Another possibility is the OP's system may be underpowered, I didn't see any mention of what was being used to drive those speakers. Maybe the fronts are using up all the power. Something to consider.
It's also my understanding that speakers that have the +/- wires correct can still be out of phase due to room/setup variations. A test disc, or the audio setup portion on most THX dvd's, will offer a phasing test to help determine that.
Jack
I think this issue of phase is an interesting topic, and in terms of speakers for surround misunderstood.
We have already had members say that when testing with the disc you mention, state that they get an out of phase error, even though the speakers are wired correctly, and they wonder if their speakers are faulty.
So how does this happen. Unfortunately easily. Lets take a two way speaker, with second order low and high pass filters. In many of those the crossover puts the two drivers 180 degrees out of phase at crossover. Therefore to avoid a null at crossover the tweeter is wired out of phase.
Now for each order in a crossover, the bass driver lags 45 degrees and the tweeter leads 45 degrees. Now the drivers have phase changes of their own, so the actual phase of tweeters, woofers and filters is all over the map.
So I think you can see that any combination is possible. Now when drivers have phase angles 125 degrees to 225 degrees apart, then there will be significant cancellation, maximal when the phase error is 180 degrees.
I think this is a big part of matching mains and centers. There the phase has to match precisely. When you get into surrounds the witches brew continues. So really for optimal results the speakers have to have the same designer who designs all the speakers to work together in a coherent fashion.
You won't solve it by reversing speaker connections usually, just change the phase cancellation form woofer to tweeter and vice versa.
You know I'm a huge fan of people designing and building their own speakers, this is just another reason why. I know this probably sounds of the wall to most, but I really believe all true enthusiasts should learn the art, especially in this multichannel era.