Reducing rail sag by inverting one of the stereo channels?

Just a thought I had. Could rail sag be reduced in a stereo amp by inverting one channel? You'd keep correct phasing by swapping +/- output labels on that output, but then the large bass signals common to both channels pull current from different filter caps, rather than the same one. You could also use this to drive a mono speaker in bridge mode.
 
Don’t worry, keep thinking

It seems to do more than share the load better across rails (as bass is usually recorded mono), crosstalk inverts too which seems to add air to the sound. Definitely artificial, but I like it nonetheless

Brian
 
i use this setup for "separate" L/R supplies

four bridges.JPG
 

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This is something I considered due to the grounding issues - generally caused by GNFB loops.

When a transistor conducts on the +ve side, current flows through the speaker, back to the ground. Unless this is a superconductor, this current pulls the ground up, +ve. The GNFB loop means you have to connect this exact ground to the small signal bits that monitor the feedback voltage, or bad things happen...
So the power amp ground dictates how the small signal ground dances about.

But: if you have both stereo amps out of phase, both pull ground equally (mono signal) so ground doesn't dance. If not, it just gets worse 😀

So there's another reason why it should sound better 🙂
 
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Small signal ground should NEVER bounce with respect to speaker ground. Tie them to the same place. The center tap of the transformer a and junction between the two reservoir caps can bounce around all it wants with respect to THAT and it won’t mess up sound quality. It can affect maximum voltage swing, but below clipping it should be invisible.