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According to him, in essence its like having a phase reverse switch. I've heard elsewhere that some speakers are wired 180 degrees out of phase. Maybe they are too? I don't know the technical end of XOs or stuff like that, so take it as you will.
Here is an easy way to check phase which I use when switching components. The first track on Roger Water's AMUSED TO DEATH CD starts with the sound of crickets and then the sound of dogs barking way to the right. The dogs really sound like they are outside your house next door. If you have a phase problem the dogs won't be there. I recently bought a Conrad Johnson preamp and amp and the dogs were in front. I flipped the ac plug on the preamp and the dogs appeared far right. Everything in the image sharpened and the stage became normal. The recording technique used on this album uses phase manipulation to fool your brain into hearing things way outside your speakers. If you get your system to do this CD right, the rest of your collection will sound better!
So Conrad Johnson doesn't use polarized plugs? Or, you just made your chassis connected to the "hot" side of the AC. So much for UL approvals, huh.Wayner
Here is an easy way to check phase which I use when switching components. The first track on Roger Water's AMUSED TO DEATH CD starts with the sound of crickets and then the sound of dogs barking way to the right. The dogs really sound like they are outside your house next door. If you have a phase problem the dogs won't be there.
I recently bought a Conrad Johnson preamp and amp and the dogs were in front. I flipped the ac plug on the preamp and the dogs appeared far right. Everything in the image sharpened and the stage became normal. The recording technique used on this album uses phase manipulation to fool your brain into hearing things way outside your speakers. If you get your system to do this CD right, the rest of your collection will sound better!
... and yet, this has nothing to do with absolute polarity. Absolute polarity, i.e., whether the speaker provides a compression or rarifaction in response to any given part of the musical signal, would not be affected by reversing the AC power plug.
"Music normally creates compression waves. Electronics, however, often invert that natural, positive polarity to unnatural, negative rarefaction, thus diminishing physical and aesthetic impact. The term Absolute Polarity uniquely describes the correct arrival to the ear of wavefronts from loudspeakers, with respect to actual musical instruments.
So let's ignore microphones - you're in a room with some live singers & musicians. As the trumpet player sounds, you hear the leading edge of the wavefront hit your eardrums. And it sounds like a trumpet. If you recorded it with correct absolute polarity and played it back in front of you through a one-driver, "full-range" speaker, it would still sound like a trumpet.But if you then flicked a phase reversal switch on the tape/CD-R machine, so that the recording was now playing back at you with reverse absolute polarity, it would sound different - strange in fact. This is because you are no longer hearing the true leading edge of the notes.
If you say you can't hear absolute phase change then IMO there are two possibilities:1. you have speakers which use higher-order crossovers which require one driver to be connected in reverse ... this makes it very difficult to pick up absolute polarity issues. (Mine are like that. )2. you are one of those people who are not particularly sensitive to it (which is perhaps a blessing! ).
Well said Andy. As one who is sensitive to correct polarity, it makes a big difference for me. Couldn't live without that switch. Mine is in the digital domain. no invert switch on preamp. The phono stage has one as well. I have found that LPs are the worst culprits. Some with the bass out of phase some just all out of phase. Love that switch.
OMIGOSH! Andyr got it almost all right! More so than anyone else I've read, over the years, over the decades.