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
Never heard of this and surprised that a moving coil could be minaturised to fit in an MMC1!
Please keep us posted! Martin, have you heard of this?
Peter
Amazing! Yes, do tell us more.
Jacques
Any update on this?
Saint Beogrowler:Sadly, no response. Any ideas where else I can search for the history on this?
'Might explain why: Larry Klein
Being in the position he was in at Stereo Review I can imagine that Bang & Olufsen probably sent that sample cartridge for him to check out? That means you have quite a collector item Beogrowler. Where did you find it?
-sonavor
sonavor:Being in the position he was in at Stereo Review I can imagine that Bang & Olufsen probably sent that sample cartridge for him to check out? That means you have quite a collector item Beogrowler. Where did you find it? -sonavor
Saint Beogrowler:I was thinking maybe asking Peter Ledermann but random cartridge questions sent to Soundsmith don’t seem to go anywhere.
I would. And mention Larry Klein, who lived in Westchester County/NY where Soundsmith is based. They probably knew each other. Send him the photo as well. Peter@sound-smith.com
MediaBobNY:I would. And mention Larry Klein, who lived in Westchester County/NY where Soundsmith is based. They probably knew each other. Send him the photo as well. Peter@sound-smith.com
When the Ortofon MC200 came out in 1981/2 I remember reading a review in HiFi News and Record Review that mentioned in passing that B&O had experimented with building a moving coil unit for the new Beograms (8000 and 6000). I always thought that the miniaturisation that Ortofon performed on the MC200 was indeed a collaboration with B&O, perhaps in preparation for making them for B&O. Unfortunately, I did not discuss this with Per Windfelt when I met him in the early 2000s. The exterior dimensions of the B&O MMC X series and the Ortofon MC200 are indeed, remarkably similar (I have both the MMC1 and the MC200 and am looking at them as I write).
In the end, according to the article in HFN&RR, B&O decided to go with their own design. Unfortunately, today the original MMC manufacturing tools are quite literally on the scrapheap of history. Peter Lederman (and Tonar in Germany) are the only ones that can make them today (but only after reverse-engineering the original design).