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Vinyl coming?

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Millemissen
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Millemissen Posted: Fri, Oct 18 2013 8:34 AM

According to:

www.completemusicupdate.com/article/bpi-publishes-vinyl-revival-stats/

vinyl is coming (back).

Will we ever see a new BeoGram LP from Bang & Olufsen.

They seem to 'listen to' the latest trends in Struer - so why not?

The 'warmth' of a vinyl-lp played on the 'wood-warm' BL17 🌅

Tip: untill then, use the line-in of the Playmaker for a vintage BeoGram turntable.

Greetings Millemissen

There is a tv - and there is a BV

Peter
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Peter replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 8:53 AM

I think it beyond imagination that B&O will ever build their own turntable. I would suggest to them that if they wanted to go down this route, then buying in a suitable motor unit would be the sensible way, like the Beogram 3000 Thorens. I imagine however that they will either merely come up with a recommendation of a third party or do nothing at all!

Peter

bayerische
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Is vinyl really coming "back", it was un the up a few years ago, but IMHO it has slowed down?

 

Vinyl is cool and all, but not very practical, and it's a very limited novelty thing. 

 

Vinyl is also a format that gets worn, meaning it will sound worse after years of use. How many vinyl records haven't been ruined by improper arm weights and destroyed needles?

 

B&O wouldn't make a beogram anymore. Or on the other hand, looking at the nonsense that has been coming out lately, who knows! 

Too long to list.... 

Mark
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Mark replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 9:49 AM

Yes Vinyl Record sales are at a 10 year high.

Figures from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) show almost 550,000 LPs have been sold so far in 2013 and account for approx 0.7% of the market and the major growth has been in the under 25 year old segment.

I mainly play 180 gram vinyl and the sound quality is impeccable compared to CD or download (Beo 7000 paired with Pentas).

Now this is an area B&O could play in and use their strengths.


we tend to forget there is more to design than designing.

bayerische
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bayerische replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 10:09 AM

Mark,

 

You said the key number, why it makes no sense to into vinyl, 0,7%.There is absolutely no money in 0,7% of the market. B&O should right now try and get into the other 99,3% of the market to even survive.

 

 

Too long to list.... 

beaker
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beaker replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 10:35 AM
B&O's share of the stereo/tv market would be a lot less than 0.7% so should they just give up. Also I would have thought that the majority of vinyl purchasers are of the demographic that B&O wants to attract ie the slightly better off than average.

I'm not saying they should but 0.7% of the music market is still a huge market. I bet if they simply reproduced the BG7000 there would be a fair few people who would want one.
bayerische
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bayerische replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 10:42 AM

Beaker,

 

Ofcourse B&O's market share is low, probably a lot less than 0,7%, but what do you think it would be, if they were to concentrate on 0,7% of the market instead of 99,3%...? 

 

They would be long dead as a beogram manufacturer. Just the cost of taking up a turntable production that has been closed for... 20-25 years would be something I doubt they could bare right now.

 

I'm not signing that LP users would be better off financially... Why do you think that? If the largest growth of vinyl is in the under 25 YO demographic, (as per the article) it's hardly high income. The ones I know that still use vinyl, are those who love to "re-use" old stuff, (not well off) and hifi-nuts who also buy a lot of snake oil. Some are well off, others eat macaroni's 7 days a week to support their expensive hi-fi hobby. Very few of these would even look at B&O as an alternative. 

Too long to list.... 

bayerische
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bayerische replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 10:47 AM

Half a million vinyl plates sold a year is not a "big part of the market". 

What I can think is true is that a vinyl user is often a very keen music enthusiast, and likes to buy new albums. Especially since Vinyl is a bit of a hobby. Say I was to get the vinyl boom, I'd probably buy 100 if not more LP's within a few months. 

Thing is though with "novelties", they usually die out. Last vinyl boom was in 2002? 2003? 

Saying B&O should make a Beogram is like saying Sony should start producing mini-discs or the C-casette walkman again. 

Too long to list.... 

beaker
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beaker replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 10:56 AM
I would have thought that B&O are only concentrating on 0.7 or less of the market. They have aspirational products which to most people are simply out of reach. When I look at the new record player market they either seem to be the really cheap decks for plugging into a computer via USB or the horrendously expensive esoteric things.

Again I'm not saying they should make a new Beogram but if they did it would find customers.
vikinger
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vikinger replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 10:57 AM

What B&O could do is develop a later version of the tangential turntable but with an electronic laser cartridge that could 'read' the vinyl grooves without actually making contact with the vinyl. That would open up a massive market for them.

Graham

bayerische
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bayerische replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 11:14 AM

Beaker,

Well you can look on B&O's market share like you said, but I don't look at it like that.

 

B&O manufacture 3 main groups of products.

 

Music players

Speakers

TV's

 

You are right, they are not for everyone, as for example a Samsung TV is.

However, since they manufacture TV's, their TV's are in the TV segment. As are the Music players in the music player segment (where also Vinyl players, iPods etc. belong). Speakers, means they are in the speaker segment.

If you combine all these three main segments, you probably have 99,3% of the market. There's always the POTENTIAL of someone buying a B&O TV over a Sony. 

There's a very slim chance anyone buying a Beogram over a CD player or Beosystem 5.

 

Too long to list.... 

jc
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jc replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 12:41 PM

B&O better not go back to turntables;

1. the brand is not and will not be taken seriously by the small specialist hardcore vinyl-users.

2. <25 year olds won't by a B&O premium priced turntable.

3. to many hard-to-beat specialist firms that cover that specific marked niche

bayerische
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jc:

B&O better not go back to turntables;

1. the brand is not and will not be taken seriously by the small specialist hardcore vinyl-users.

2. <25 year olds won't by a B&O premium priced turntable.

3. to many hard-to-beat specialist firms that cover that specific marked niche

You are absolutely right. 

Too long to list.... 

Mark
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Mark replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 2:34 PM

UK's physical and download market share in 2012 was approx £3.5bn so Vinyl sales would be 0.7% of that. (I cannot find world figures). 

The question is when do you ride the wave, this is not new territory like MP3 players or mobile phones, record decks are planted in the B&O DNA. I also felt sad they did not capture the recent on-ear headphone market craze. 

Dammed if you do and dammed if you don't but small companies have the flexibility and speed to market over the big boys.

It's good to read these posts as it shows we are all passionate about one subject 

 

 

we tend to forget there is more to design than designing.

bayerische
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Mark, one of B&O biggest problem is their... Slowness to react. They're a pretty big company, even if they are small compared to Samsung.

 

B&O can't move fast. It's never been in their "DNA". There's plenty of vinyl players out there, with strong names such as Thorens. B&O can't compete with these. If the Vinyl markets biggest grower is under 25YO, they don't even know what B&O is. They buy whatever Dr Dre (or gaga) is using. The Vinyl players are being sold are cheap. (Except for the high-end stuff, but those guys never left the format)

Too long to list.... 

bayerische
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0,7% of 3,5 billion is a lot of money, but you need to calculate possible sales like this:

 

OK, so Vinyl has 0,7% of the market. Let's say B&O would have 0,7% of the market (AUDIO/VIDEO) They probably have a lot less! 

 

Meaning B&O has a 0,7% of total world markets, they would have 0,7% of the 0,7%  the vinyl market. This would equate to a market share (global) of 0,000049%.

3,5 billion times 0,7% is 24.5 million. A lot of money, but still very little money. (if sales of vinyl appliances would be equal to sales of vinyl records) B&O would then have 0,7% of this market share, or sales of 171,500 pounds. 

 

I hope I make sense to you guys, but I'm just trying to show, how ridiculously small the Vinyl business is. Money is elsewhere. 

Too long to list.... 

linder
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linder replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 3:51 PM

I do like vinyl but I don't think B&O is going to go down that path.  Many AV manufacturers now offer a turntables such as Marantz and McIntosh but they are expensive.  If B&O were to offer a turntable resembling anything like past Beograms, they would be at least $5000 or more.  In addition, the new products from B&O are essentially digital....wireless speakers and ethernet connections through a router.  There is nothing wrong with digital products but vinyl is analog.  I would like the ability to play higher resolution audio digital files.

Retro is fine but ultimately tastes will change.  Everyone switched to CDs in the 80s and to digital download music in the late 90s.  I am now listening to music stored in a digital cloud.  

I expect the Beosystem 4 will be my new media player.

linder
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linder replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 4:02 PM

I forgot to mention a surprising fact about much of the new vinyl including reissues of classics like the original Beatles LPs.  They are sourced digitally.

http://www.stereophile.com/content/listening-123

A quote from the Stereophile article.

'Not only that, but the recent and richly ballyhooed reissues of the Beatles albums on LP—sold singly or as The Beatles Stereo Vinyl Box Set (Apple AEMI 33809)—were all mastered not from the original analog master tapes but from 24-bit/44.1kHz digital copies (footnote 2) thereof (a revelation that comes courtesy of my friend and colleague Michael Fremer, who broke the story on AnalogPlanet.com).'

'

Mark
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Mark replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 4:41 PM

Bayerishe you do make sense so do not worry, this is why I enjoy this forum.

 

we tend to forget there is more to design than designing.

soundproof
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Vinyl is great, and has caught on Big with a younger crowd, but it is just a small fraction of the total market.

However, B&O has never been a total market brand. Should the company develop a vinyl player? I don't know, and am not representative. I have thousands of vinyl records, and five Beograms, as well as a totally refurbished Garrard 301 (and a similarly refurbished Beogram 3000 TD124).

What I do know, is that most of the cool bands followed by younger people are releasing vinyl, some even releasing reel to reel (the latter a very low count).

There's a potential signal effect for B&O in vinyl, but I don't think they have the resources for the kind of effort they put into Bg4000 and Bg8000.

These players are much sought after by youngsters, though.

StUrrock
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StUrrock replied on Fri, Oct 18 2013 6:07 PM
soundproof:

These players are much sought after by youngsters, though.

My son's BeoGram is his most prized possession.

To think I got him it for free from a valued customer!

I'm very jealous as it is such a beautiful object and the sound of the vinyl is just so good.
AdamS
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AdamS replied on Tue, Oct 22 2013 1:37 PM

What's this about vinyl "coming back"? For some of us, it never went away!

linder:
  Many AV manufacturers now offer a turntables such as Marantz and McIntosh but they are expensive.

Ironically, both of the items you mention there are basically re-badged/tweaked Clearaudio designs. As far as I know, the only "old hi-fi name" that has a turntable totally of their own design currently on sale is Luxman with the PD-171

Orava
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Orava replied on Tue, Oct 22 2013 2:15 PM

AdamS:

Ironically, both of the items you mention there are basically re-badged/tweaked Clearaudio designs. As far as I know, the only "old hi-fi name" that has a turntable totally of their own design currently on sale is Luxman with the PD-171

Oh, I tought that Luxman buys them from Micro Seiki

 blah-blah and photographs as needed

AdamS
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AdamS replied on Tue, Oct 22 2013 3:11 PM

Micro Seiki closed in 2001 so they have nothing to do with the PD-171.

Back in the 1980s however, Luxman's decks were mostly designed as  joint ventures between themselves and Micro Seiki but were largely made in-house by Luxman, as i understand it.

AdamS
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AdamS replied on Tue, Oct 22 2013 3:11 PM

Micro Seiki closed in 2001 so they have nothing to do with the PD-171.

Back in the 1980s however, Luxman's decks were mostly designed as  joint ventures between themselves and Micro Seiki but were largely made in-house by Luxman, as i understand it.

ouverture
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ouverture replied on Tue, Oct 22 2013 3:56 PM
all the 5000 and 5500 systems I have sold in the last 3 years have been to young men (well under 35 years old or so)

they have all come with their own very expensive headphones (Sennheiser, Grado, AKG etc) and some of their favourite vinyl LP's and CD's

the moment they hear how good their favourite vinyl sounds via the headphone jack on the Beomaster they buy the whole stacking system (usually they don't want the Beocord, but take it anyway as it looks cool as part of the set)

I had one chap call me back a week or so later, saying the Beosystem 5000 he bought from me sounded just as good as his Project Turntable and headphone amp that cost him over £2000, mind you this was the Beogram 5000 radial with an MMC2 cartridge 😎

Orava
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Orava replied on Tue, Oct 22 2013 4:18 PM

AdamS:

Micro Seiki closed in 2001 so they have nothing to do with the PD-171.

Back in the 1980s however, Luxman's decks were mostly designed as  joint ventures between themselves and Micro Seiki but were largely made in-house by Luxman, as i understand it.

aaa, do I live in past....

 blah-blah and photographs as needed

Søren Mexico
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ouverture:
I had one chap call me back a week or so later, saying the Beosystem 5000 he bought from me sounded just as good as his Project Turntable and headphone amp that cost him over £2000, mind you this was the Beogram 5000 radial with an MMC2 cartridge 😎

I have BG 2404, BG 5000, BG TX2, all with MMC4, the 5000 stack is my favorite, the BG 5000 on any of my BMs sounds better than any of the other BGs, even the BG 2404 comes up short, when connected to BM 2400, and the 2404 was made for BM 2400.

Collecting Vintage B&O is not a hobby, its a lifestyle.

ouverture
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ouverture replied on Wed, Oct 23 2013 12:51 AM
don't get me wrong, I love the tangential 5005 and 5500 decks, but that 5000 radial is really good with all the MMC carts 😋
Søren Mexico
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For Danes only. or let Google translate. Vinyl fair in my hometown

Collecting Vintage B&O is not a hobby, its a lifestyle.

August
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August replied on Fri, Oct 25 2013 7:25 PM

I'd love to see a new BeoGram.

jc:

B&O better not go back to turntables;

1. the brand is not and will not be taken seriously by the small specialist hardcore vinyl-users.

I'm one of those and I take B&O seriously.

jc:

2. <25 year olds won't by a B&O premium priced turntable.

I would if I could afford it! There's the problem, I guess... Crying

Orava
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Orava replied on Fri, Oct 25 2013 9:06 PM

August:

I'd love to see a new BeoGram.

jc:

B&O better not go back to turntables;

1. the brand is not and will not be taken seriously by the small specialist hardcore vinyl-users.

I'm one of those and I take B&O seriously.

jc:

2. <25 year olds won't by a B&O premium priced turntable.

I would if I could afford it! There's the problem, I guess... Crying

Um, take a example, ProJect, it isn't too expencive, but still not bad at all, so why Beogram woldn't fit in for ex. BeoPlay series?

B&O should not target to "high-end" users, but rather to "hip" users, in that way they moight get future fans.

 blah-blah and photographs as needed

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