
I'm not the one that brought polarity into the discussion.
I was initially talking about phase.
Thing is, you seem to (correct me if I'm misreading your posts) feel that 180 degrees is only a result of, or applicable to, *polarity reversals*...which is not the case, you can also have 180 out-of-phase, which is what I was talking about and what the OP was asking about.
It's best shown with a sine wave (that's the first diagram I posted)....but we all agree that most audio signals are made up of many sine waves, and there are points in the phase difference between two "identical tracks" where time-shifting one will put the fundamental frequency a full 180 degrees out from the other track's fundamental, and cause the most dramatic cancellations....which is what I was saying back in post # 11.
I just didn't get into the longer explanation of "multiple frequencies" and that they don't all cancel or strengthen when you time-shift tracks....it was simply easier to say "try it and see what it sounds like".
So what's "blurry" about that?
I do think we all know what we are talking about and maybe just delivering the explanations with different words....but I don't think you or ashcat or I...or anyone here...has really said anything wrong or misleading.
Oh fuck me. This was about phase, not polarity.
Go argue in the mirror...
I correct you because I was invited to do so.With phase you can be 180 degrees out at a particular frequency.
Which doesn't mean anything without a frequency reference, and even then....I would only really worry when the tracks get to 180 degrees out of phase, because then the frequency cancellations will be most dramatic,
Which is misleading, in my opinion.When the track from mic 1 is 180 degrees out of phase with the track form mic 2....as in the positive cycle of soundwave one is directly opposite the negative cycle of soundwave two. Like say, if you mic the front and back of a cab.
I would only really worry when the tracks get to 180 degrees out of phase, because then the frequency cancellations will be most dramatic
Which, I'm pretty sure doesn't mean anything.
"When the track from mic 1 is 180 degrees out of phase with the track form mic 2....as in the positive cycle of soundwave one is directly opposite the negative cycle of soundwave two. Like say, if you mic the front and back of a cab.
Which is misleading, in my opinion.
Again...as already explained and with diagrams..., it refers to the more simpler sine wave example where phase can be 180 degrees out....which will be comparable to front/back cab mics (the polarity reversal you brought up).
Did you see a pot that needed stirring or what?
time-shifting can sound good or bad and he has to decide....
there will be a single point in the time-shifting of the tracks when it will sound the most bad....and I'm willing to bet it will be when the fundamental frequency on track 1 is at that 180 degree out-of-phase point of track 2....and if you could focus on the just that fundamental frequency....it will look like the sine wave diagram I posted.
Jesus you guys have really thrown me off with all the arguing and now I'm confused
So is being out of phase by 180 degrees and having opposite polarity basically the same thing? What causes two opposite polarities?
Jesus you guys have really thrown me off with all the arguing and now I'm confused
So is being out of phase by 180 degrees and having opposite polarity basically the same thing? What causes two opposite polarities?
Jesus you guys have really thrown me off with all the arguing and now I'm confused![]()
They're only indistinguishable when dealing with a sine or other simple wave form. Phase interactions come from timing differences, which is what your illustration shows. Polarity is a simple matter of inverting the waveform.
If you don't like how it sounds now the simplest thing to try is inverting polarity, which doesn't exactly address the timing difference but might make it sound better. Or you can try shifting one channel to match the other. Do whatever sounds best to you.
Interesting. Who would have thought any of this would be confusing.....
Stick to page one.![]()