AD161/162 amplifier schematics from Philips databook

I think the circuit in Figure 3.23 in that book is my first Hifi amplifier that I picked up as junk in about 1980. I gutted it out of a console stereo that had been dumped and made a new case for it. My speakers at the time were a DIY by my Father, using the Rola 6WR and 5FX. It had no over current protection for the output stage and would quickly destroy itself if the output was shorted. At least it wasn't too difficult buying the AD161 and AD162 transistors back then. That's a walk down memory lane, for sure.
 
Is it this amplifier? https://frank.pocnet.net/other/Philips/elcoma/Philips_SemiconductorsICs_2_1970-10.pdf
AD161_162_amp.png
 
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I had the Philips databook, but I probably discarded it several years ago.
I found a Siemens application, which is probably relatively similar:
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Edit: the one I remember was simpler than Martin's one. There were probably several variants published
 
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For goodness knows what reason, I have always hung-onto one pair of mint AD161 & AD162 transistors. I think their vintage is better than the very first.
That 8 W amp. design presented by @MartinX is soooo amazingly nostalgic 🙂
I would love to see some 'smart cookie' present a NON GERMANIUM 'equivalent' using today's higher spec. components and no thermistor.
PS.
I was always quite surprised at the collector current spec. of some AC series devices > and WHO remembers the 2N301 ???
 
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I seem to remember an AD160/161 10 W amp published in Practical Electronics in the very early 1970s (maybe ‘71 or ‘72) very similar to this. As with most of those vintage DIY amps, the internal wiring and construction were complex to say the least - but it looked good from the outside to my adolescent eyes. A few years later the ‘Texan’ came along and, using power silicon bipolars got a lot more power. Very nostalgic stuff!
 
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