LeeRosario said:
Well the thing I find particularly interesting is the speaker design. I don't care for the other stuff. For example, JBL claims to design thier speakers opposite the polarity of most, if not all other speaker manufacturers.
In the end they still sound normal, but I suppose they did it just to be different.
All the stuff that guy said, I suppose I'm too young in the game to say I've seen it all, so it hasn't happened yet.
JBL doesn't do that anymore. They got on the AES standard long ago, probably fifteen or twenty years since they made drivers that way.
Here are a couple of things I found:
He talked about drivers in a box being out of polarity. What he doesn't get is that sometimes that actually is better for phase coherence. Crossovers produce phase shift. Having all the drivers mounted on a flat baffle often means their acoustic centers aren't matched up. That means more phase shift. Woofers are "slower" than tweeters. Even more. All these factors and more may mean polarity reversal of the tweeter helps give the best phase coherence for the listener. For any decent speaker, you should only have to be concerned with polarity at the inputs, not for each driver.
Like I said, I agree with absolute polarity. I'm kind of a stickler about it, actually. The guy just uses some misconceptions when discussing it.
The other thing was his discussion of digital vs. analog polarity reversal, with regards to switching polarity at the speaker leads. He makes the claim that reversing speaker leads "reverses the direction the audio signal is applied to the.......crossover". He then claims this may be why people can hear polarity reversal when they switch speaker leads.
EARTH TO AUDIOPHILE: The signal going to the speakers is AC. It's polarity reverses constantly. Current goes through the crossover both ways all the time. Switching the polarity at the speaker just determines which way it goes first, like any other polarity switch. It shouldn't make a difference. Maybe it does, but his factual error makes his findings suspect, to me anyway.
As for the rest, I don't know about wire directionality, and all that. And I do support the idea of absolute polarity, maybe just for my own peace of mind. But the guy just seems to not know much about how the stuff he talks about actually works, and draws conclusions from his misconceptions.