I've got to tell you, I'm pretty much at a loss here. It's am getting to the point where you are making no sense at all. Let's try to iron out exactly what the issue is.
It sounds like you're making my argument here. We are not talking about multiple amps, cabinets, or speakers being in phase with each other. We are talking about a single amp connected into a single cabinet (one speaker or multiple speakers in phase with each other). You say there is a difference between having the speakers connected to the amp one way verses the other. If you're talking about multiple amps or speaker cabinets then we're talking about different things here. I thought the issue was ONE AMP, into ONE SPEAKER.
This makes absolutely no sense. If the cab is always in phase with the amp, why would it make any difference which way the speakers are wired?
Again, we are talking about ONE AMP only, not the relationship between two or more amps. ONE AMP & ONE SPEAKER. Right?
You say there is a difference in sound between having the speakers wired one way verses the other (there are only two ways, tip to positive/sleeve to negative, or tip to negative/sleeve to positive). Have I've described the topic correctly? Because if I haven't, then we are arguing different things and we might as well drop it here. But I do believe I've described what the OP was about.
Now, assuming we are talking apples and apples here (I realize the risk I take assuming something, I'll live dangerously here):
That doesn't make you immune to the power of suggestion. If you think you are immune to it, you are wrong. You are susceptible to it just as I and everyone else here is.
The science says that trying to control when a positive signal is applied to the speaker is futile. I gave you multiple examples of why. You haven't given one rational explanation for any of those examples. You have absolutely no idea when you pluck a note on the guitar whether the fist impulse that hits the speaker will be positive or negative. If you think you do, please explain it. I'm thick headed, I need help here. With all of the variables I put out above, how is it possible that you could control whether the signal out from the amp is either positive or negative? Please, explain.
Why you would do it is because you are the one making a claim that defies logic. How you would do it is you would conduct a series of blind tests where you would play a guitar into an amp while someone else switches the phase of the speaker cable. You would not know which direction the phase was, or if it was even switched. If you can consistently identify the position or phase of the speaker cable you will have proven there is an audible difference that you can hear and identify. You'll have proven the phenomenon is real.
I don't know how I've questions your integrity, or how I'm being grandiose. I'm merely making an argument against what you've claimed. I've given multiple examples of why what you claim should not be true, you haven't given one explanation of why it is.
If you are using one amp, what does it matter which channel plays forward or backwards...there is no "matching" unless you are using multiple amps/cabs...I don't understand what you mean by "matching", the amp either plays forwards or backwards...that's it. Both work, both will sound OK, just a little different.
the phase changes with channels, gain stages & other factors...but the cab is always "in phase" with the amp, just out of phase with specific stages.
It is only out of phase when other influences dictate (multiple amps, cabs wired differently to each other). This seems to be the apart that you are overlooking.
You say there is a difference in sound between having the speakers wired one way verses the other (there are only two ways, tip to positive/sleeve to negative, or tip to negative/sleeve to positive). Have I've described the topic correctly? Because if I haven't, then we are arguing different things and we might as well drop it here. But I do believe I've described what the OP was about.
Now, assuming we are talking apples and apples here (I realize the risk I take assuming something, I'll live dangerously here):
How can I not be insulted? People pay me to work on their amps because they trust my ears & judgement, I have worked hard & long, spending many many hours performing critical hearing tests, devloping my hearing skills
What exactly does "the science" say on the specific subject of a given speaker in a given amp sounding different, when the cone fires forwards when a positive signal is applied, compared to backwards when a positive signal is applied? Why do you need an explanation, what's wrong with a practical test?
Prove it? How do you intend to prove what I can and can't hear? Why do I need to waste my time proving that there's a difference..
You have tried it once and not found a marked difference, fine, that's your experience...you could just say that, rather than questioning my integrity and proclaiming in a rather grandiose manner that you have "science" on your side.
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