|
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
-
Many people live in apartment dwellings where bigger screens wouldn't blend as well as smaller ones. I live in Hong Kong a few months of the year and almost all people, even lower high class, live in apartments. A 40" may fit in a living room, but what about the bedroom? Even a 32" would be too large sometimes. I posted a resolution vs
-
I used to have a similar set-up to Razlaw. Prior to getting the BL 9's, I sometimes connected a Velodyne HGS-10 to the BV 8 with a Powerlink-stereo RCA adaptor cable. One problem with this setup was that the BV 8 detected the connection and, when I tried to play audio through the Masterlinked BeoSound Ouverture, it switched off the internal BV 8
-
Not available in the US for another 2 or 3 months. I've been eagerly awaiting this TV for a year. Be sure that when it comes I'll pipe in with a detailed report! Leo
-
Interesting you should say that JK - my Boston dealer (Newbury St., same as yours I guess) told me in late 2008 that the BV 8-32 was selling very well. So well, in fact, that they would consider a trade-in if I wanted to upgrade. Could be that that was due to it being a new model at the time... Leo
-
Strange, TWG - I actually thought the music didn't jibe with the scene at all! Guess I'm not used to the style. Leo
-
Hi all, In anticipation of the upcoming surround-sound-capable BV 10 to the States, I'm contemplating speakers to hook up for rears. My choices have boiled down to the CX-100 or BL 6000 for economic reasons. I have a pair of CX-100 in storage (which have had their foams replaced about 8 years ago), so all I should need is a $150 powerlink amplifier
-
Glad I got one before the axe! A very nice basic TV and perfect size for the bedroom. Don't understand why though. Since the BV 6 and BV 7-32 aren't sold in the United States, would that mean the smallest screen size here would be 40"? That's too big for many people. Leo
-
For a while I used a BeoVision 8-32 as the music speaker in a 7 x 3.7 meter room, and it fulfilled the purpose admirably, not only for background music listening but movie watching too. Bass seemed good at first, but after purchasing and comparing to the BeoLab 9's, I noticed the BV 8 "boosts" signals around the 60-200 hz area by a lot
-
Yes, I wish indexes had stayed. On some CD's the tracks are so plentiful that they go up to the 20's and beyond. Say I bought a CD containing several string quartets - it would make a lot of sense to program a track to a whole quartet, and index the movements. With only tracks, I've no idea when a new quartet is playing without looking at
-
Thanks for sharing! My dad bought our household's first CD player in the mid/late eighties, a Phillips model. I think it's still somewhere in the house. It has a cool "index" feature which allowed skipping to different sections within a track, if a CD is mastered with it. I never see that feature in any CD player these days, and besides
|
|
|