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At £74, this looks like a fair-to-good ask for a Philips FA773, and probably reasonable rather than a standout bargain. The catch is that the market is thin enough on this model that exact benchmarking is fuzzy, but for a vintage Philips integrated in working order, £74 sits in sensible territory if it’s complete and healthy.

What makes it worth a look is the usual Philips upside: solid, unfussy build, decent phono stage, and a very listenable, no-nonsense presentation that suits everyday system duty. If the seller can confirm clean operation, intact controls, and original internals, it’s the kind of amp that can be a tidy buy. I’d only want extra reassurance on service history if it’s been sitting unused for years.

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

About Philips

Founded in Eindhoven, Netherlands, in 1891 by Gerard Philips, an engineer, and his father Frederik, a banker, Philips began as a modest light bulb manufacturer, quickly evolving into a global electronics powerhouse through relentless innovation. The brothers' early focus on quality incandescent lamps laid the groundwork for expansion into radios, televisions, and audio milestones like the 1963 compact cassette and the 1982 Compact Disc co-developed with Sony. This heritage of pioneering formats that reshaped home entertainment cements Philips as a cornerstone of 20th-century audio history.

Philips has long excelled in consumer audio categories, from vintage turntables and cassette decks to amplifiers, speakers, and complete hi-fi systems, often blending cutting-edge tech with practical design. Iconic products like the first CD player (CD-100) and early wireless Streamium systems highlight their prowess in optical media, portable recording, and integrated sound solutions, while forays into headphones and even acquiring Marantz underscored a broad portfolio.

Today, Philips occupies a solid mid-tier position in the hi-fi market, prized by savvy buyers for reliable, value-driven performance rather than ultra-high-end exotica. No longer a full-spectrum electronics giant—having pivoted to health tech—its licensed audio branding delivers competent, innovation-rooted gear that's accessible yet evocative of golden-era nostalgia, appealing to both modern enthusiasts and vintage collectors.

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