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Seller's Description

For sale a beautiful, superb sounding tube integrated amplifier. The power tubes are the Siemens F2A (they need no presentation). Heavy, fantastic machine with an incredible sound, impressive dynamics and high end components. You are welcome to test at my house in Bonn. It comes with four additional F2A tubes which I have not tested. Given the weight I can not ship. Since I am a private I can not offer warrenty nor return. Please have a look to my other listings.

Our Thoughts RADAR AI

This is a fair ask, leaning slightly strong only if you were hoping for a quick deal. At €1,000, it sits below the recent used-market median of €1,179 and clearly under the €1,267 upper quartile, so it’s sensibly priced for an “excellent” example rather than a steal.

Before buying, verify exactly what’s included: these kinds of cables/accessories listings often live or die on connectors, length, and whether any adapters or original packaging are present. Also check for oxidation, bent pins, intermittent continuity, or any signs of hard use at the terminations — cosmetic wear is one thing, but poor contacts or hidden damage can turn a good-looking piece into a hassle.

Independent perspective — not a price guarantee. Always verify condition, accessories and provenance before purchase.

About Siemens

Siemens is a German industrial and technology company founded in Berlin in 1847 by Werner von Siemens and Johann Georg Halske. Its heritage is firmly rooted in electrical engineering, beginning with the pointer telegraph and expanding over more than 175 years into a global electronics and infrastructure giant. While not primarily an audio brand in the consumer hi-fi sense, Siemens has had long-running relevance in communications, broadcast, and professional electronics.

In audio, Siemens is best associated with professional and industrial electronics, communications equipment, and historically with parts and tubes rather than with mainstream hi-fi products. It is not known as a major maker of amplifiers, speakers, turntables, DACs, headphones, or cables for the consumer market. Where the name appears in audio circles, it is usually tied to vintage German valves/tubes, broadcast components, or related technical hardware.

As a hi-fi brand, Siemens sits outside the usual high-end or mid-tier consumer landscape. Its reputation is strongest among collectors, engineers, and vintage-audio enthusiasts who value German-built components and historic tube gear. For buyers seeking modern audiophile separates, Siemens is not a primary brand; for those hunting classic European parts and legacy technical quality, it has real cachet.

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