Home › Forums › Product Discussion & Questions › BeoLab › Pentalab to Pentavox Speakers
- This topic has 4 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 17 hours, 29 minutes ago by
J. Malonson.
-
AuthorPosts
-
10 February 2026 at 23:54 #73515
leicaflex sl
BRONZE MemberCan a powered Penta speaker be converted to a non powered speaker?
11 February 2026 at 01:56 #73516 pl212SILVER MemberSure, you can remove the BeoLab from the base. There is some info on BeoCentral that suggests “all that [is] needed [is] to shorten the mounting studs and fit the stands directly to the bottom of the cabinet”.
Location: Silicon Valley
My B&O Icons:
11 February 2026 at 06:41 #73526 CharlieWednesdayGOLD MemberI have taken a look at the mountings studs and they are screw-threaded on either end, but not all the way along the shaft, so I’m not sure how you could shorten them. Getting a shorter alternative would seem to be the best option.
I broke one of the mounting studs on my Beolab Penta and I contacted Quality Dream Audio to ask if they had any spare. They did, and they sold them to me quite cheap. It might be worth contacting them to ask if they have any Beovox Penta studs.
Location: Liverpool
My B&O Icons:
11 February 2026 at 13:02 #73542 AdamSBRONZE MemberIf you’re removing the amplifiers then you don’t need to use the studs at all. Just use some new bolts to bolt the base plate into the threaded holes for the studs on the base of the speaker body.
27 March 2026 at 14:35 #120526 J. Malonson
BRONZE MemberI rendered mine passive! On my project/setup I ended up bypassing the Penta 2 amps altogether but kept I the unhooked-up amp attached to the tower. When I got them, I had one tower that worked sort of fine and one that never worked, sputtering sometimes, but always going straight to RED LIGHT. My connection was Beocenter 9000 preamp out RCA to Penta RCA. Switching the wires always produced that one speaker not working. After replacing all the midrange surrounds and accepting the fact that the doors on both the amps were not ever going to stay shut, but with no DIN speaker connection (so no display), I went the preamp out to a separate AMP route. Beocenter 9000 preamp out to a Sony DA5 ES.
This video was SUPER helpful. https://youtu.be/Uh2edGVsGto?si=eDbuklbv1WJLBKbc
After taking the base and Penta AMPS off, I undid the plain speaker wire that extends up into the tower and fished flat Monster speaker wiring up past the side of the amp through the inside of the base, trying my patience quite mightily. I reconnected the rods for the electrically disconnected amp AND reconnected the base after connecting the flat wire to the terminals on the speaker itself and then connected it to the Sony’s main speaker output. Getting those smaller bolts the video mentioned and leaving the amp off seems like a WAY easier way to go.
I get that the Penta amp was “matched” to the speaker array with crossovers and whatnot, but the Sony’s outputs (110 watts per channel, ANALOG direct) It’s legit too loud and too startlingly CLEAR to play above halfway. It’s the best non tube setup I’ve ever heard, even on cassette. I was pretty lucky to get a Beolink 1000 remote and a Beogram 9000 to go along with the rest of the setup. Everything (besides the Penta amps) acts just like new. The Beocenter’s CD player didn’t want to work initially but it somehow self-healed, works fine, and I didn’t ask any questions.
I may try the setup with a semi-lower powered Yamaha RX-396 with it’s 50 watts per channel, to see if I can discern any difference, but I haven’t done that yet.
Location: MARYLAND
My B&O Icons:
27 March 2026 at 14:35 #120527 J. Malonson
BRONZE Memberdouble post
-
This reply was modified 17 hours, 28 minutes ago by
J. Malonson. Reason: double post
Location: MARYLAND
My B&O Icons:
-
This reply was modified 17 hours, 28 minutes ago by
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.













