Speaker Polarity Test & Checker

Speaker polarity indicates whether a loudspeaker cone moves outward (positive) or inward (negative) in response to a positive voltage. SonaVyx tests polarity using cross-correlation peak sign analysis per the transfer function measurement, returning a definitive +1 (correct) or -1 (reversed) result. Reversed polarity between speakers causes destructive interference and up to 30 dB of cancellation at crossover frequencies.

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Open the polarity checker in transfer function mode — instant +1/-1 result.

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Technical Specifications

ParameterValueStandard
Detection MethodCross-correlation peak signTransfer function IR
Result+1 (normal) or -1 (reversed)Binary determination
Frequency Range20 Hz - 20 kHzFull bandwidth
Test SignalPink noise or impulseBroadband required
Confidence IndicatorCoherence-based validationAES-2id clause 6
ProcessingRust WASM (client-side)Instant result

How to Test Speaker Polarity

1

Connect Reference Signal

Route the system output (pre-amplifier or processor output) as the reference channel. Connect your measurement microphone as the measurement channel. SonaVyx needs both signals to compute the cross-correlation.

2

Play Broadband Signal

Send pink noise or broadband music through the speaker under test. The signal must contain energy across a wide frequency range for reliable polarity detection. Avoid using sine tones or narrow-band signals.

3

Check the Result

SonaVyx computes the cross-correlation between the reference and measured signals. A positive peak indicates correct polarity (+1). A negative peak indicates reversed polarity (-1). The result appears within seconds of starting the measurement.

4

Verify and Correct

If polarity is reversed, check the speaker cable wiring (swap + and - at one end only), the amplifier polarity setting, or the processor polarity invert switch. Re-test after correction to confirm +1 polarity.

Understanding Speaker Polarity

Every loudspeaker has a defined positive and negative terminal. When a positive voltage is applied to the positive terminal, the cone should move outward. If the wiring is reversed at any point in the signal chain (mixer, processor, amplifier, or speaker cable), the cone moves inward instead. This reversal affects every frequency simultaneously, distinguishing polarity from phase.

Why Polarity Matters for Multi-Speaker Systems

In a single-speaker system, reversed polarity is rarely audible. In multi-speaker systems, polarity becomes critical. When two speakers are in opposite polarity, their outputs cancel at frequencies where coverage overlaps. At the crossover frequency between a subwoofer and main speaker, reversed polarity creates a deep null that no amount of EQ or delay adjustment can fix. The solution is always to correct the polarity first.

Common Causes of Reversed Polarity

The most common cause is miswired speaker cables, especially in permanent installations where cables are terminated on site. Digital processors often have per-output polarity switches that can be accidentally toggled. Some amplifier models invert polarity by design. And certain crossover topologies (like odd-order Butterworth) naturally invert one output. The only reliable way to verify is measurement.

Polarity in the Context of System Optimization

The standard system optimization workflow is: verify polarity, set delay alignment, adjust level matching, then apply EQ. Polarity must be the first check because all subsequent steps assume correct polarity. SonaVyx integrates polarity checking into the transfer function measurement mode, so you can verify polarity, check delay, and view the frequency response in a single measurement session.

Polarity Checker Comparison

FeatureSonaVyxSmaart v9REWOSM
Polarity detectionYes (auto)Yes (IR visual)Yes (IR visual)Yes (IR)
Auto +1/-1 resultYesNo (manual)No (manual)No (manual)
Coherence validationYesYesYesYes
Browser-basedYesNoNoNo
Multi-speaker workflowGuidedManualManualManual
PriceFree$898FreeFree

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Tools & Resources

Standards References

  • AES-2id:2023 — AES information document for room impulse response measurement (polarity from IR)
  • IEC 60268-5:2003 — Sound system equipment: Loudspeakers (polarity marking requirements)
  • AES-12id-2006 — AES information document for digital audio measurements: Signal polarity