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For example if you pluck a string towards you you'll hear one polarity, and if you pluck it the other way you'll hear the opposite.
A strange choice of examples. If you are talking about, say, a guitar then the first impulse will be either a rarefaction or compression, depending on the listening position, as the major source of the sound heard is not the string but the upper surface of the sound box. This is regardless of which way the string is plucked since what is imparted to the instrument from the string is variations in tension caused by the vibration. The lateral motion of the string doesn't count for much.
Actually, I have never seen a mic with a polarity inversion switch. Mic preamps and channel strips on mixing boards usually have them.
Not true in my recordings, and I am not alone. I am aware of the polarity of the signal all the way through every single stage (and there are many) of the recording /mixing/mastering process. I would never buy or use a piece of equipment without knowing whether it inverted polarity. I have come across two cases where it was a real factor in my experience - both about 12 years ago. One involved a piece (spl Vitalizer) intended as a mastering tool. I began to notice that it always sounded better in some way when the box was out of the circuit versus "hard wire" bypass button engaged. Then I did a little careful comparison, putting the signal simultaneously through the box and through two other channels on the board. Bringing up the levels on both pairs to match revealed that "bypass" inverted polarity.
Picky picky... maybe I'm misremembering, but I'm pretty sure I have. Anyway it's not very relevant where the switch is, just that it exists.
Whoa there... I never claimed expertise as a recording engineer, so I'm not sure why you would presume I have any.
A couple of equipment and music reviewers I know are using this recording as a reference for recorded orchestral sound...
It is relevant to your presumption of expertise on the subject.Quote from: opaqueice on 23 Oct 2007, 12:59 amWhoa there... I never claimed expertise as a recording engineer, so I'm not sure why you would presume I have any. No offense, but I didn't, actually.
As for time delay, that makes sense - except that as we've agreed, if the mics are at different locations they may "hear" a different polarity anyway.I don't see it quite like this, but I'm sorry, I don't have the inclination to thrash through this, so can we let this point slide?
Furthermore if there's more than one source of sound I don't see how there can be any choice of time delay that preserves coherence for more than one of the sources. Am I missing something there?No, you're not but usually the need is only for an approximation. Anything within ± 5 msec is fine when the spots are only lightly used and the group being recorded is physically large, like an orchestra, large choir, big band and such. Beyond 10 msec, with situations where the spot is representing a particular instrument in thee mix at levels similar to those for the same instrument in the main mic (which I have for convenience been calling a room mic), the dual attack nature of the sound starts to become apparent. At 15 msec it is obvious, if there is any percussive aspect to the sound - say vibes, piano, xylophone, for example.Strictly speaking the only way to have phase coherence for all instruments is to use a coincident stereo pair to record them even if the ensemble is huge, which is why I did just that, against all odds, in 1994 when I recorded the Ukrainian Radio and Television Orchestra in Kiev. Here was a 95 piece orchestra being recorded with a single pair of ribbons, with the conductor's enthusiastic support (after many lengthy discussions of just the type we are having here). A couple of equipment and music reviewers I know are using this recording as a reference for recorded orchestral sound so theory seems to fit reality here.
I'll look for your recording - I'd love to hear it.
Interesting, and very informative - thanks. Occasionally I've listened to binaural recordings, and through a laptop soundcard and mid-fi phones they sound so realistic it's literally scary - more so than all but the most carefully set up ultra hi-end stereo systems. I guess there must be a reason for that. I never could believe it was just phase and polarity, but proper time alignment of sudden sharp sounds makes a lot of sense.I'll look for your recording - I'd love to hear it.
Do you agree Steve/Ethan?1. Absolute polarity can be audible under very specialized test situations. Audible says nothing about better/worse, it just means its detectable. 2. Under the vast majority of situations its not audible.
I think you're forgetting something - ears are connected to brains, and brains do a lot of processing.
Using a PC ABX program, I listened through Grado headphones to the two tones. The effect wasn't obvious, but listening carefully you could hear a slight difference in pitch. Let's say A sounded higher than B, and I could pretty easily score perfectly on the ABX by listening for it. So the polarity reversal was audible, but was it my ears or was it the headphones or something else in the playback chain?
I don't know what that means in practice. What really matters is if the sound is changed enough to affect your enjoyment. To me it's a non-issue, even for sounds with sharp leading edge transients like a kick drum. It seems like there'd be a big difference in the sound if the drum head (or loudspeaker) goes in rather than out. But in practice it makes little if any difference.
I don't know if it's your ears or a nonlinearity in the headphones. It may depend on the frequency components present, as I explained earlier about the sawtooth wave. In that case the reversal was audible at 20 Hz but not at 50 Hz. BTW it was the same with headphones or with speakers with the sawtooth wave.
Again, I won't argue against the importance of absolute polarity too strongly because it apparently is discernible in some cases. But I have never seen a situation where it makes a meaningful difference in sound quality. It seems more a curiosity than anything else.
If it was nonlinearity in the phones it wouldn't have reversed when I turned them around. Therefore it was NOT in the phones.
That's too complicated for me to ponder. Seriously, why would it NOT reverse? Or do I not understand what you mean by reverse?
Make sense?
*Caveat - one possible source of asymmetry in sealed-box speaker drivers is the cushion of air behind them and in front reacting differently to compressions versus rarefactions. However an open-backed headphone doesn't have such a cushion.
Maybe it would if I could see the phones and how they implement the reversing. But just being open back is no assurance there's no back pressure unless the back is totally open with no support vanes etc.
Actually it does, except that it is between the diaphragm and your ears! (unless it's an AKG K-1000 or similar)
When you say "turning the phones around" do you mean reversing them on your head - left for right?