MartyMcFly said:
Try this...
Record a little bit of guitar. Then take a plugin(Waves) or probably any others...I use one of the waves compressors. If you look at the plugin there should be a 0 with a line thru it. THATS your phase reversal button.
NOW duplicate the track.
Then pan each track to the extreme opposite sides of each other.
THEN...pull up one of the plugins(it doesnt matter which) and hit that phase reversal button.
THAT should be the sound of phase.
IF you move your head around while listening it might actually make you dizzy.
This is NOT phase, but polarity, and is a different issue entirely. See the thread
Phase. I can't understand!? for more on the difference.
The sound of phase cancellation is referred to as comb filtering, because what it does is cancel out a variety of frequencies. The cancellations are related to the difference in time between the two signals. The easiest way to hear it, for me, is to listen to the mics individually, and then together. If you seem to be losing a frequency or two, you have issues. Some times (sometimes) the polarity switch will make things sound better. It will NOT eliminate the phase cancellations, it will only change them. It may be an improvement, or it may not.
The real trick, for me, is to always check the polarity on each track, both ways. I can then choose the best sounding version. This way, if I miss a phase issue, it doesn’t matter.
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