Absolute Polarity Switch


Whenever I play a new CD (my system is single source CD) I listen with the polarity both ways to determine which is right for that recording. Often, that setting works for all the tracks, but sometimes it is mixed, on compilation albums, for example. Once I have determined the best sounding position for that CD (or individual track), I mark it with a red or blue dot sticker.


My understanding of, and experience with, absolute polarity is that you want to match the polarity of the microphones that originally captured the sound, regardless of how many times the polarity may have been flipped between them and the sound coming out of your speakers. The reason for this is that there has never been a universal standard for wiring mics, so it could be either way. If you don’t have a method for changing the polarity of your system, then the odds of it being right (ie best sounding) for any given recording are about 50/50. In simplistic terms this means that half of your music collection will never sound as good as it could. This correlates very well with my experience, as roughly half my CDs sound better one way, and half the other.


Of course, this assumes that all the original mics were wired the same way. This may not be the case, especially with multi-track recordings. Even with these recordings, though, in most cases, I have found one setting preferable to the other.


A few components (mainly preamps) do have an absolute polarity switch (sometimes improperly labeled as “phase”), but most don’t. Without one, you will need to reverse the speaker leads at your amp, in order to switch polarity. Not exactly an easy or practical method. Implementing a polarity switch is relatively easy, if you have transformers somewhere in the signal path. If not, it gets a lot more complicated. My amplifier (Antique Sound Lab Tulip 2A3 SET) has input transformers, so I had a friend help me add a polarity switch to it years ago. Eventually, I hope to acquire a Music First Audio passive TVC pre with polarity switching, freeing me to upgrade my amp. Some may not hear a difference switching polarity, but a polarity switch is not something I want to live without in my system.


tommylion

Showing 6 responses by tommylion

One of the reasons I am certain that getting polarity “correct” makes a difference in my system is that my non-audiophile wife also hears it. Sometimes when we are listening together she will say she thinks the polarity is wrong, and she is often right.
mijostyn,

It certainly is controversial topic, and even many hard-core audiophiles who hear differences with all kinds of other things don’t address it. If you can’t hear any difference in your system then that’s cool, saves you some trouble. Since discovering I can hear it in my system, I can’t go back.

As far as blind testing, I’ve never understood why it would have any relevance for determining what one hears with ones own ears in their own system. If you are trying to scientifically prove to someone else that you hear what you hear, then maybe, but I feel no need to do so. In posting, I am merely sharing my experience, in the hope that some fellow music/home audio enthusiasts might benefit from it. Others can test it in their own systems, ignore it, or ridicule it. Makes no difference as far as my enjoyment of my system.
The trick is to have a switch, or some other similar means to change it on the fly. Once I installed the switch on my amp, it was very easy to determine which way was better for each recording. To me, the most logical place to have it is on your preamp, or, these days, DAC/pre.

I understand it can done easily in the digital domain, but I've never had a digital component with this feature. All I know is that in the analog domain, a switch before or after transformers (ideally you want one switch for both channels) works great.
scm,

it looks like Herron preamps also have a polarity switch (labeled “Invert”) on the front panel, and remote. Very nice!

AC polarity is actually a whole different issue, and can of worms. I’ve never heard of a component with a switch like that, cool.


LampizatOr makes, or at least used to, a type of power conditioner to deal with this issue:

https://www.lampizator.com/the-silk/
mijostyn,

You have tested polarity in your system and you hear no difference. No problem, I take your word for it. However, you then leap to the  assumption that no one else can either. You have no way of determining or knowing that for certain, you can only speak of your experience.