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I don't get what your trying to do. You reversed the polarity of both speakers, so that's no big deal, but then you reversed the ........and then there you lost me. Do you change the wires in the interconnect, say from a CD player so that the signal went to the shield and vise-versa?Wayner
At the amp side you reverse the way you hook up the speaker cables and at the speaker hook ups end you (do not) reverse them. Did you all know that some recordings were recorded this way?
Quote from: HiFiSoundGuy on 28 Sep 2008, 02:40 pm At the amp side you reverse the way you hook up the speaker cables and at the speaker hook ups end you (do not) reverse them. Did you all know that some recordings were recorded this way?What do you mean, "some recordings were recorded this way"? Recordings are usually made with many channels recorded by many mics at different positions (and therefore different relative phases). Mics often have a phase switch, and when the channels are mixed the engineer can again reverse the phase as well as adding time delay, phase response aberrations from filters, etc. etc.Anyway, absolute phase is almost totally inaudible to humans (phase in general is very hard to hear, fortunately for us). The exceptions are special test tones and a few specific natural sounds, sometimes, if you listen _very_ carefully.
I must be dense, but please restate what you are doing. Are you just flipping the positive and negative on the speaker terminals? That would put the signal (in the electronics) and the speakers 180 degrees out of phase (relative to the original signal)....Is this what you mean?Wayner
opaqueice,Wrong Again,the difference in absolute phase can be easily detected when listening to Sheffield Labs Direct to Disc recordings.
The effect is best demonstrated when these recordings are played back through phase coherent loudspeakers,that is, speakers that can pass a recognizable 1kHz square wave.
If you doubt this,try an experimental listening test.
opaqueice,Wrong Again,the difference in absolute phase can be easily detected when listening to Sheffield Labs Direct to Disc recordings. The effect is best demonstrated when these recordings are played back through phase coherent loudspeakers,that is, speakers that can pass a recognizable 1kHz square wave. If you doubt this,try an experimental listening test.I have also heard a difference when absolute phase was changed in the digital domain. I was able to do this when I owned a Mike Moffat's Frankenstein CD player which was the predecessor to Theta Digital's first commercial product. The effect was more subtle and I could not have told you which polarity was the more correct one. No longer having the means to easily switch the phase for each recording by flipping a switch, I have not concerned myself with which direction is the correct one for years. I suspect it may matter when a simple microphone array is used in which the absolute phase intergrity is maintained. Scotty