Home › Forums › Product Discussion & Questions › BeoLab › Beolab 2000 as a blue tooth speaker
- This topic has 6 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 10 months, 1 week ago by Guy.
-
AuthorPosts
-
16 January 2024 at 04:55 #52216
I own a Beolab 2000 that I would like to use as a blue tooth speaker. I have never used it as part of a masterlink system. It powers up but as I have no other masterlink devices connected to it, how can I establish if the unit is working correctly before buying the blue tooth adapter please? When powered up it shows two red lights either side of the display and pressing any of the function select buttons doesn’t change the display. I would be grateful for some advice please.
16 January 2024 at 17:31 #52217Watch this video
Jump to 3m20sec
That will give you answers
16 January 2024 at 17:50 #52218Thank you. Now I need to find the converter!
16 January 2024 at 18:04 #52219Here’s one: https://www.quality-dream-audio.co.uk/beolink/15121730.html
I have no link to the company but have bought from them successfully in the past.
16 January 2024 at 18:13 #52220Still work-in-progress but:
16 January 2024 at 18:17 #52221Thank you very much I bought the converter.
16 January 2024 at 21:48 #52222Thank you very much I bought the converter.
Great! Come back here if you need help setting it up. In the meantime, you may wish to look at this post (and the wider thread) about using the BL1611 converter: https://forum.beoworld.org/forums/topic/beolab-3500-and-1611-converter-settings/page/4/#post-14017
You’ll be able to substitute your BL2000 for the BL3500 in the diagram, and with the right input cable will be able to select two different sources using a remote. So you could have a Bluetooth receiver and a turntable, as an example.
Later in the same thread I tried my BL2000 with a BL1611 converter (I called it Test 4) and it worked well.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.