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AUDIO
OUT
AUDIO OUT
L
R
By Jake Rothman
Transformers in audio – Part 2
performance of real (as opposed
to ideal) transformers.
CW1
Input
CP
Primary
series
resistance
Primary
leakage
inductance
RP
LP
Primary
lumped winding
capacitance
Interwinding capacitance
Primary
inductance
RO
Secondary
leakage
inductance
Ideal
transformer
LP
Core loss: hysteresis
and eddy currents
(non-linear)
NP
Primary
turns
Secondary
series
resistance
LS
Losses
RS
Output
Secondary
lumped winding
capacitance
CS
NS
Secondary
turns
Interwinding capacitance
CW2
Fig.9. The equivalent circuit of a transformer with all the parasitic elements added.
L
ast time (July 2022) we
looked at the uses and advantages
of one of the oldest components
in electronics – the transformer. This
month, we will examine the limitations
of real, as opposed to ideal transformers,
as well as exploring some common audio
transformer applications.
Transformer equivalent circuit
and ‘parasitics’
The theoretically ideal transformer has no
losses and an infinitely wide frequency
response. However, no component is
perfect, although power transformers
come close in terms of efficiency. Audio
transformers have very real frequency response limitations at each end of
the audio spectrum and because of the
way induction operates – depending
on a rate of change of magnetic flux –
transformers cannot pass DC, which is
generally a good thing in audio. The limitations of a real-world transformer lead
us to the transformer equivalent circuit,
which takes account of the non-ideal
Fig.10. No-waste E and I shaped laminations. These are
normally inserted alternately (interleaved) into the wound bobbin.
58
All components can be represented
by an equivalent circuit consisting of the ideal component with
associated undesirable losses and
‘parasitics,’ which are represented
by additional ‘components’. This
is shown in Fig.9 where additional
passive components (resistors, capacitors and inductors) have been
added to a truly ideal transformer.
The most obvious loss is the DC
resistance of the windings, which
are called ‘copper losses’ and are
represented as resistances in series
with the windings. Next, we have iron losses (core losses) due to eddy currents and
hysteresis. Energy is lost by the emission
of stray magnetic fields, which is worse
for standard transformers compared to
toroidal transformers. These losses are
real. The old crude doorbell transformer
in my house continuously dissipated a
significant 2W of heat. Replacing it with
a toroid eliminated this energy loss. Over
22 years I paid £85 for a lot of electricity units (385kWh) to run a doorbell that
only rang for around three seconds a day!
Fig.11. Toroidal transformer cores are wound from a long strip
of steel into a ring.
Practical Electronics | September | 2022
currents are induced in it by the coils,
causing heating. These can be mostly
eliminated by laminating the steel into
strips with an insulating coating. The flat
strips allow the passage of magnetic flux
but break up any eddy currents circulating in the conducting iron by reducing
the cross-sectional area. The higher the
frequency the thinner the laminations
need to be. Westinghouse commercialised the production of transformers by
developing a ‘no-waste’ cutting process
of making E and I shaped laminations, as
shown in Fig.10. These are interleaved
into a ready-wound bobbin. Toroidal
transformers use a strip of iron wound
into a ring – see Fig.11. (It’s only relatively recently that efficient machines
have been developed to wind the wires
efficiently through the core.) The steel
is normally grain-orientated, where the
crystals are all lined up the same way by
the rolling process, which gives greater
permeability in the direction of the flux.
B (T), magnetic flux (tesla)
(x10,000 for gauss)
Silicon
iron
1.0
Mumetal
15% Fe
80% Ni
5% Mo
1.0
n
Hysteresis
region
–20
–10
10
20
H(A/m), magnetic
field strength
–0.5
–1.0
Vout
Time
Hysteresis
‘kink’
Saturation
Fig.12. Magnetisation curve of silicon
steel showing hysteresis kink. In power
transformers this gives rise to a small
heating loss. In signal transformers this
gives a ‘soft-sounding’ third-harmonic
distortion on low-level signals.
All ferromagnetic materials have a maximum level of magnetic flux density
they can accommodate, above which
little to no additional flux can be carried. At this point the material is said
to be ‘saturated’, or ‘in saturation’. It
can be considered as a magnetic circuit form of clipping. For silicon steel
(which is really magnetically soft iron,
with around 4.5% silicon) this occurs at
Eddy currents
Eddy currents arise because iron, the
magnetic core of the transformer, is an
electrical conductor and circulating
2.2kΩ
12kΩ
1.0kΩ
Fig.13. Butt jointing where all the Is are
on one side rather than interleaving the
laminations allows the transformer to
accept much more DC current through
the winding without saturation. This
construction is employed for single-ended
Class-A amplifiers and smoothing chokes.
Toroidal transformers cannot accept any
DC since they have no gap at all.
+30V
+
47µF
10V
4.7kΩ
around 19,000 gauss. Mumetal, which
is used for magnetic shielding saturates
at only 8,500 gauss, and Radiometal at
16,000 gauss. When saturation occurs,
the input impedance can suddenly
drop, overloading the stage driving it.
High-nickel-content materials such a
Mumetal (80%) and Radiometal (50%)
have higher permeability (ease of magnetisation) than silicon steel, so they
1.2kΩ
0V
820pF
DCR
5Ω
2N1711
+
82µF
Input
10kΩ
22kΩ
CT
TR1
BC184
22kΩ
150Ω
2N3055
27Ω 1.0Ω
2.5W
2N1711
+
100kΩ
DC trim
on driver
stage TR2
VA1040
50Ω
NTC
10kΩ
+ 150µF
1.2kΩ
I2
82µF
I1 + I2
2N3055
100kΩ
220pF 47Ω
1.0kΩ
4.7kΩ
47µF
50kΩ
330Ω
1W
VA1040
50Ω
NTC
820Ω
1W
Negative feedback
1.5nF
150Ω
1500µF
50V
10Ω
8-15Ω
10Ω
+
+
+
10µF
10Ω
I1
TR2
BC184
1.0Ω
27Ω 2.5W
100nF
0V
–30V
Fig.14a. The circuit of the Rogers Ravensbourne amplifier used two emitter followers with their currents flowing in opposite directions
to cancel DC magnetisation currents. The sound of this simple amplifier circuit was highly regarded in 1979. See inset photo Fig.14b.
Practical Electronics | September | 2022
59
Vout
Typical transformer frequency response
Drive impedance, Z < 50Ω
Load impedance, Z = 1MΩ
0dB
–3dB
12dB/oct
slope
C4
4.7nF
630V
C2 +
22µF
250V
R2
220kΩ
0V
6dB/oct
slope
30Hz
20kHz 80kHz
Log f
need fewer turns for a given inductance, but the
maximum flux density is less.
The maximum power and lowest frequency, ie the
total magnetic flux of the system, that can be handled is determined by the physical size of the core.
This is why big heavy transformers are needed for
high powers. For audio output transformers, one
old rule of thumb is 0.17lb (77g) of steel per watt.
~80V
8Ω
~5W
R9
10kΩ
Input
Load impedance, typically
1MΩ for tuning with ‘scope
R = 560Ω to 12kΩ
C = 100pF to 39nF Select
R
Output
C
R1
4.7kΩ
R3
12kΩ
R8
4.7kΩ
3
2N5457
R4
1MΩ
PL84
2
~6V
There is a kink in the BH curve of all magnetic materials due to hysteresis. This is where a reverse force
is required to get the curve back to zero, as shown
Zobel
network
7
9
C3
47nF
MPSA42
300V rated
C1
10nF
+170V
17:1
ZP = 2.4kΩ
22mA
Hysteresis
1kHz
square
wave
R6
47kΩ
70mA
Fig.15. Typical frequency response of an audio
transformer. A first-order bass roll-off below 30Hz
and a hump at the high frequency second-order rolloff point.
Input
+250V for EL84
ZP = 5kΩ
R12
3.9kΩ
Resonance
R5
100Ω
4 5
Heater
15V
300mA
R10* +
135Ω
R7
680kΩ
C5
47µF
0V
Negative feedback
gain control
C6
100µF CW
+
+10dB
*91Ω + 43Ω
in series
10kΩ
A-log
R11
1.5kΩ
Fig.17. Small guitar practice amplifier using a PL84 valve. The
PL84 is the cheap TV low-impedance version of the EL84 with a
different 15V 300mA heater rather than the standard 6.3V.
in Fig.12. This non-linearity causes the current drawn from
the source to be distorted. Silicon steel has a wider hysteresis
area than nickel-based alloys, so it produces higher distortion. Distortion can be minimised by driving the transformer
with a low source impedance. It can be made lower still by
using a negative impedance to cancel out the primary’s series resistance. The lamination material can be identified by
its appearance. Silicon steel has a dark grey finish and nickel-based laminations look bright and silvery.
DC current
No Zobel network
Zobel network, C too high
One cycle
of slight
overshoot
Optimum Zobel values
dB
Zobel network, R too high (not enough
damping – ringing moves to lower frequency)
Resonance
(no load)
Optimum Zobel
network
Too much
compensation
(C too high)
f (Hz)
Typically 30kHz – 90kHz
Fig.16. Adding a Zobel network damps the high frequency
resonance. The values have to be determined empirically by
feeding a 1kHz square wave into the transformer primary and
tuning out the ringing on a ‘scope.
60
Transformers do not like DC current in the windings as it
eats up the device’s saturation headroom. Magnetic induction voltage is proportional to rate of change of magnetic
flux, so the lower the frequency the less efficient it gets. DC
is zero frequency. If DC current has to be accommodated,
such as in the output transformer of a single-ended class A
amplifier, a ‘resistance’ needs to be inserted in the magnetic circuit to limit the flux which is analogous to electrical
current. This is achieved by introducing a gap in the circuit.
In the case of EI laminations, this can be achieved by a butt
joint between the lumped ‘E’ and ‘I’ laminations, as shown
in Fig.13. A plastic spacer can be inserted to increase the
size of the gap if necessary. A side effect of this is to reduce
the inductance. Clever circuits have been devised to cancel
out the magnetisation of DC currents by running equal currents in opposite directions in the windings. This is one of
the great benefits of push-pull operation. It was added to the
driver transformers of the Bowes transistor amplifier and the
Rogers Ravensbourne, as shown in Fig.14.
Capacitance and leakage inductance
Capacitive parasitics are responsible for causing high-frequency roll-off. At the upper end of the response curve these
parameters often form a resonance (see Fig.15) similar to an
Practical Electronics | September | 2022
R7
1.5kΩ
R1
56kΩ
C2
100µF+
R3
10kΩ
–14V
VR8
2kΩ
Lin
C4
100µF+
0V
R17
270Ω
10%
0.5W
VR13
5kΩ
Lin
R9
1.0kΩ
TR3
OC42
R10
820Ω
TR5
OC22
TR2
OC42
R14
3.9kΩ
TR1
OC42
+
C1
100µF
R15
1.2kΩ
R18
560Ω
R16
1.2kΩ
R19
560Ω
R11
820Ω
Input
C3
100µF+
R2
12kΩ
3W
TR6
OC22
R4
3.3kΩ
R5
22Ω
1.65+1.65:1
TR4
OC42
R6
8.2kΩ
R20
1.65Ω
10%
5W
R12
1.0kΩ
0V
R21
560Ω
C5*
All resistors 0.25W, ±10% unless otherwise stated
Electrolytic capacitors 12V DC working
*C5 – add for stability
typically 470pF to 3.3nF
Fig.18. a) (above) Mullard 5W class-A transistor amplifier circuit from 1961; b) (below) I have the output transformers and transistors
for this design and will build one for its historical and teaching value. Apparently, they sounded quite good.
under-damped low-pass filter. This effect is usually suppressed
with a series RC circuit called a Zobel network, named after
the telecoms engineer who invented it – see Fig.16.
Output transformers
In pre-semiconductor days, valves were the only audio amplifying devices available. They are high-voltage (90 to 800V)
low-current (10 to 100mA) devices, which means a high output impedance (Zout) of around 1500 to 10,000Ω. Moving-coil
loudspeakers are the opposite, having a low-impedance, typically 3 to 16Ω input impedance (Zin). It is not possible to
wind a reliable 5000Ω speaker voice-coil, so the only solution to this dilemma is an output matching transformer which
Practical Electronics | September | 2022
transforms the load imposed on its secondary to a suitable one
for the driving device – we looked at this last time. A typical transformer ‘matching circuit’ is shown below in Fig.17,
a good valve amplifier using the trusted (and still available)
EL84 output valve, which needs a 5kΩ load. This calls for a
turns ratio of 40:1 to match a 3Ω loudspeaker. The result is
an impedance ratio of 1600:1. Note that with a 3Ω loudspeaker this is reflected back to the primary, that is transformed
to 1600 × 3 = 4800Ω. OEP do a suitable audio transformer.
If an 8Ω speaker were to be used then an impedance ratio of 625:1 would be needed, giving a load of 5kΩ. Working
backwards, the square root of the impedance ratio is taken to
get the turns ratio, giving 25:1. I once found a box of cheap
PL84 valves used for old TVs. These have a relatively lower impedance, so when designing an output circuit around
them I dropped the HT voltage and transformer ratio to 17:1
to produce a 2.4kΩ impedance.
As an interesting aside, early transistor amplifiers briefly used output transformers (Fig.18) but as their output
current capability increased it became possible to drive
loudspeakers directly.
Output transformers do tend to be big because they have to
transmit significant power. A 20W transformer may weigh a
couple of pounds (1kg). Cores are normally grain-orientated
silicon iron for high power handling. Negative feedback is
often applied around output transformers to reduce the distortion and widen the frequency response. However, there
is a limit to the amount of feedback that can be applied due
to phase shifts associated with the transformers high- and
low-frequency roll-offs.
For class-A stages, output transformers enable the greatest
theoretical efficiency to be achieved of 50%. (Fig.19a) Without a transformer, using a push-pull constant-current load
the maximum possible efficiency drops to 25%. With a fixed
current source or a simple loudspeaker load it’s 12.5% and
61
Note: PNP transistors
use positive earth
VC = – 16.8V
5:1
AL21062
Output = 1.3W
(3.19W in 40% efficiency)
2. 5mA
6mA
Interstage
transformer
7.5:1
1W
AL21063
.
Gapped core
‘ DCR’ : DC resistance
OC35
2.7W
on heatsink
4.7nF
1
DCR
1.5µF
.
DCR
100µF
6V
.
Alternative
transformer:
e anco
as used in car
radio amplifiers
190mA
VC = 16.5V
–630mV
1000µF
3V
–2.5V
with RC coupling (Fig.19e), it’s a paltry
8.3% with half the audio power going
into the RC network resistor. The high
efficiency in the transformer circuit occurs because the transformer has a high
AC load resistance and a small DC resistance. This means the output device
sees the full power-rail voltage and the
resulting AC swing is twice that.
.
0.5W
et
+
100µF
15V
3W
5-inch
Celestion
+
OC72
Input
Fig.19. For single ended Class-A
amplifiers, transformers provide the most
efficient way of coupling the loudspeaker.
a) Transformer coupled – 1960s car radio
amplifier, theoretically 50% efficient. b)
No transformer, modulated constantcurrent load. Efficiency 25-30% due to
quarter of power rail voltage lost across
current source, c) unmodulated constantcurrent load, 12.5% efficiency, d) direct
loudspeaker connection, 12.5% efficiency
since half the supply voltage lost. e) RC
coupled, only 8.3% efficient because
audio is also dissipated in the power
resistor. All figures just before clipping. At
lower volumes it’s even worse.
+
0V
Negative feedback
onitoring unit
e lace trans or er ith
constant current source
odulated
Input
plus
ractical
VC
VC
25% – 30%
efficiency
12.5%
efficiency
V
V
= VC
Input
plus
+
–1
theoretical e iciency o
0.5VC
ias
1000µF
ush ull
lass
si ilar to ohn insley
0.5VC
ias
c) Constant-current load
ood design
VC
8.3%
efficiency
igh
current
throudh speaker
V
12.5%
efficiency
0.5VC
d
0.67VC
Input
plus
ias
irect louds ea er drive
ow
X L R input
1
o
Moving to the ‘other end’ of an audio
circuit, a common use for audio transformers is impedance matching on the
input. A common example is a preamplifier for moving-coil microphones (which
are typically 600Ω source impedance).
The classic NE5534 op amp likes to see
a source impedance of 4.5kΩ for lowest
noise, so a step-up transformer of around 1:7
is required – see the circuits in Fig.20.
Input transformers only need to be
capable of transmitting a couple of milliwatts before saturation, so they tend
to be quite small and employ Mumetal
cores. A microphone input transformer is shown in Fig.21. They typically
have turns ratios in the region of 4:1 to
12:1. Input transformers are also used to
1000µF
VC
Input
plus
Input transformer
= VC
+
ye anguard
= VC
+
a
1000µF
ias
e
esistive loading ca acitor cou ling
om
Sowter 3195
1:7
o
+15V
l
wo
3 + 8
R1*
1
IC1a
2 –5532
R2*
2
R4
Jensen JT-13K7-A, 1:5
R3
Vigotronix VTX-101-003, 1+1:6.3+6.3
Lundahl LL1530, 1+1:3.5+3.5
C6
22pF
C3
22pF
R8
C5
CW 220µF
R5
R6
+
C2
220µF
R9
6 +
+
*Alternative transformers
C1*
150pF
C4
220µF
1
+
3
IC1b
5 –5532
VR1
Lin
R7
7
O utput
4
–15V
0V
Fig.20. Transformer-coupled microphone pre-amp. Note how a centre-tap can provide a lossless phantom power connection. Whole
circuit gain: +14dB to +70dB. (Based on a Steve Dove design).
62
Practical Electronics | September | 2022
–12V
R1
1
DCR
C1
33µF
+
R4
FM424
1. 34:1
1
DCR
O utput
NKT218
FM424
1. 34:1
OC71
Input
C2
100µF
+
R3
R5
R6
+
R2
C3
100µF
0V
Positive earth
Fig.22. Lan-Elec Ltd audio-frequency No.5, two-stage
transformer-coupled pre-amplifier.
Fig.21. Typical microphone transformers. Note the round
Mumetal can on the Sowter transformer. The Swedish Lundahl,
along with American Jensen transformers are possibly the best.
create interference-rejecting balanced inputs. These low-level transformers are enclosed in Mumetal cans to shield them
from hum.
lowest distortion. A common interstage transformer turns
ratio range of between 1.5:1 to 5:1 was used for simple transistor pre-amplifiers such as the circuit shown in Fig.22.
They are always step down to match the high-impedance
collector output with the low-impedance base input. The
low DC resistance of the transformer also provides a perfect
path for any base leakage currents resulting in stable bias
conditions. This circuit (shown built) in Fig.23 was used as
an educational board – it makes a fantastic fuzz box!
Next month, we’ll build something! – some transformer
mounting PCBs.
Interstage transformers
When amplifying devices were very expensive it was essential
to maximise the gain from each stage, so an impedance-matching ‘interstage transformer’ was employed between stages.
These disappeared from valve amplifiers around 1940, only
to reappear again in the early days of expensive transistors.
These transformers were also called driver transformers, where
dual secondaries were used to provide the phase splitting for
push-pull output stages. A medium level of power is needed,
around 20-200mW, so Radiometal is normally employed for
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Fig.23. The circuit in Fig.22 was used as a teaching aid in an old
Radio and TV servicing college in South London in the 1970s.
Now redeployed as a germanium fuzz box.
Practical Electronics | September | 2022
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