#beogram — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #beogram, aggregated by home.social.
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A real shout-out to the folks who designed the Beogram 4000 back in the early 70s.
No doubt I could spend tens of thousands of dollars and get a turntable that's, say, 15% better than the 4000. Or hundreds of thousands, and get one that's 20% better.
But those wouldn't be anywhere near as "livable" as this 54 year old technological and design wonder, which works better today than it did when it was new.
So good sounding, beautiful, and *easy* to use.
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A real shout-out to the folks who designed the Beogram 4000 back in the early 70s.
No doubt I could spend tens of thousands of dollars and get a turntable that's, say, 15% better than the 4000. Or hundreds of thousands, and get one that's 20% better.
But those wouldn't be anywhere near as "livable" as this 54 year old technological and design wonder, which works better today than it did when it was new.
So good sounding, beautiful, and *easy* to use.
-
A real shout-out to the folks who designed the Beogram 4000 back in the early 70s.
No doubt I could spend tens of thousands of dollars and get a turntable that's, say, 15% better than the 4000. Or hundreds of thousands, and get one that's 20% better.
But those wouldn't be anywhere near as "livable" as this 54 year old technological and design wonder, which works better today than it did when it was new.
So good sounding, beautiful, and *easy* to use.
-
A real shout-out to the folks who designed the Beogram 4000 back in the early 70s.
No doubt I could spend tens of thousands of dollars and get a turntable that's, say, 15% better than the 4000. Or hundreds of thousands, and get one that's 20% better.
But those wouldn't be anywhere near as "livable" as this 54 year old technological and design wonder, which works better today than it did when it was new.
So good sounding, beautiful, and *easy* to use.
-
A real shout-out to the folks who designed the Beogram 4000 back in the early 70s.
No doubt I could spend tens of thousands of dollars and get a turntable that's, say, 15% better than the 4000. Or hundreds of thousands, and get one that's 20% better.
But those wouldn't be anywhere near as "livable" as this 54 year old technological and design wonder, which works better today than it did when it was new.
So good sounding, beautiful, and *easy* to use.
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TIL that the/my Bang & Olufsen Beogram 4000 doesn't just detect the end of the record via a sensor (a plunger that's pushed by an adjustable metal "finger"). That's just a failsafe.
The normal detection of the end of the record is by tracking velocity. When a circuit determines that the tonearm is moving at a more rapid rate for a certain period, it knows it's the runout.
1972. Just incredibly innovative...
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TIL that the/my Bang & Olufsen Beogram 4000 doesn't just detect the end of the record via a sensor (a plunger that's pushed by an adjustable metal "finger"). That's just a failsafe.
The normal detection of the end of the record is by tracking velocity. When a circuit determines that the tonearm is moving at a more rapid rate for a certain period, it knows it's the runout.
1972. Just incredibly innovative...
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TIL that the/my Bang & Olufsen Beogram 4000 doesn't just detect the end of the record via a sensor (a plunger that's pushed by an adjustable metal "finger"). That's just a failsafe.
The normal detection of the end of the record is by tracking velocity. When a circuit determines that the tonearm is moving at a more rapid rate for a certain period, it knows it's the runout.
1972. Just incredibly innovative...
-
TIL that the/my Bang & Olufsen Beogram 4000 doesn't just detect the end of the record via a sensor (a plunger that's pushed by an adjustable metal "finger"). That's just a failsafe.
The normal detection of the end of the record is by tracking velocity. When a circuit determines that the tonearm is moving at a more rapid rate for a certain period, it knows it's the runout.
1972. Just incredibly innovative...
-
TIL that the/my Bang & Olufsen Beogram 4000 doesn't just detect the end of the record via a sensor (a plunger that's pushed by an adjustable metal "finger"). That's just a failsafe.
The normal detection of the end of the record is by tracking velocity. When a circuit determines that the tonearm is moving at a more rapid rate for a certain period, it knows it's the runout.
1972. Just incredibly innovative...