|
Untitled Page
ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012 READ ONLY FORUM
This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and
1st March February 2012
Search
-
Agree with our member down under: Sounds like the cables. A pulsating, or " wavy " sound would indicate electrical source interference, through the cable, or from a nearby source. In addition to the good comments above, you might also consider checking the switches in the back of each of your Beolab 4000 speakers (L-R), and also trace down
-
Both the BS 9000 and the BS 3200 are very fine receivers, but different. The BS 9000 has the S/PDIF option as mentioned above, expressly for the BL 5 speaker. Both are classic, older designs in their own right, one larger, one smaller, both with CD, local Radio, and aux. When the BS 3200 was designed 29 years ago, downloading digital music files didn't
-
Trip, as I sit here listening to Jordi Savall's "L' Orfeo " on our M-L Beosound 3200, I see a Danish supplier now online selling something interesting. Under B&O related, the vendor is offering an M-L cable with the B&O connections, and what he describes as another for M-L to CAT 7 specifically for " Encore applications
-
We discovered we had the same problem when we upgraded from XP to Win 7 - 64. We lost access to a number of stations, including our favorite SWISS POP. I spoke with a number of B&O sales and technicians, all with no solution. I also contacted a few of the radio stations directly, with the same result. Our solution is to just use the PC directly
-
Absolutely nothing. That is until a month or so when the Encore / Beonet arrives.
-
Clearly M-L does not support digital transmission. We are building a new condo ( hopefully the last, my wife says ) that we hope to retire to in the near future, and have elected to install empty silicone conduit into the walls until we can see what the new Encore actually entails. We remain hopeful regarding the promise of Beonet, and believe that
-
Eliteelectronics; Thank you for posting the additional information. 1. The Japanese telephone system is different than North America. This information is available on the Internet. 2. I graduated from Waseda University, and lived in Takodanobaba-Tokyo for a number of years. 220-240v was not common to residential electrical service in the cities; I only
-
Tokyo's voltage is at 100v, ( not 110 v ) BUT the frequency works at 50 Hz. US frequency operates at 60 Hz. If the internal wiring insulation of any of your electrical devices is cheap or old, ( most likely not B&O ) there could be problems. Eastern Japan , ( Tokyo, Yokohama, Hokkaido, Tohoku ) operates at 50 Hz , while western Japan ( Nagoya
-
I believe the question was software; AVS video converter is one.
-
Mawheele; The 2,5 Gateway product you mention: Can you expand on that for a minute ?
|
|
|