These kits are published by Philips, not only in the Netherlands, but in many countries and native languages like Germany, USA (Norelco branded), Italy, Argentina and South Africa.
After the Philips Pionier Junior series Philips greatly enhanced the experimenters kit offering:
Not only were these kits quite
versatile, they were also offered in all majar countries in local
languages where Philips was active at that time.
On this page I show you the kits in my possession and the
pictures and manuals of a number of non-dutch kits.
I have the following manuals:
- the original manual that came with my EE8 box: dutch, colour
circuit diagrams and colour photo's of the board layouts. The
size is A4
- a dutch manual with the same contents but with a small
landscape A5 format in black and white
- a german manual in A4 format with inside two small landscape A5
format books.
- a french manual like the german
- a UK manual like my original
- a spanish manual
The Italian manual is scanned by Federico Paoletti, the Brasilian by Jose Daher de Barros. Photos of the Argentinian manual are made by Andres.
The Brasilian EE8/20 manual
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Part of the german manual in PDF format
, with contents page, list of experiments
and component list. |
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Part of the dutch colour manual
, also with lists of components and designs
and sample pages. An identical english version of the UK manual is available in the library of Tor Gjerde. |
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Part
1 of the dutch black and white manual
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LW add-on EE1916 as found on the library of Tor Gjerde It is a longwave add-on for RE and EE kits. See the picture on the right for the box. |
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Older version of the manual (see also the Carlo ten Hoope pictures ) |
Italian EE8/20 manual (thanks to Federico Paoletti) |
Look on this page where John Lusty from South Africa tells about the EE20 kit he bought at age 11 and how this influenced his career.
Hugo Sneyers acquired in 2005 an EE20 kit and found in the box (shown here) an addition to the midwave radio experiments: long wave radio ('grande onde' and 'petites onde'. I ahve acquired a similar kit recently.
After building my Pionier
Junior II and getting bored with the possibilities I managed to
get an EE8 kit. And this kit made it possible to explore much
more than just a radio: in total eight experiments (hence the
name EE8) including quite a good midwave radio receiver. The EE20
contains 20 experiments, the A20 box is the upgrade from EE8 to
EE20.
Watch out, I see offered on auction sites kits as EE20 which
in fact are A20 kits!
As a boy I did not have the money to get a A20 kit but since the
manual of the EE8 also covers the EE20 I did buy the components
like transistor and loudspeakers and build all the experiments.
And those components also were used to upgrade the Pionier II to
a sort of Pionier III radio.
The manual is, like the Pionier manual, quite good in explaining
the concepts of electronics.

The system of pinheads and
boards with holes, first available in the EE5/10 kits, is a big
improvement over the system of the Pionier Junior and is used in
the EE kits afterwards. Also the use of templates that are placed
on the board made building the experiments quite convenient. The
weak point is the the use of the transistors (germanium like
AF116 and AC126 as is, the wires break often and it is to easy to
wire them wrong.
The loudspeakers are small, and the quality is lousy. Attaching
with screws and bolts helps, and a separate board helps even
more, though it is not hifi. That lack of quality made me explore
building real quality amplifiers and loudspeakers and the EE8 kit
disappeared in the quick growing collection of electronic
components.
The designs in the EE8/20 are ranging from electronic organ, intercom to light-enabed switches and ofcourse the radio, as shown in the next picture.

Here you see the two EE8 (top) and EE20 (bottom) boxes I have now. The boxes contain lots of components in not-original locations and some extra.
The next picture shows a EE20 box in new state. Note the different sticker on the back of the loudspeaker.
Kevin Kingsland made some nice
photos of the EE20 as sold in the United Kingdom.
Click on the images to see a larger photo.

The EE8 UK variant
Thanks to Andres from Argentina I can show you the EE20 kit as made and sold in Argentina.
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I found an advertisement in a dutch magazine (august 1964) for the EE8/20 and the RE 1/2. Note the prices! Click on the pictures below to see a larger version.
The Mechanical Engineer kit
ME1200 and the EE8/20 are from the same period, around 1964.
See the ME1200
page how Philips made it possible
to combine the electronics of the EE8/20 with the mechanics of
the ME1200. This is repeated for the EE1003/ME1201 kits.
The transistors and diode in the EE8 and EE20 are germanium types. Not only is the construction method, by directly using the wires, dangerous for the lifetime, also the transistors like AF116 are quite vulnerable. I remember many visits to the electronics shop to buy replacements. The dutch may remember Aurora kontakt in the Vijzelstraat in Amsterdam!
The AF116 is very hard to replace these days. But types like the AF125, AF126 and AF127 are still available ( www.dil.nl in the Netherlands) and do perform quite well as replacement.
The AC126 and AC128 are still for sale as are germanium diodes like the OA90.
The next picture may help in using these replacement transistors.


German A20 kit
Above the german manual,
bottom the dutch colour version
EE1916 LW add-on

Combination of ME1200 and EE20