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Subwoofers get quite then loud again
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<blockquote data-quote="Lasherž" data-source="post: 8714452" data-attributes="member: 679555"><p>Besides one being a delay and the other being a total inverse, no. They're mathematically the same, but because music is a finite line, unlike trigonometric waveforms, there is timing to consider and so it's different musically.</p><p></p><p>Edit: Exactly, as the page shows, here's the difference:</p><p></p><p>With phase, we are shifting the position of a waveform relative to another in <strong>time</strong> (degrees of cycles). With polarity, we are positioning the waveform as either right side up, or upside down relative to its original state. I.e. we are flipping the +/- <strong>orientation</strong> without changing the waveform's position in time.</p><p></p><p>Music relies on time. So once again, the original statement. "They share an airspace, you may even be experiencing a phase shift between the two brands, I've heard Taramps defaults to reverse speaker wiring so it's possible as one contracts the other expands."</p><p></p><p>You may be experiencing a phase shift between two brands of amps affecting the airspace of the subs. You may also be experiencing reversed speaker wiring because taramps wires their amps differently. So both, neither being good.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lasherž, post: 8714452, member: 679555"] Besides one being a delay and the other being a total inverse, no. They're mathematically the same, but because music is a finite line, unlike trigonometric waveforms, there is timing to consider and so it's different musically. Edit: Exactly, as the page shows, here's the difference: With phase, we are shifting the position of a waveform relative to another in [B]time[/B] (degrees of cycles). With polarity, we are positioning the waveform as either right side up, or upside down relative to its original state. I.e. we are flipping the +/- [B]orientation[/B] without changing the waveform's position in time. Music relies on time. So once again, the original statement. "They share an airspace, you may even be experiencing a phase shift between the two brands, I've heard Taramps defaults to reverse speaker wiring so it's possible as one contracts the other expands." You may be experiencing a phase shift between two brands of amps affecting the airspace of the subs. You may also be experiencing reversed speaker wiring because taramps wires their amps differently. So both, neither being good. [/QUOTE]
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Subwoofers get quite then loud again
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