As most of you know, I'm new to car audio.
I have a mono amp with the usual knobs, gain, "Bass Boost", "Crossover", whatever...
It also has a knob for a "Phase" Setting that goes from 0-180...
I've been reading the how-tos on tuning the amp gains, but none mention the PHASE setting.
What is it? Why's it there? & Why do I notice a difference in sound when I change it?
Oh, and what should it be set to?
vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
My Car Website
http://www.theallin1der.com
My Cardomain Page
http://cardomain.com/ride/3108332
Ummm.... ok..
Quote:
phase adjustment is necessary to make the sine waves from the sub come out a little sooner than the sound in the front speakers.
This answered my question... So it sounds fine... Do I leave it alone??
vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
My Car Website
http://www.theallin1der.com
My Cardomain Page
http://cardomain.com/ride/3108332
With most common amps, your phase setting actually reverses the polarity of the wattage going to your sub. This function is for inverted subwoofer setups. All it does is reverse the excursion, equivalent to switching the + and - terminals on the sub.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edited Saturday, October 11, 2008 5:50 PM
its for phase, depending on the length of the speaker to the listener, the frequency and size of car its in even though you wired the speaker in phase, the sound can reach your ears out of phase. youlle find allot of sq guys when testing and tuning will start flipping the polarity of individual mids and highs to see how it effects the sound.
this doesnt need to be difficult. put some clean sounding music in and listen, then flip the switch and have a listen again, stick with the setting that sounds best.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sndsgood/ https://www.facebook.com/#!/Square1Photography