360 degree phase switch

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In order to have vairable phase you need to have an in phase signal and the same signal 180 degrees out of phase. You then use a potentiometer and a capacitor as a potential divider between the signals. The output from the pot div will vairy between 0 and 180 degrees depending on the variable resistor.

This can be done using transistors or opamps, Transistors are probaly easier as you would only need the one.
 
Here is a simple schematic, i have not worked out the values but they are not to critical.
 

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It's not done that way. It's done using a (multi-stage) phase shifter (also called Allpass Filter) like the rightmost op-amp shown in the schematic from Rod Elliot's page.

See also the resulting phase plots from that page. A constant delay is introduced in the signal up to the frequency where the pase is 90 degrees, then the delay progressively falls to 0 for higher frequencies as phase approaches 180 degrees. The amplitude of the signal remains unchanged for all frequencies.

The best control is achieved by allowing independent adjustment of each phase shifter stage (sometimes up to four are required to get decent phase match between very dissimilar drivers or horns in the crossover region).
 
Here is a constant amplitude phase splitter, uses transistors so biasing values e.t.c are critical.
Im not sure how stable this is at temperature but it is an emitter degeneration amplifer so has negative feedback.

The phase shift is not constant for all frequencys but i doubt that will matter for a very small frequency range such as a subwoofer bandwidth.
All values are critical on this design! Dont change them or it wont work. (except for RC)

keep impedance high on the next stage as well. Probaly bout 200kohm.
 
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