Run the same signal through both speakers. (low frequency) I walk back and forth left--right looking for a dead spot in the middle. If you find a dead spot one of the speakers is reversed.
Can't figure out how to multiquote, so
crutschow as well:
Thanks guys, but I think I damaged my ears by listening to loud music all day, as I can't find anything wrong with the speakers, no matter how I wire the polarity.
I did run some decibel tests:
60 HZ sine wave - right speaker with the original polarity 3 tests at 30 seconds:
58.9
59.8
59.2
_____________
Average - 59.3
Same test on right speaker with polarity reversed:
56.4
56.5
56.1
____________________
Average = 56.333
Same test on right speaker with original polarity with increased volume:
60.7
60.6
60.1
______
Average = 60.467
Same test on right speaker with polarity reversed:
59
57.4
59.5
_________________
Average = 58.633
Left speaker with the original polarity, keeping the increased volume:
59
57.4
59.5
____________
Average = 58.633
Left Speaker with reversed polarity:
56
59.2
58.8
__________
Average = 58
I was frustrated and surprised that the left speaker results were almost the same, but was getting too tired to run more tests.
So, with a little evidence, (are the decibel differences a valid measurement and are the differences enough?) plus the fact that the second diagram at least got the channels right, I'm keeping the original polarity.
The way I have this wired is - starting from the outside, opposite the volume control - right negative, right positive, left positive, left negative. Is this a normal order for amp modules, or can it be completely random?
Ty