Either way is fine (polarity wise). I would follow Rogue's recommendation. Polarity inversion is dismissed by as many as it is believed. Some preamps offer the provision to change polarity at the remote. Expirementing with this reveals very little on most music/recordings,at other times a slight change in midrange tonality.
If your pre was recently upgraded, listen to it for 100-200 hours to let it burn-in. It is my belief that any new parts, wiring etc, needs time to "settle-in". Once your pre has re-settled, take a handful of your favourite recordings and do a listening evaluation with polarity inversion to determine which way sounded the best.
peter jasz
If your pre was recently upgraded, listen to it for 100-200 hours to let it burn-in. It is my belief that any new parts, wiring etc, needs time to "settle-in". Once your pre has re-settled, take a handful of your favourite recordings and do a listening evaluation with polarity inversion to determine which way sounded the best.
peter jasz