This has worked on some of my amps, and in some situations. Feedback is when a given frequency is produced or picked up, reinforced by the amplifier, and thus picked up and reinforced again etc. Often the particular frequency is dependent on the amp and its environs, but I had this idea: If the speaker is wired out of phase with the input, it is much harder to pick up the original frequency which causes the ringing, because the amplifier is actively cancelling it by projecting any sounds picked up in an inverted phase relationship.
I'm not too sure though, and so I wanted to open this up for an experiment!
For those who have amps which tend to feedback a bit with hotter mics etc., try switching which wire goes to which terminal on your speaker(s). PLEASE DO THIS ONLY WHILE THE AMP IS OFF. I found that I could sit in front of the amp and play harp into the microphone right in front of the speaker without feedback (whereas with it the other way I couldn't get within around a 5ft distance at that volume). For those who can try easily, I'd like to see if the problem improves (it didn't go away for me, but one polarity is definitely less feedback prone than the other).
If this is just snake oil, let the flamewar begin–I honestly see a pretty major difference though (almost as much as just turning down the treble )!
I'm not too sure though, and so I wanted to open this up for an experiment!
For those who have amps which tend to feedback a bit with hotter mics etc., try switching which wire goes to which terminal on your speaker(s). PLEASE DO THIS ONLY WHILE THE AMP IS OFF. I found that I could sit in front of the amp and play harp into the microphone right in front of the speaker without feedback (whereas with it the other way I couldn't get within around a 5ft distance at that volume). For those who can try easily, I'd like to see if the problem improves (it didn't go away for me, but one polarity is definitely less feedback prone than the other).
If this is just snake oil, let the flamewar begin–I honestly see a pretty major difference though (almost as much as just turning down the treble )!
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