Three things i don’t believe were mentioned.
Some folks don’t hear phase reversals - even those with golden ears. You might be one of those lucky individuals.
Secondly, do we know that your amplifier doesn’t invert polarity? You might have two inverting components which net out to non-inverted.
Finally (and building on the second point), you need to take the entire signal chain into consideration - your digital front end as well as your phono section.
For each source selected, add up the total number of gain stages. An even number means non-inverting and an odd number means inverting.
It could end up (for example) that running through your digital front end, the signal is inverted and through your phono section, it’s non-inverted (or vice-versa).
BTW, I’m one of the lucky ones ;-)
Cheers,
Thom @ Galibier Design
Some folks don’t hear phase reversals - even those with golden ears. You might be one of those lucky individuals.
Secondly, do we know that your amplifier doesn’t invert polarity? You might have two inverting components which net out to non-inverted.
Finally (and building on the second point), you need to take the entire signal chain into consideration - your digital front end as well as your phono section.
For each source selected, add up the total number of gain stages. An even number means non-inverting and an odd number means inverting.
It could end up (for example) that running through your digital front end, the signal is inverted and through your phono section, it’s non-inverted (or vice-versa).
BTW, I’m one of the lucky ones ;-)
Cheers,
Thom @ Galibier Design