Turning the volume knob (which serves as a balance control in balance mode) in either direction will change the balance in that direc- tion. The display will reflect this by changing to the appropriate single- headed arrow to indicate the direction of change and by showing the number of decibels by which that channel has been increased (in tenths of a decibel) relative to the other. (In point of fact, it is the opposite channel’s volume that is reduced, a much safer and more sensible thing to do that increasing the volume of the channel toward which you wish to shift the image.)
If balance is left in a
balance control tip Precise balance control is essential for obtaining accurate sound- staging. Output imbalances due to differences in speaker sensitivity and asymmetrical placement of the loudspeakers in the room are common, and degrade imaging accuracy.
To correct this problem, play a mono recording (or use a
38input). Center the resulting image (which should be quite small) directly between the loudspeakers, using the balance control. Differences as small as 0.1 or 0.2 decibels have been found to be significant. Try it.
Note that this “mono trick” can correct only for differences that occur after the preamplifier in the signal chain, things like asymmetrical placement of loudspeakers or slight mismatches in sensitivity between speakers. If a particular recording is out of balance, you will have to adjust the balance more subjectively, in stereo, as you normally have done.
polarity The Nº383 allows you to invert the polarity of the music to which you are listening with the press of a button. People vary in their sensitivity to this aspect of the sound, and the difference frequently ranges from subtle to inaudible, depending on microphone technique and other factors in the recording itself. However, some recordings simply sound correct in one position, and irretrievably wrong in the other.
We encourage you to experiment with the polariy feature to see what you think works best for any given recording, understanding that the recordings themselves are anything but consistent.