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Junior Varsity
Sub placement
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<blockquote data-quote="drew gandy" data-source="post: 100063" data-attributes="member: 880"><p>Re: Sub placement</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I'm not sure 'polarity' is the right term for this. I mean, the sound coming from the vent is typically 180 degrees out from the sound coming off the cone a few octaves above. Some might be tempted to consider that 'out of polarity'. It sounds kind of weird but I think 'in phase' might actually be a better phrase since, in a good alignment, the port phase meets up with the cone phase without big dips in response. I know I know, it's all semantics.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="drew gandy, post: 100063, member: 880"] Re: Sub placement I'm not sure 'polarity' is the right term for this. I mean, the sound coming from the vent is typically 180 degrees out from the sound coming off the cone a few octaves above. Some might be tempted to consider that 'out of polarity'. It sounds kind of weird but I think 'in phase' might actually be a better phrase since, in a good alignment, the port phase meets up with the cone phase without big dips in response. I know I know, it's all semantics. [/QUOTE]
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