Hi all, thanks for all of your thoughts so far!
Quote:It certainly seems that the ZTPRE could well be wired out of phase considering the testing you have made. My DAC has a phase switch so that would be a rather definitive way to test in my system.
If I'm missing something or misunderstanding here, I will be happy to have that pointed out. But to my understanding this is not what the phase button on a DAC does (or at least isn't what it does on my Denafrips DAC).
We should be careful about terminology here when it comes to talking about phase:
There is *
relative* phase, which is the difference in actual phase of the waveforms being generated between the two channels. The problem that I am seeing here with the ZTPRE is that the relative phase of the two channels is 180 degrees, i.e., while one driver on one speaker is pushing outward, the same driver on the other speaker is sucking inward. They are completely out of phase and have no coherence, and are causing frequency cancellations not intended by any recording.
There is *
absolute* phase of the channels, which is the overall phase of the signal being fed to both channels (assuming they are the same, which I believe is the usual intent, so that the sound from both speakers sum coherently). Changing
absolute phase will invert the phase of *
both* channels, so, if they were out of relative phase to begin with, they will still be out of relative phase after inverting the absolute phase.
So, to flip
absolute phase, the phase of
both channels are inverted, while to flip
relative the phase of only
one channel should be inverted.
On my DAC, the phase button inverts absolute phase: it flips the phase of both channels and leaves relative phase unchanged. From some quick google searching, this seems to be standard for DACs. My understanding as to why this function exists is, as CAJames mentioned, some recordings are made with an inverted
absolute phase, and although this is subtle, some people can detect it and prefer a different absolute phase, and they can use this button to change it. This button however will do nothing to correct relative phase errors.
Here is the .flac file that I use for relative phase tests
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1UasX5tZ_BWRkDiJ1wSPe5pjQ7pctQGEx/view?usp=drive....
When the voice says "my voice is in phase", the relative phase between the two channels is zero, and when it says "my voice is out of phase", the relative phase between the two channels is 180, and you can hear the difference. Hitting the phase button on my DAC doesn't change how this test sounds, because the DAC is inverting absolute phase of both channels, and thus has no effect on relative.
Is my understanding of relative and absolute phase here correct?
Quote:This is a feature, not a bug. Some components invert phase and some don’t. Just wire your speakers so the sound is in phase with the ZTPRE and enjoying the music.
What the DAC phase button does is also my understanding of what it means to have a pre-amp or other component that inverts phase -- the
absolute phase is inverted, not the relative phase. Inverting absolute phase is a feature, but inverting relative phase would appear to be a bug. Would you agree, or am I misunderstanding? I'm assuming the same is true for what 4krow said about recordings/masterings: some might have an inverted
absolute phase, but the relative phase should still be correct no matter what.
In my case, the ZTPRE is not inverting absolute phase (which I wouldn't have any problem with), it is inverting the relative phase. Flipping absolute phase is a matter of rewiring BOTH speakers to be inverted (or hitting the Phase button on your DAC). Flipping relative phase is a matter of rewiring ONE speaker to be inverted. The first is not an actual problem and could be seen a a design choice for the component. The second is not -- nothing sounds correct when the relative phase between the channels is out.
As I said, when I rewire just one speaker OR remove the ZTPRE from the chain, it corrects the issue. So, the issue appears to be that the ZTPRE's relative phase is just incorrect.
Anyway, this may actually be something I can fix myself, as pointed out above. It could be as simple as one of the two channels having the +/- wires from the input terminals being mixed up, which should be easy to figure out by comparing both sides.
Nonetheless, I'm hoping that we can all agree that inverted global phase (as in what a component or recording sometimes has) is not the issue here, and that a component whose channels have inverted
relative phase is always a mistake. If not, it means I have something to learn!! If I am mistaken in my assertions above, please please do point it out!
In the meantime, I am of course absolutely enjoying the sound with my left speaker rewired to have opposite phase to correct the issue. I'm actually housesitting right now and on unfamiliar speakers (Revel Salon2 Ultima) but really looking forward to getting it home to see how it is with my differential mono UFO25s and la scalas!