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Saturday, July 26, 2025

Michigan Beogram 8002 Restoration: Sensor Measurements

The Beogram 8002 from Michigan is performing very good with its turntable functional tests.

I connected some test leads to the Beogram's position sensors, speed sensor, record detection sensor and the forward servo drive signal (IC2 Pin 7).  Reference Beolover's post on the servo motor check.

Here are my test points on the Beogram 8002 PCB 1 board.





























First, the position sensors (1 & 2) along with the IC2 Pin 7 output to the servo motor.

This picture shows the signals when the Beogram 8002 is doing a forward scan over the platter.
The image on the left is of the Fast Forward Scan and the image on the right is the Slow Forward Scan.



















I placed a test record on the platter and measured the sensors again while playing a record.

The servo IC2 Pin 7 signal varies as the servo motor advances the tonearm assembly to track the record groove.  It does this once every revolution of the platter.



















The tonearm controls worked perfectly and the Beogram 8002 record play was great.

Next I swapped out the test lead on the Position 2 and IC2 Pin 7 test points with the Speed Sensor and Record Detection test points.

The Record Detection on the Beogram 8002 is interesting compared to the Beogram 8000.
The Beogram 8000 platter is very similar to the Beogram 4002/4004 platters so the platter detection in the fixed arm just measures a series of pulses by detecting the platter ribs.

With the Beogram 8002 B&O designed a special laser engraved platter with two different sections of black markings as well as a flat gray section.

Here are the Beogram 8000 and Beogram 8002 platters side by side.






















The Beogram 8002 platter design results in a different record detection signal than the Beogram 8000.

Here are photos of the Record Detection sensor measurements and the Platter Speed sensor measurements.  I kept the Position 1 sensor as a reference.

This first set of images is with the platter speed at 33.33 RPM.
I actually set the speed to 33.33 RPM to show the Record Detection sensor at the black marking level and at the gray section level.  The photo on the left shows the Record Detection sensor over the black markings.



















Here is he platter speed set to 45 RPM but I only captured the signals over the gray section of the platter.



















I am satisfied that this Beogram 8002 is functioning properly now.

I will play a couple of records with the components still removed from the cabinet just to test the sound and make sure the audio mute relay is working.

Then I will do the cabinet repairs and reassemble the Beogram 8002 to complete the project.

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