I do have different speakers as rear channels. Sonance in-ceiling speakers. B&W CDM9NTs for LR and matching CDMCNT for center ch.
Is this something I need to actually fix to get best audio performance? If they truly are out of phase -- is this an engineering / assembly / design error?
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In doing the battery test - pos moves driver forward I assume? Assuming this is correct... any movement forward would be considered valid phase?
For clarification as to steps in this confirmation test:
1. remove speaker wire from amp.
2. connect speaker pos and neg to pos and neg of AAA or 9v battery.
3. observe direction of drivers.
Question...
My L and R speakers are technically a four speaker system. NT tweeter, FST driver, and the two 6.5in drivers that actually move back and forth - in unison ( I believe )... if these drivers move in correct direction - can I assume my tweeter and FST driver are also in correct phase since I won't be able to observe them moving if at all?
I will also double check all speaker and amp connections to verify pos and neg are connected correctly.
Thanks for the information.
Is this something I need to actually fix to get best audio performance? If they truly are out of phase -- is this an engineering / assembly / design error?
-----
In doing the battery test - pos moves driver forward I assume? Assuming this is correct... any movement forward would be considered valid phase?
For clarification as to steps in this confirmation test:
1. remove speaker wire from amp.
2. connect speaker pos and neg to pos and neg of AAA or 9v battery.
3. observe direction of drivers.
Question...
My L and R speakers are technically a four speaker system. NT tweeter, FST driver, and the two 6.5in drivers that actually move back and forth - in unison ( I believe )... if these drivers move in correct direction - can I assume my tweeter and FST driver are also in correct phase since I won't be able to observe them moving if at all?
I will also double check all speaker and amp connections to verify pos and neg are connected correctly.
Thanks for the information.