Home › Forums › Product Discussion & Questions › BeoSystem › Inherited My Dad’s BeoSystem 7000 – Looking For Advice
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Madskp.
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30 May 2025 at 17:07 #65933
Rob
BRONZE MemberHello, I recently inherited my Dad’s BeoSystem 7000 (BeoMaster 7000, BeoCord 7000 and BeoGram CD 7000) and am trying to set it up to be able to play his music but I need some advice with a number of things if anyone can help:
Firstly, my Dad unfortunately never showed me how the system works (I wasn’t allowed to even go near it when I was younger haha!) so I’ve been reading the manuals that I’ve found online and fumbling with the remote (Beo4) to try and understand it but it doesn’t seem the most intuitive to someone new to hifi systems so any pointers would be greatly appreciated!
Secondly, I was wondering if modern, non-B&O, speakers can be connected to it and how I would go about doing that if so? Also do I need passive speakers or will active ones work as well?
Thirdly, if I wanted to add a turntable to the system would I be able to connect a modern one? I did see a BeoGram 7000 come up on eBay a little while ago that I was tempted to get to complete the set but I just don’t know enough about turntables to know if I would be better off buying a modern one for the price/function. I read that the B&O styluses are also expensive to replace but I don’t know how often I would need to replace one as I’d probably only listen to a couple of records a week.
Finally, I’ve also seen that you can buy a compatible Bluetooth receiver so I could in theory play Spotify through the BeoSystem. Is there any benefit to doing this or would I be better finding speakers that I can connect to that I can also use an adapter of some sort for the connection to the BeoSystem? I’m new to all this so not sure what is possible/best.
Very grateful for any advice anyone may have!
1 June 2025 at 08:56 #66076TK
GOLD MemberJust my thoughts –
One of the benefits to buying a Beogram 6500 or 7000 is that those two turntables will integrate seamlessly with your system, and be controllable via the remote. I think there are a few other options that will work as well. Some turntables u may need to provide RIAA as a typical BM7000 will not have one. installed. If your father had a turntable hooked up to it at one point, you’ll might need to check to see if your BM7000 has a built in RIAA card already.
RE: Bluetooth – look into the Beotooth offering, as it also integrates seamlessly with the 7000. I have one, and it was an excellent purchase. A generic bluetooth dongle will likely also work, but wont integrate as well.
Remote- consider spending the money to purchase a 2-way remote, such as the Beolink 5000, MCP 5500, or Beolink 7000. They are specifically designed to work with two-way IR systems like the BM7000. Of those three options, the MCP 5500 will likely be the least expensive option.
The 7000 has both passive and active speaker hookups, so you have a choice for your speaker system. A Beolab 8000 is a reasonably priced option that will work well. “Period hard core” would be something like a Penta. Shop carefully, as some of these older speaker systems require some TLC/reworking to get back to their original condition.
1 June 2025 at 09:51 #66081Madskp
GOLD MemberSecondly, I was wondering if modern, non-B&O, speakers can be connected to it and how I would go about doing that if so? Also do I need passive speakers or will active ones work as well?
Both passive and active speakers will work. For the passive speakers you will need some 2 pin DIN speaker plugs. You can connect any active speakers with analoginput to the Powerlink connection on the BM7000. You will need an adapter from the 8 pin DIN (as not all pin is needed it can also be a 5 pin din) to either RCA or minijack depending on what the active speaker you connect has for input. Try to look at at the site sponsor Sounds Heavenly webshop. he will have the right adapter for this.
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