The human ear cannot hear the phase. It only can hear a phase change. If you enter the root with the Leslie spinning, you cannot say, whether is in phase or out of phase.
Also the phase is frequency dependent on your position in the room.
Either is out of phase, you cannot say this or that is "out of phase".
In my remark to Uwe below, I was referring to the situation in a single Leslie in which you flip the wires going e.g. to the treble driver.
And Uwes statement about "notches" in the range near the takeover frequency was what I was putting into doubt.
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Christoph
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Am 01.01.2025 um 18:10 schrieb Dennis Wage (N9OQ) <
dwage@...>:
I witnessed it with my own ears. I put a sine wave tone at 600-700hz with the motors stopped and then physically reversed or flipped the phase of one of the drivers. It very easy to tell which way was in phase and which way was out of phase.?
Now, how much this affects the overall sound of the Leslie when motors are going fast and slow is debatable.?
Uwe,
I believe you are wrong in your claim, that "out of phase connection of both drivers will result in a considerable notch in overall frequency response in the xover frequency region".
This is a nebulous statement lacking any mathematical or scientific substance.?
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Christoph
You're absolutely right regarding the AC thing. But an out of phase connection of both drivers will result in a considerable notch in the overall frequency response in the xover frequency region. And, similar to a stereophonic setup, two Leslie's need to be connected in phase to get proper sound.
?
Best regards!