I did not see my console listed-Futura Model F-5593, owners manual is dated 1966, unit has a Dual 1015 turntable, receiver appears to be the Fisher 220-T
Let me begin by welcoming you to Audiokarma. That's a very odd Fisher console you have. I had to do a lot of digging through my records to try to piece together its story.
The reason you don't see any like it listed in the Compendium is that it is the first example of its kind to surface. You won't find it at the fisherconsoles.com website either. I'm not exactly sure what model year it would fall under but I'm pretty sure it's not a '66 - more likely '67-'68. The cabinet appears in the '69 catalog but that year's Futura had a
Tune-O-Matic receiver. (24-R/250-T/250-TX)? Below are the applicable pages of the '69 Fisher console catalog. Yours is 'C': Country English in Mahogany - as noted on the build sheet attached to the back of your cabinet, i.e. CEM.
Your receiver does indeed appear to be a 220-T. Have you ever looked at the back/bottom of the receiver to see if there is a model number there? Sometimes when Fisher used a receiver in a console they used a special model number as in the above 24-R/250-T/250-TX example. The 220-T dates from around 1967 so your console is possibly from that model year. The 1966 copyright date supports that since Fisher's literature was usually prepared in advance - as you would expect.
However, the cabinet being used in '69 makes me suspect it was from the '68 model year. The F-5593 model number also supports 1968 since the few new models from that year - like the Diplomat D-393 - all ended with the digits '93'. '67s were '92' and '69s were '94'. Have you ever checked the IEA codes on the speakers? That's a good way to get a ballpark estimate of the date a console was manufactured. Those speakers are probably United Speaker Systems, Inc. products. I forget their IEA code but if you could post any numbers from the back of the console's speakers I'm sure we could figure it out.
What I suspect your console is is the late 60s equivalent of an early 60s Chadwick or Warwick. Fisher used those model names to sell odd mixtures of cabinet and hardware - often from divergent model years. It has been conjectured that this was Fisher's method of cleaning out its warehouse - building consoles with whatever components they had overproduced and housing them in a cabinet from the current model year. Your Futura is unusual in that the cabinet seems to have been offered BEFORE it debuted as part of 1969's factory lineup.
The use of the Futura name itself is also strange. No Futuras appeared in either the '67 catalog or the '68 product brochures, (there was no '68 console catalog.) It almost seems as if Fisher intended to abandon that model name which would make sense since Chadwick and Warwick were old Fisher models from WAY back recycled as sort of clearance model names. What is really cool is the Futura name on your 220-T: that makes it a very unusual find and verifies this receiver as original equipment on this console.