@theaudiomaniac I think you might be right, in terms of AC voltage output being close enough. That said, there is a 1.2% variance at 5,000Hz, and close to a 1% variance around this frequency. While small, wouldn’t that be audible
That is at best 0.1db. Left to right, your system could be off 3,4,5 or more db. It will not be audible.
I did read an old forum post that indicated that subtle differences may not be detectable using a voltmeter. The ultimate test is to use a dual channel oscilloscope, inverting one of the channels phases, then using the “sum” function of the scope. Because you’ve inverted one of the phases, the channels should cancel out each other when you sum them, and any variance from 0V that the scope shows would indicate an imbalance. I used to have an oscilloscope that hooked up to your PC but it’s so old it won’t work anymore.
Don’t waste your time. A wide bandwidth multimeter is accurate enough. The difference in time between measurements and thermal differences are smaller than what you are measuring. It is your room. Didn't you already say you swapped channels and the issue is still there? That rules out the electronics.
What you need to do is figure out how to measure room response. There are many resources on the web. It will cost you $100-200. If you have a noticeable difference, then then it will be easy to see them. Measure with one speaker, measure with the other, then compare.