The BM8000 was a no-compromise receiver.
If metal resistors were better, they would have been used - and they are
actually used in selected positions here and there.
25 years have passed and lots of new technology is available now, but I'm not sure
all of it improves performance just because it's new.
Clearly the hybrid amplifiers did not improve anything soundwise.
I hardly ever use metalfilm resistors in amplifiers.
It's possible that they make them a different way today than
they did 20 years ago but back then I had problems with
self-oscillation in some amplifiers and the cause proved to be the resistors.
Metalfilm resistors (at least the ones I had problems with) had
a slight amount of inherited induction, depending greatly on their resistive values, as
in wirewound resistors, and that was enough to set the whole thing in motion.
Metal resistors can fail short. It's rare but it does happen.
A coal resistor will never short, it will burn and go open circuit.
Others may like metal resistors, some claim they can hear the difference, some claim
that the coal resistors are noisier.
I never observed a particularly noisy BM8000 amplifier stage anyway and I tend to like
the sound of the BM8000 circuits as produced and intended by B&O so I like to mount
components similar to the original as far as possible.
We had the same issue with regards to the opamps in the pre-amplifiers recently. Here
I also tried mounting "better" opamps but as a couple of other members I reverted back
to the original when I found the sound reproduction too cold and sterile for my liking.
In Pentas, however, they do improve performance a lot.
That's probably just me. I'm getting old, the family radios were valve things when I
was a child. I liked the warm sound and today I care more about sound pleasant to my ears
than for 100% linearity and/or costly "improvements" that I cannot hear and
remain theory.
My ears are luckily still fine. I can still tell the difference between most B&O
amplifiers and I can detect 0.5% distortion on a 1KHz sine but on some setups, like my
own BM8000, I like to use Loudness.
I'm sure that it will work fine with metal resistors.
Martin