Beovision Harmony 65 - A down-scaled flagship Featured
Written by Karl Erik SyltheThis spring, Bang & Olufsen launched a brand new TV model. Beovision Harmony 77 ”became the company's new flagship model.
In 2017, B&O launched Beovision Eclipse, with two models, Beovision Eclipse 55 ”and Beovision Eclipse 65”. We wrote about these models when they arrived, and they were at that time the top models from Struer. Half a year later Beovision Eclipse Wood Edition came along , and a new all time high was reached - both in design and price.

But last spring, the time was ripe for the Beovision Eclipse to step Down from the role of flagship, as the Beovision Harmony 77” made its arrival, with a whole new and slightly rude design concept. An audio system that collapses when the TV is not in use, and at the same time is a sculptural solution quite unlike any other TV on the market. Like the Eclipse models, Harmony is also based on an LG panel - in this case a custom 77-inch LG C9 OLED. The price tag is not tight, one might say, and this probably has undeniably created needs in the market for a literally scaled-down version of this Wonderboy.
Beovision Harmony 65”
Which brings us to today's launch. Today, November 15, B&O reports that Beovision Harmony 65 has arrived. And ss the name suggests, this is a 65-inch version, and is based on a special version of the 65 LG C9 OLED. This model has the same advanced audio solution as its big brother, in terms of speakers, amplifiers and streaming solution. The latter includes AirPlay 2, Bluetooth and Chromecast. And it has a built-in 7.1 surround decoder, which makes it well suited to complement B&O's wireless speakers, such as Beolab 18, Beolab 50 and Beolab 90.
Beovision Harmony 65 ”comes in both a basic version and a wooden player version, where you can choose between floor rack and wall bracket. And if you first decided to spend 127,500, - for a TV, you should really spit in the ten extra thousand notes that are needed to get the version with wooden games. You will not get lighter and more sculptural TV!
Read more about Beovision Harmony at Bang & Olufsen
Karl Erik Sylthe
Redaktør i Audiophile.no
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.Latest from Karl Erik Sylthe
- Rega Mercury og Solis – HighEnd forsterkersett med britisk tradisjon
- Bowers & Wilkins og McLaren utvider partnerskapet med den nye Px8 S2 McLaren Edition
- TEST: Pixel 10 Pro XL – Googles flaggskip i KI-ens tidsalder
- TEST: Cyrus 40 – elegant og kompakt HiFi i forsiktig HighEnd-terreng
- PLATESMAKING 24 - 2025. Nye- og gamle helter
- KLH Audio med ny distributør i Norge – med tre nye høyttalermodeller
- Lumin X2 – nytt flaggskip med egenutviklet DAC-teknologi
- TEST: Sennheiser Momentum 4 - høy kvalitet til en svært moderat pris
- TEST: JBL Tour One M3 – et friskt pust
- TEST: Sonos Ace - gigant i ukjent terreng?
- TEST: Sennheiser HDB 630 – en fullblods 600er?
- TEST: B&W Px8 S2 – en velkledd audiofil mester
- GRUPPETEST: Fem trådløse hodetelefoner i Premium-segmentet
- PLATESMAKING 22-2025. Fire gamle helter og en nykommer
- Linn introduserer ny versjon av Klimax Exaktbox
- Technics SL-1200G Master Edition - en verdig avskjed med en legende?
- Sound of Heaven og Hifisentralen med minimesse i Drammen
- PLATESMAKING: Little Feat - The Last Record Album (Deluxe Edition). Som å hoppe etter Colombus
- TEST; Atohm Sirocco 1.24 – en velkledd fransk sjarmør
- TEST: Eversolo Play - strømmefavoritten som utvidet repertoaret

