The Beovox 1600 was a three-way design. The units comprised a 12cm woofer, a 2.5cm dome midrange and a 4cm cone tweeter. These units were supplied by Wharfdale (England), Philips (Holland) and SEAS (Norway) respectively. An odd mix, though they were all of good quality and were well made, the woofer had a rot-resistant soft rubber roll edge and a pressure die-cast basket for example. Using a cone driver as the tweeter and a dome for the midrange was odd practice, though it has to be remembered that these were early days for dome loudspeakers in general.
The crossover network was of a fairly standard three-stage parallel design complete with a band pass section for the midrange. Unusually for B&O, a film capacitor was used as the pass element for the tweeter, normally a cheaper electrolytic capacitor would be found here.
The slim cabinets also had an unusual feature, they were braced from front to back to make the large front and rear panels more rigid. This may have been done to stiffen the rear panel in particular, to reduce the amount of acoustic energy that was transmitted into the wall. The cabinets were constructed on the pressure chamber principle and were fronted by a cloth grille that was supported on a pressed steel sheet.
B&O had clearly put a lot of work into the Beovox 1600. It was later replaced by the Beovox 1800.
Dimensions W x H x D 44 x 33 x 10,5 cm
Weight 5 kg
Performance
Music load 20 watts
Continuous load 15 watts (DIN 45,573)
Frequency response 50 – 20,000 Hz (DIN 45,570)
Distortion Max. 3 % (DIN 45,403)
Sensitivity 4 watts (DIN 45,500)
Crossover frequency 4000 Hz
Capacity 10 litres
Resonance of woofer 35 Hz
Dispersion 90°
Number of units
Bass unit One 15cm
Mid-range One dome unit
Tweeter One 5cm
Available documents are listed, if none are listed then please reach out to see if we have them.
Please let us know