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I was curious if anyone here could tell me why some manufacturers allow their components to invert polarity. Is there actually a technical or design reason why this would be an optimum way to build a circuit?
Don't get me started.....
It's often to do with the circuit(s) they choose to use.
Wouldn't it be just as easy for them to switch it back after their circuit design right at the output jacks? In that way the unit would at least output the polarity that went into it.
Y'already are, so might as well finish it up. C'mon, let's hear your rant.
I assume they do it to pander to the audiophile community. I even have some CD sets with the same content on two CD's with opposite polarity, so others besides amp manufacturers do it also. I'm pretty sure no one has ever heard a difference in polarity in a properly conducted blind test. So it would be one of those "belief" things. Is there a technical reason for it? I don't believe so.
Quote from: Housteau on 20 Oct 2007, 08:06 pmI was curious if anyone here could tell me why some manufacturers allow their components to invert polarity. Is there actually a technical or design reason why this would be an optimum way to build a circuit?I assume they do it to pander to the audiophile community. I even have some CD sets with the same content on two CD's with opposite polarity, so others besides amp manufacturers do it also. I'm pretty sure no one has ever heard a difference in polarity in a properly conducted blind test. So it would be one of those "belief" things. Is there a technical reason for it? I don't believe so.
BTW, I've tested this extensively and never found a meaningful difference. A few years ago an engineer friend sent me a file with a static sawtooth wave that reverses polarity in the middle. Son of a gun you can hear the timbre change halfway through! But the wave is at 20 Hz, so what's really being heard is loudspeaker nonlinearity. When you try the same test at 50 Hz or whatever your speakers can actually reproduce, all of the sudden the reversal is no longer audible.
I think it's like being able to see the rainbow effects in DLP projectors, or being susceptible to motion sickness...some people are affected, some aren't. But to say there is no technical reason? As Charles Hansen said "you're new to this, aren't you"?
Quote from: fmw on 21 Oct 2007, 12:34 pmI assume they do it to pander to the audiophile community. I even have some CD sets with the same content on two CD's with opposite polarity, so others besides amp manufacturers do it also. I'm pretty sure no one has ever heard a difference in polarity in a properly conducted blind test. So it would be one of those "belief" things. Is there a technical reason for it? I don't believe so.Steve Eddy has just explained the technical reason for it. And in fact it's very easy to hear polarity differences blind - I've done it myself using a PC-based ABX program and cheap headphones, 10/10 correct - if you construct a test signal designed to accentuate the differences (which I did). It's extremely difficult on music, but I do know of two successful ABX trials using carefully chosen short musical selections.The reason it's so difficult is that when music is mixed from a recording made on multiple mics at different locations with multiple sound sources, there simply is no such thing as correct polarity, and in addition the differences between the two polarities become very small.
How about my rant?
Recording an electric bass by plugging it direct into the console is a common recording technique. But what is the correct polarity for that? What if the bass player uses a pick and picks some notes up and others down? There's no standard I'm aware of for pickup winding direction either, so this complicates it further. And what about all-electronic instruments like synthesizers?
The reason it's so difficult is that when music is mixed from a recording made on multiple mics at different locations with multiple sound sources, there simply is no such thing as correct polarity...
You can move the mic, just a couple inches, correct for SPL electrically and whola! The waveform that used to be making an electrically negative waveform is now making a positive one.
Quote from: fmw on 21 Oct 2007, 12:34 pmI assume they do it to pander to the audiophile community. I even have some CD sets with the same content on two CD's with opposite polarity, so others besides amp manufacturers do it also. I'm pretty sure no one has ever heard a difference in polarity in a properly conducted blind test. So it would be one of those "belief" things. Is there a technical reason for it? I don't believe so.Steve Eddy has just explained the technical reason for it. And in fact it's very easy to hear polarity differences blind - I've done it myself using a PC-based ABX program and cheap headphones, 10/10 correct - if you construct a test signal designed to accentuate the differences (which I did). It's extremely difficult on music, but I do know of two successful ABX trials using carefully chosen short musical selections.