ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
Hi guys,
I just got a wonderful new (to me) Beovox Cona today. As soon as I took it out of the box the first thing I noticed is - wow it's big. Too big to fit reasonably in my home office where I was going to place it.
So instead it'll have to go upstairs with the TV and the Beosystem 3. So here comes the ask:
How can I setup the Cona as the BS3 sub? I've looked at beolink passive, but that's master link ( can a master link device be a BS3 sub?) and it only has 30watt per channel output. The specs say the Cona is 125watt.
What's the right thing to do here, besides moving houses and getting a larger home office?
"You think we can slap some oak on this thing?"
Right now we have 4x Beolab 6000's plugged in for front R/L and surround R/L as well as a generic powered sub
hooked up to the sub port via power link to RCA cable.
I had completely forgot that B&O built ICE amps for other companies. and did not know they offered them retail (or at least in volumes < 10,000's).
This I will have to investigate. Though, going down that path will cost more than the Sub did to begin with. It does look straightforward though. Solder up some wires, and place the amp in a box...
A BL Passive can very well be used.
Just hook the amp ( = the Passive) up to the Sub-port of the BSys3 with a (fully wired) PL cable and connect the Cona to the outputs of the amp.
Be sure to make the fitting settings in the Sound menu of the BSys3.
Whether this will be better/different, than your current solution, only a test will show.
A used BL Passive will probably come cheaper than a 'DIY IcePower amp solution'.
MM
There is a tv - and there is a BV