|  |     
    Well, since this doesn't claim to be a HI-Fi Guru's conference I'll
    put in my twopence worth.
    
    I've had a Bang & Oluffsen system for about 8 years now and it still
    sounds great to me. I was talking to one of the moderators of this
    conference recently and mentioned that I owned B&O equipment and
    was greeted by the fashionable sneer (Oh yeah, more money than sense
    sort of thing) that I get from many people.
    
    As I said I don't claim to be an expert on Hi-fi and probably couldn't
    tell a Linn from a Quad (or is that a really stupid comparison?),
    but I bought my system because it sounded vastly superior to anything
    else on offer at the time at the price. I also reckon that you would be hard
    pressed to find anything from one manufacturer that could compete
    with a modern B&O system at any price.
    
    A lot of people look at the units and don't believe that they can
    be good sound producers because they look too good (although I know
    some people who prefer the look of stack systems with lots of flashing
    lights! For them I believe Amstrad do a nice range :^) ), but in
    fact in a normal room a B&O system will probably sound as good as
    anything else you can get. Certainly, I've never been over impressed
    by friend's component systems, possibly I suspect because they strive
    after the ultimate bass at the expense of a good all-round clarity
    and sound.
    
    The biggest thing against a B&O system has to be the cost. They
    are very expensive and I would imagine that you could spend less
    on equipment from other manufacturers which would not sound any
    worse, but then that will look more like a 50s B-film rendition
    of computer hardware than anything else and what's wrong with having
    something attractive in the middle of your living room?
    
    Mark
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|  | Thanks,
B&O have long had a reputation for charging a lot for the design aspects of
the system. We are looking for something that will have a furniture function as
well as an audio one. I might even look to merging TV with audio (B&O make
a TV with integral satellite system for example).
You never get design (=looks) for nothing and so I expected to have a price to
pay. I am glad that they are also apparently reliable. Sound quality of the few
I've listened to is more than acceptable (though I might use speakers from 
another source).
I suspect B&O offers all the sound quality I need for the application I want it 
for - an entertainment complex for my wife and I, and our occasional guests.
/. Ian .\
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|  | 
  Until recently, I was using a B&O receiver, sound was reasonable (although the
speakers, non B&O, left a bit to be desired), and it still looked OK despite now
being around 16 or so years old. 
 The only things that I have had go wrong with it were that the slider used for 
the tuner snapped at the back, but an addition of araldite soon solved that, and
more recently, there was transformer hum getting through to the speakers, but my
brother is still usiong it as that hum does not worry him.
	 Alan
	~~~~~~
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