Mains polarity, for those ignorant of this arcane subject, is concerned with getting the "right" connection of mains "Active" and "Neutral" vis-a-vis your power transformer.
It sounds like wank but many people report hearing a major improvement when their system is correctly polarised.
Ginger ... R U out there??

Can U hexplain the theory behind this??
For those who have not come across this topic before, I invite U to read the article at:
www.boundforsound.com/tweak.htmFor those of U in the know, could U possibly do a measurement and report back? It will be interesting to get results both from 240v countries and those benighted souls who make do with 110v!
What U need to do is:
1. disconnect all ICs from the component under test
2. temporarily disconnect the earth pin in your power cord from making contact with the wall-socket earth slot (2-pin US folk have no problem here!)
What I did (in Oz, a 3-pin country) was take apart a double-adaptor and remove the brass earth pin connectors. Then I plugged this into the wall-socket and my AKSA 3-pin plug into it.
Then switch your DVM to "AC volts", plug the black probe into the earth slot of another wall-socket and the red probe onto a convenient chassis screw-hole or earth bolt, and measure.
Then you reverse the "Active" & "Neutral" wires (I made up a 6" extension cord which reversed these wires) and repeat the measurement.
The orientation which gives the LOWER reading is the "correct" one ... don't ask me why!

Giiingggeeeerrrr!!
I was expecting to read a few volts, max, but I was gob-smacked to measure up to 70v AC on my meter when the component was switched off and 110v when it was switched on!
Does anyone else get these enormous readings??
(Of course, in the "real world" when the component is in use, the earth pin of the power cord IS connected to wall-socket earth (and your case is attached to the IEC socket earth pin), so there's no safety issue!)
Regards,
Andy