JT30.com

Amps: www.HarpAmps.com
Tab: www.HarpTab.com
Contact Webmaster
Links: www.HarpLinks.com
Learn: www.HarpLog.com
Rock & Roll Lyrics

Mic Kaczmarczik's Why Care About Phase Information

Why Care About Phase

This directory contains USENET articles Mic has saved about guitars, equipment, pickup, techniques, players, and so on. Mic has graciously granted permission to post the stuff on the JT30 page on the off chance that it might be useful in the context of Blues Harmonica. Mic is not responsible for the content, just the collection.

Questions and Answers

Why Care About Phase

Why Care About Phase

From detritu--(at)--x.netcom.com Mon Jun 1 10:43:04 CDT 1998
From: detritu--(at)--x.netcom.com(Lord Valve)
Newsgroups: alt.guitar.amps
Subject: Re: speaker wire reversal on re-issue 4x10 bassman
Date: 1 Jun 1998 05:52:01 GMT
X-NETCOM-Date: Sun May 31 10:52:01 PM PDT 1998
Xref: geraldo.cc.utexas.edu alt.guitar.amps:108085

In <357237F1.2FB--(at)--oncentric.net> Robert Hinson
<6bq5el8--(at)--oncentric.net> writes:
>
>to aga gurus, in g. weber's first book he has a section on the 4x10
>bassman and says you need to reverse the polarity on the speaker wires
>to the current speakers (alnico mojo/eminence) because the signal from
>the output section is inverted with respect to the input signal from
>your guitar. this part i understand (because of the gain stage type
and
>arrangement) but why then wouldn't the same be true of any amp using
>similar preamp gain structure (marshall, vox, etc.--they all invert
the
>signal with respect to the input)? he says what you want is the
speaker
>cone to move forward when signal is applied or when you test the
>polarity with a 9v battery. as far as i know, the current alnico
>eminence speakers move forward when given the battery test. the only
>difference is the orientation (left or right) of the speaker terminals
>when compared to the orientation of ceramic magnet speakers. if a
>speaker moves forward when given either signal or the polarity test,
why
>the hell should you reverse the wires? i thought maybe this was just
>true with the old jensens which weber says move backward so that is
why
>one would have to make the wiring change. lord valve, trem, do you
guys
>have the real scoop on this? maybe there's something about speaker
>construction i don't understand or that gerrie left out. thanks rh

Lord Valve Speaketh:
"Absolute" phasing - whether a single speaker (or an array of
speakers) moves inward or outward when presented with a positive-going
transient - is really a matter of taste. Some people (I happen to be
one of them) can hear this; of those who can, only around half express
a preference for one 'phase' over the other. My own take on this is
that I don't care much, unless the program material has a lot of
kickdrum in the mix and it's LOUD. In that case, I prefer to have the
'absolute' phase be correct. Note that this is really a pretty
haphazard process, as (in a large PA system) the signal will pass
through many dozens of stages of preamplification, EQ, summing,
buffering, etc., and many discrete stages such as the mixer, outboard
processing (including compression, EQ, filtering, time-based effects,
etc.) electronic crossover, power amplification, and so forth. Some of
these stages/devices will invert signal and some won't. If any of
these devices use balanced line connections, the 'absolute' phasing
will also be at the mercy of the guy who wired the connecting cables.
There is really only one way to determine whether an entire system is
"in phase," and that requires test equipment. "Relative" phasing is
much more important...if you have two speakers wired electrically
out-of-phase in the same cabinet, you'll be looking at a pretty drastic
drop in low-frequency performance. Having two arrays (like the left
and right speaker stacks of a PA system) out of phase with each other
is more subtle...the folks in front of the right stack will like what
they hear, as will the folks in front of the left stack. The folks in
the middle will be listening to some pretty squirrelly cancellation
effects, though. As far as your Bassman goes, feel free to try it both
ways. You can't hurt anything by running the speakers out of phase
with respect to the input signal, so if you actually find that you
prefer one phase over the other, go for it. I have a customer who had
me put a phase-reverse switch on his Twin; he likes it "in" on some
tunes, and "out" on others. Why don't you try it yourself and post the
results.

Lord Valve
Visit my website: http://www.freeyellow.com/members2/lord-valve/
Good tube FAQ for newbies. Click the e-mail link and request a
tube catalog. I specialize in top quality HAND-SELECTED NOS and
current-production vacuum tubes. Good prices, fast service.

"I got the chop...I'll never get popped." - Tower of Power






 

Amp Shipping
Dealer Cost Vs List Price
Death Switch
Diodes on Plates
Dont Use Stereo Speakers
Effects FAQ
Effects FAQ
Effects FAQ
Fix Reverb Ground Hum
Flea Market Checkout
Hammond Organ Buys
Hammond Tonewheel Organs
How Long Do Tubes Last
How Many Watts
Magnetics for Morons
Microphone Placement
NOS defined
Stage Placement
What Are Optoisolators
What are orange drops
What Dealers Pay
What is 6V6GTA
What is a Fetron
What is a Klystron
What is a Plexi
What is Bias
What is Blue Glow
What is Ground Lift
What is Kinkless Tetrode
What is Single Ended
What Is Tube Glow
What JBL Means
Which 4x12 Impedance
Who Made Delco Tubes
Who Makes Kendrick Spkrs
Why 16ohm Loads
Why AC on heaters
Why Blackface an Amp
Why Bleeder Resistors
Why Cap Value Spread
Why Care About Phase
Why Change SF Lead Dress
Why Microphonic Cords
Why Not Bias By Scope
Why Opto Trem
Why rectifier is separate
Why Select Highest Z Tap
Why Sprague Caps
Why Use Grid Stoppers
Why Use Standby

micK pages


Amps
Caps
Circuits
D-I-Y
Effects
Fender
Guitars
Q & A
Speakers
Tubes
Vendors