Hi Mika
My personal preference is for the old style tuners, with the coils, instead of ceramic filters. The ceramic filter was introduced to save costs.
I have restored a number of 1950's Grundig and Saba tube radios (not B&O) with coil filters, and they ALL have far superior reception to modern radios.
The 10.7MHz ceramic filters of those times are really noisy, with noise figures of about 7-10dB.
They also have incredibly wide skirts - between 280-350kHz, which makes it very difficult to receive marginal stations, located between the strong local stations.
Today, Murata's best ceramic filters have noise figures of 3-4dB.
On all my radio equipment (not only B&O), I replace the factory-fitted filters with new Murata units with 150KHz wide skirts.
On the B&O receivers especially, a moderate tuner becomes a powerhouse, being able to pull in previously impossible stations.
A new alignment is essential (easy with the Service Manual), also because the older 10.7MHz filters were usually not manufactured to tight tolerances on exactly 10.7MHz, but sometimes as far off as 10.6MHz, and if you just insert a new accurate 10.7MHz filter (without realignment), you'll be missing a large part of the signal.
And anyway, many times the radio was not aligned properly during production, so a realignment after 30-40 years does wonders.
Bottom line - buy it if you want, but change the filter, and realign. If you have one with a coil tuner, don't change it to a ceramic one.
Menahem
Learn from the mistakes of others - you'll not live long enough to make them all yourself!