Phil Leigh Wrote: 
> I happen to agree with this last post from PF. However, aside from a
> simple bass drum and the infamous "garage door slam", you'll never hear
> the effect in practice, because aside from these sort of sounds with a
> distinctly directional "0Hz" or "DC" initial transient impulse
> everything else to do with music is more oscillitory in nature and as
> I've said many times there is no absolute phase to preserve on most
> recordings. It's not like any microphone in the world is perfect...
> 
> OK there is ONE exception - a digital (non-sampling) synth directly
> recorded totally in the digital domain "might" preseve the phase
> response/polarity of an oiginal transient that it generated...and if
> you've got a true digital (PWM) amp that might be preserved all the way
> to the x-over in the speakers...and then all bets are off when it hits
> that RLC circuit...

I don't think any RCL circuit will actually invert any signal.. (Again
I think time delay is being confused with polarity inversion. The fact
that time delay is measured in degrees at a certain frequency seems to
be the reason for this confusion.)


-- 
P Floding
------------------------------------------------------------------------
P Floding's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=2932
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=22118

_______________________________________________
audiophiles mailing list
audiophiles@lists.slimdevices.com
http://lists.slimdevices.com/lists/listinfo/audiophiles

Reply via email to