Hi Martin and Peter,
The question that begs asking, in my mind is why? Addressed to you both.
At one point I rated my various Beograms in order of performance, but in reality, what I was rating was the relative filth on the individual cartridges.
The vast differences between my three 4000 series turntables evaporated with the thorough cleaning of all the styluses. My flawless, yet much berated 4002 now is very much the equal of the 4004…. and dare I say it? The 4000.
Sure, the 4000 is by far my FAVORITE, but that has so much to do with the incomparable aesthetics of the 4000, well that and the function of the control buttons.
Blindfolded, I have little confidence that I could tell the difference between the 4000 series Beograms with their cartridges cleaned. (All are MMC20CL’s)
The Beogram 8000 with its elder MMC6000 is delightfully mellow, which is NOT to say muted, no, just mellow…. soft if you prefer. I have no doubt that a NOS MMC20CL would add a great deal of brilliance to the 8000’s performance, but I’d miss this particular combination’s sound quality with is subtle, delicate, and smooth sound.
Then there is the Beogram 8002 with is relatively new MMC2 cartridge: brilliant, crisp, and spectacularly unforgiving of any defects in a record. I have come to LOVE this Beogram for violin, guitar, harpsichord, or piano…. but would choose the 4000 (any of the 4000 series really) for vocals. It depends on the recording which Beogram suits it best. Peculiar, huh?
So where does a Beogram 1000 or 3000 fit in to this picture…. and why?
All the best,
Jeff