convenience.
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