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Post by jhen86 (jordan) on Feb 8, 2020 9:15:45 GMT -7
Two of my Zs are not in phase with each other. I’ve resorted to flipping the leads inside one of my speaker cables. It’s marked REV and I pull it out when needed. That said, I’ve had my eye on a suhr buffer that would go first in my chain (or after fuzz). It has the option of flipping phase to one line when running two amps stereo. I know there are many others like this as well. www.suhr.com/electronics/tone-tools/suhr-buffer/My question is....is one approach better than the other? “Correcting” phase at start of chain before I hit the amps (technically one amp would be seeing reverse phase at input) vs just flipping at the cab on one of the amps. Note: Polarity may be the better term, instead of phase. I recognize that. Just looking for a practical answer.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2020 10:04:31 GMT -7
I have done it both ways. On my big board when I was running 3 amps I had a custom 'out' box that had the switching on it.
For combo amps the thing I've done in the past is to swap the leads on the speaker. My combos are all single speaker.
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Post by jhen86 (jordan) on Feb 8, 2020 10:41:25 GMT -7
Yeah, I used to have the leads reversed on one cab too, but then added a third cab and amp and figured it would be easier to have all cabs in phase and have a cable to do the flip. A little easier and leaves me more options.
I assume no discernible difference in tone either way, Roscoe?
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