T
TripleM
Well-known member
I hear people talk about how, "Your polarity is reversed." Could someone explain to me what it is, what causes it, and maybe even what it sounds like?
Thanks.
Thanks.
tvaillan said:let's say your right speaker was plugged in wrong
i.e. the red wire was in the black hole and the balck wire in the red hole.
now let's say your left speaker is fine.
play the music and you get 180 phase shift on the right speaker.
anybody can comment on this?
is it a good explanation? or am i full of shit?
littledog said:
Phase shift is caused when a given sound is recorded or played back through two (or more) sources in such a way that one of them is shifted in time.
littledog said:
You were doing fine until you got to the "phase shift" part. That's where a lot of people get confused.
Phase shift is caused when a given sound is recorded or played back through two (or more) sources in such a way that one of them is shifted in time. If the timing is such that the waves are arriving 180 degrees out of phase with eachother (so that a positive peak on one signal is arriving at the same time as a negative peak) the resulting cancellations can very much resemble reversed polarity, and as such, can be "fixed" to some extent by flipping the polarity of one side.
But polarity has nothing to do with timing or phase. Polarity is when you create a mirror image of the wave form, which is often done accidently by miswiring one side of an input or output somewhere in the audio chain. (Could be the speakers, but could be anywhere else as well).
ambi said:hmm, so how would you knwo if you had phase reversal going on?> or the mics being outa phase or whatever it is that causes problems?
for instance, if my brother was playing guitar, and i miced his guitar with a shure sm57, and his voice with a condensor, say an apex 410. Would there be a possibility of phase problems? And could they be fixed? the phase reversal switch?
destorctr said:polarity can be fixed by connecting cancelled sorces to a common ground