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
.
Present: BL90, Core, BL6000, CD7000, Beogram 7000, Essence Remote.
Past: BL1, BL2, BL8000, BS9000, BL5, BC2, BS5, BV5, BV4-50, Beosystem 3, BL3, DVD1, Beoremote 4, Moment.
Agree with all of the above obviously.
The Beomaster 8000 also have an excellent tuner section.
Jacques
I stand by my previous comments! I personally believe the Beomaster 5000 to be one of the best tuners ever made full stop, and not just best B&O tuner. I know of two people who have changed to one in preference to a Yamaha CT-7000 which is another model that is often touted as one of the best tuners ever made.
And chartz is right, too - the Beomaster 8000's tuner section is something special as well. I'd put it a very close second.
seethroughyou:So what makes this late 1960s Tuner so much better than modern tuners or more recent B&O tuners/beomasters? Were the components super high quality or the implementation?
I live in the UK and have both early Beomaster 5000 (1967) and Yamaha CT-7000; A-B switching is very revealing - I have loft mounted FM Aerial. On wide range speakers (I have TDL RSTL [Reference Standard Transmission Line] and IMF Ref Standard MK IV, the difference is quite amazing on good quality FM Transmissions. The Beomaster gives detail from the transmission that is just not there on the Yamaha. The Beomaster sound stage is better defined and it pulls in the deepest bass I've ever heard on FM. I've had both units in constant use along with an early Beolab 5000 for the last 12 years. I also have Tandberg tuners, pre-amplifiers and power amplifiers. I just keep coming back to the B&O 5000 sets - the sound just invites you in. I am very critical but the B&O units just tick my box always for accurate detailed sound.