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ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012
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This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and 1st March February 2012

 

Latest post 11-23-2007 12:38 PM by Alex. 5 replies.
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  • 11-23-2007 7:34 AM

    What exactly is a Beolink

    Hi:

    Sorry for my ignorance but what is a Beolink?

     I asume that it is a cable which enables one to link their different b&o systems together. However, I have heard that this enables multi room sound systems.

    I cannot envisage this without bumerous cables trailing all over the place and how would you control say the track change on an Oveture situated in the dining room from the bedroom (for example).

     

    Thanks

     

    Graham

  • 11-23-2007 7:52 AM In reply to

    • Christian
    • Top 100 Contributor
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    • Joined on 04-16-2007
    • Copenhagen, Denmark
    • Posts 626
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    Re: What exactly is a Beolink

    BeoLink is a term covering connection between various products.

    There is Master Control Link (MCL) - used with old products, whereas Master Link (ML) is used with new products. The Ouverture was one of the first products that used Master Link.

    MCL is wire based only, but with ML you have the choice between BeoLink Wireless and normal BeoLink.

    I the situation you describe I would suggest a BeoLink Active (which is wire based), and enable local control, and the possibility to connect a set of active speakers is the bedroom. Here you will be able to control the volume independently from the dining room.

    If you want to avoid the cables you can use Wireless instead, which has the same properties.

    (And do not be sorry for you "ignorance", there is no such thing)

    Living room: BV7-40 mkIV + V8000, BL5, BL3, BM1 and BS9000. Bedroom: MX3000 and BL4500 on MCL2-AV. Around: PentaIII, CX100 and MCX35 on ML/MCL + MCL2-A, BeoPort and BL4 on ML, BS3300 + M75 as stand alone, BC6000 + BC600 and BT1100, LC1, LC2, Beo4, Beo5 and BL1000, BS2 and A8, EarSet2, Apron, Coffee mugs, Enamel Bagdes, Bath towel, Keyring, Books, Lots of miniature and the Bottle opener. Office: BC2300 + BL2500 and BS3. Summer house: BS Century.

    Addicted? Oh no.... ;)

  • 11-23-2007 8:18 AM In reply to

    Re: What exactly is a Beolink

    I would strongly suggest a trip to your local dealer. We can explain things a bit but nothing beats a good hands on demonstration. They will have a Beolink set up which will show you what can be acheived using this technology and let you have a go. The clever bit is that this has been going for over 20 years and most products from then can still be used today. I have a total mishmash of products using a variety of versions of Beolink in my house and they still all talk to each other! And yes, i can listen to and change the music from downstairs when upstairs as well as changing sources. Thanks to a new development, I can even choose computer music and get feedback about what tracks I have and the ability to chose the. (Very useful as I have 16,000 tracks on the computer!)
  • 11-23-2007 9:02 AM In reply to

    • van
    • Top 100 Contributor
    • Joined on 10-19-2006
    • Brighton, UK
    • Posts 663
    • Gold Member

    Re: What exactly is a Beolink

    Hi

    Some more information can be found on the main BeoWorld website within the articles section.

    BeoLink Part I  

    BeoLink Part II

    All the best 

  • 11-23-2007 11:04 AM In reply to

    Re: What exactly is a Beolink

    Just to add a bit more info for you, MasterLink only needs one cable to each room - it's a single multicore cable than carries audio and control signals from the master products (audio system and main TV) to all of your other rooms, unlike the basic multiroom systems that have two wires per pair of speaker, plus control wires etc etc.  Just one single very robust and high quality (and very inexpensive) cable does it all with B&O.

    If your 'link' room has audio only, then only one masterlink cable is required.  If you have a 'link' TV and you want to be able to watch sources from the main TV, then you need MasterLink and an RF cable (standard TV aerial type cable).  The RF carries the picture from the main TV to the link TV, the MasterLink does the rest.

    Also, if you have several link rooms, you don't need several MasterLink cables coming from your MasterLink products - just one cable that can be daisy chained or joined in pretty much any way you like to make installation easy.  I have one ML cable coming out of my main TV under the lounge floor, which then splits off in a junction box to the kitchen, dining room, upstairs etc etc.

    It's a really great system.

    Wireless units can be useful but you must test them in your own home - they can be problematic in the wrong kind of property.  Also, wireless units can only connect to a pair of loudspeakers or the BeoLab 3500 link speaker - you can't wirelessly link a TV.

    As Peter says, you can't beat going to see it working at your local dealer!

    Cheers,

    Martin

    BV7-40MK4BR,7-32,6-22,6-23,6-26,BSnd5,9000,BLab9,3,4000,2,BCom2,6000,Btalk1200,LC2s,Lutron

  • 11-23-2007 12:38 PM In reply to

    • Alex
    • Top 25 Contributor
    • Joined on 04-16-2007
    • Bath & Cardiff, UK
    • Posts 2,990
    • Bronze Member

    Re: What exactly is a Beolink

    It basically lets you put a simple speaker system or 'stand-alone Television' in say, your kitchen or bedroom, which accesses your 'home cinema' or whatever in the main room. That's pretty generic though, you don't need a home cinema, just a simple stereo system will do.

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