There are fewer than a handful of books that no tube audiophile can do without. One of them, Transformers and Tubes in Power Amplifiers by Menno van der Veen, lies at my right hand with Langford-Smith's Radio Designer's Handbook. Many tube audiofiles who may think they don't know Menno have already met him because they own Plitron or Amplimo transformers which he designed. Below is an article I asked Menno to write on selecting a transformer, followed by more fruits from his fertile mind in rare and wonderful topologies and the transformers for them. Enjoy. - - Andre Jute

 

Copyright text and figures (c)1998, 2004 Menno van der Veen

 

THE SECRET OF SELECTING A GOOD OUTPUT TRANSFORMER

by Menno van der Veen

President Ir. buro Vanderveen

Plitron/Amplimo/OPT-R&D

The article is in two parts: first what everyone should know, then remarks about coupling schemes, including a couple Menno has just invented. Here's Menno:

"This article explains how to select an optimal output transformer (OPT) for your special amplifier. I shall introduce the challenging possibilities of the new "Specialist" toroidal OPTs. The only restriction Andre gave me for this article was: "please, no formulae--we can't control how they appear on the net". Therefore I will explain with words and point to my book, published lab reports and AES preprints for those who love doing complex calculations. Here we go."

 

Part 1: What every audiophile should know

SE AND PUSH-PULL OUTPUT TRANSFORMERS

In tube amplifiers you need an OPT because the voltages in the tube amplifier are too large for your loudspeaker, while the current capability of the tubes is too small to drive your speaker correctly. There exist fabulous Output Transformerless amplifier designs (OTL) but most tube amps use output transformers. The function of an OPT is to lower the high voltage to safe values and to multiply the weak tube currents into larger values. This action is performed by winding different amounts of turns on the incoming (primary) and outgoing (secondary) side of the OPT. The turns ratio between primary and secondary is the major tool performing this job.

All output transformers can be divided into two groups. Transformers for Single Ended amplifiers and transformers for push-pull amplifiers. The major difference between these two is that in SE OPTs the quiescent current of the power triode is not compensated in the transformer core, while in push-pull transformers the quiescent currents of the two push-pull power tubes cancel each other out in the core of the OPT. This means that an SE transformer must be constructed differently from a push-pull type. In general one can say that an SE-transformer includes a gap in the core to deal with the quiescent current while the push-pull version has a closed core with almost no gap in it. This means: even when you own a very good push-pull OPT you can't use it in a SE-amplifier!

 

IMPEDANCES

Suppose you want to select an OPT for a special design. Suppose that we are dealing with a push-pull amplifier. Somewhere in the tube spec or design notes you should find the primary impedance (Zaa) for optimal loading of the power tubes. Let's imagine a design with a primary impedance of 3300 Ohms. On the secondary side you wish to connect a 4 or an 8 Ohms loudspeaker. I have standardized my toroidal designs to a 5 Ohms secondary, but very often 4 and 8 Ohms connections are found. Suppose for now that you have found a transformer with a primary impedance of 4000 Ohms and secondaries at 4 and 8 Ohms. Can you use this transformer for your special design where Zaa should equal 3300 Ohms? The answer is yes, you only have to perform a minor calculation to see how.

 

In your transformer you have an impedance ratio of 4000/4 = 1000. Now suppose that you don't apply a 4 Ohms loudspeaker but a 3.3 Ohms version, then with this impedance ratio of 1000 you get a primary impedance of 3300 Ohms. When you use the 8 Ohms secondary connection, your impedance ratio is 4000/8 = 500. To get a primary impedance of 3300 Ohm you should apply a loudspeaker with an impedance of 3300/500 = 6.6 Ohms.

 

These examples demonstrate the following important rule: "The impedance ratio of the OPT combined with the impedance of the loudspeaker delivers the primary impedance."

 

Another example: suppose you have an SE-OPT with a primary impedance Za = 2500 Ohms. On the secondary you have a 4 Ohms connection. The impedance ratio is 2500/4 = 625. Now suppose that you wish to build a 300B SE-amplifier with a primary impedance of 3500 Ohms. What speaker should you connect? The answer is: 3500/625 = 5.6 Ohms.

 

Every one knows that the impedance of a loudspeaker is frequency dependent, meaning that at each frequency the impedance has a different value. Therefore loudspeaker manufacturers give a mean impedance value. The consequence of this is that you never can calculate exactly the value of the primary impedance. Just try to be close to the primary and secondary impedances intended in the design, but don't worry about deviations up to about 20%. This criterium will make your selection of an output transformer much easier.

 

POWER CAPABILITY

The output transformer must be able to handle the output power without major losses and distortions, over the intended frequency range. This is a rather difficult topic because not all manufacturers deliver all the information you need to judge whether the OPT is applicable or not. What you need is the following: "which is the lowest frequency at which the transformer can handle its nominal power"? Take an example: suppose you select an OPT which can handle 50 Watts at 30 Hz. Then this transformer can handle 50/2 = 25 Watt at 30/1.414 = 21.2 Hz. Or the transformer can handle 50*2 = 100 Watt at 30*1.414 = 42.4 Hz.

 

The rule behind all this is: "The power capability doubles when the frequency is a factor 1.414 larger. The power capability halves when the lowest frequency is devided by 1.414 (squareroot 2)."

 

But what to do when the manufacturer only tells you that you are buying a 100 Watt transformer without mentioning the lowest nominal power frequency? To be honest: the lack of information makes you 'blind' and you don't know how the behaviour of this transformer will be at low frequencies. The lower the frequency of the input, the more the core of the OPT gets saturated and you only can guess at which frequency severe distortions will start. The only thing you should count on is the good name of the manufacturer, expecting that he is knowing what he is doing. I plead, however, for OPT power specifications to be specified with the lowest frequency clearly stated. That would help you in selecting the optimal OPT for your application.

 

LOSSES

All the magnet wire turns of the OPT have a resistance. The currents of the tubes are partly converted into heat in this internal resistance and therefore you lose power. This is expressed in the "Insertion Loss" which you find in the specification of the OPT. Let me give an example: suppose an I-loss of 0.3 dB, how much power is lost in heat in the transformer? Now take your calculator and calculate: 0.3/10 = 0.03, calculate -0.03 with the inverse log-function (10 to the power of x) resulting in 0.933. This results means that 93.3 % of the output power is converted into music while 100-93.3 = 6.7 % is converted into heat. This knowledge does not enable you to fry an egg on the transformer, so a more general rule will give better information: "Insertion losses smaller than 0.3 dB in an OPT indicate an acceptable heat loss without causing major difficulties."

 

LOW FREQUENCY RANGE and DC-IMBALANCE

The calculation of the frequency range of an OPT is very complex. You find all the information and details in my AES preprint 3887: "Theory and Practice of Wide Bandwidth Toroidal Output Transformers", which can be ordered from the AES.

The most important quantity determining the low frequency range of an OPT is the primary inductance Lp (its value is given in H = Henry). The larger Lp is, the better the low frequency response of the transformer. To make Lp large you need a lot of magnet wire turns around the core and you need to use a large core. A second factor determing the low frequency range is the primary impedance of the OPT paralleled with the plate resistances of the output tubes. The smaller the plate resistances and primary impedance the wider the frequency range at the low frequency side. Select power tubes with a low plate resistance (like triodes) for a good bass response with very little distortion combined with OPT's with a large Lp value. (For a more detailed study see my article in Glass Audio 5/97: "Measuring Output Transformer Performance", p20ff.)

 

However, the larger you make Lp, the more sensitive the OPT becomes to an imbalance of the quiescent currents of the power tubes in a push-pull amplifier design. In practice this means: when you use high quality OPTs with good bass response and a large primary inductance, you should pay special attention to carefully balancing the quiescent currents of the power tubes. Whether you use my toroidal designs or EI-designs or C-core designs, this is a general rule for large primary inductance OPT designs. If you don't balance your quiescent currents carefully, your maximum power capability at low frequencies gets less and the distortions become larger.

 

HIGH FREQUENCY RANGE

At the high frequency side, two internal quantities of the transformer limit the high frequencies. These are: the effective internal capacitance between the windings (Cip) and the leakage inductance of the transformer (Lsp). The leakage is caused by the simple fact that not all the magnetic fieldlines are captured in the core. Some leave the core and are outside the transformer. In this aspect the toroidal transformers show very good specifications, because the round shaped core captures almost all the fieldlines, resulting in very small leakage inductances. The smaller the leakage, the wider the frequency range.

 

The influence of the internal capacitance is the same: the smaller the internal capacitance, the wider the high frequency range. A transformer designer therefore has to find an optimal balance between the leakage, the capacitance and the tubes and impedances used to create an optimal frequency range. I discuss this in detail in my 3887 AES preprint.

 

Now some rules:

"The smaller the plate resistances of the tubes, the wider the frequency range."

"When the balance between Lsp and Cip is not correct, square wave overshoot will occur (incorrect Q-factor)."

"When both Lsp and Cip are large, the high frequency range becomes limited and this will result in differential phase distortions" (meaning that the frequency components of a tone, or of the music, will be time-shifted towards each other, resulting in a distorted tone envelope, detectable by the ear due to its a-linear behaviour).

Let me summarise this as follows: it is up to the transformer designer not only to create a wide frequency range, but to tune the high frequency behaviour with the correct Q-factor (somewhere between 0.5 and 0.7). In that case no square wave overshoot will occur and the differential phase distortion will be minimal. Look into the specifications of the manufacturer to find more details about the high frequency tuning of his designs. I have optimized my toroidal designs for a very wide frequency range, in order to be prepared for the new digital developments with sampling rates now up to 194 kHz--and who knows what the near future will bring?

 

Part 2 of the article by Menno van der Veen:

 At the leading edge

 

SPECIAL CONFIGURATIONS & NEW ADVENTURES

Recently I finalised a study and research about special coupling techniques between an OPT and power tubes. The results of this research can be found in my AES preprint 4643: "Modelling Power Tubes and their Interaction with Output Transformers", obtainable from the AES.

 

My basic question was: "How can I couple power tubes optimally to an output transformer?" In order to answer this simple question I first had to design a mathematical model describing the behaviour of power tubes. Fortunately many others (like for instance the pioneers Scott Reynolds and Norman Koren) already had studied this subject and I only had to add a very small extension to their models to be able to model pentode power tubes rather accurately.

 

My next important step was the understanding that there are many ways to connect power tubes to output transformers. I only mention a few possiblities: pentode push-pull, ultra linear, triode push-pull, cathode feedback, cathode out, and so on.

 

I discovered that it is possible to bring all these various coupling techniques into one general model by means of the introduction of the screen grid feedback ratio X and the introduction of the cathode feedback ratio. The figure shows eight different coupling methods between the push-pull power tubes and the OPT. To investigate all these amplifiers, I designed new toroidal output transformers: the "Specialist Range".

 

These new transformers contain very special windings for the application of selectable cathode and screen grid feedback. For more information see the web pages of Plitron and Amplimo. The major time consuming element in the designing of these new toroidal transformers was the demand that the amplifiers should be absolutely stable, not oscilating, and optimized in power, frequency range and damping factor behaviour. During my research and the development of the new OPTs I discovered two brand new circuits (numbers 5 and 7) which are under my registration and copyright. For trade use and/or manufacture please contact me for licensing.

 

I will not deal now with all the details of this new research. The technically inclined can order the 4643 AES preprint.

 

The circuits 5 (Super Pentode) and 7 (Super Triode) both show very special qualities not seen before by me in push-pull amps. For instance, circuit 5 delivers amazingly large output powers (80 Watt with 2 x EL34 at 450-470 V supply), while circuit 7 delivers extremely small distortions (harmonic as well as intermodulation) and a damping factor surpassing triode amplifiers. In all this I noticed (and calculated) that especially the quiescent current per power tube is a major tool in creating minimal distortions (while hardly decreasing the maximum output power).

 

The new toroidal "specialist" transformers are available for any one to perform his/her private tests with these new amplifier possibilities. See Plitron's and Amplimo's web-sites. Their internal research reports can be ordered; they deal with these new technologies, giving a background information and important references to the relevant literature .

 

SUMMARY

I did not talk in length about SE-transformers, their selection and optimal application. All this information can be found in my new book which I hope to finish soon. I paid attention to impedances, powers and losses, the frequency range, distortions and new coupling techniques. For those who wish to study these subjects in depth, I attach a bibliography of only my own writing, which in turn contain bibliographies of the relevant references.

 

If comments, reactions and advice should appear in my email, I would be a very happy man.

 

LITERATURE

1) Menno van der Veen; "Transformers and Tubes"; published by Plitron; www.plitron.com

 

2) Menno van der Veen; "Het Vanderveen Buizenbouwboek"; published by Amplimo; www.amplimo.nl

 

3) Menno van der Veen; "Theory and Practice of Wide Bandwidth Toroidal Output Transformers"; AES preprint 3887

 

4) Menno van der Veen; "Modelling Power Tubes and their Interaction with Output Transformers"; AES preprint 4643

 

5) Menno van der Veen; "Measuring Output Transformer Performance"; Glass Audio 5/97

 

6) Menno van der Veen; "Lab Report Specialist Range Toroidal Output Transformers"; published by Plitron; www.plitron.com

 

7) Menno van der Veen; "Specialist Ringkern Uitgangstransformatoren, de Super Pentode Schakeling"; published by Amplimo; www.amplimo.nl

 

All the above literature contains a wealth of references to other authors.

 

Super Pentode and Super Triode:

Names and principles are registered by the author and are subject to European Union and International Copyright Laws. Licensing enquires for reproduction of and manufacture for trade sale should be directed to Menno van der Veen

 

Menno van der Veen (b1949) graduated in physics and electronics. He taught physics at the physics department of a teachers' college until he founded his research and consultancy company in 1986. He is a board member of the Dutch Section of the Audio Engineering Society and of the Elpec (Dutch Electronic Press Association). He is a member of the Dutch Acoustic Society (NAG). He is the designer of special toroidal output transformers for tube amplifiers in close cooperation with Plitron and Amplimo. Results of his output transformer research were published at AES conventions in 1994 and 1998. He wrote over 360 articles for various Dutch high end audio magazines and is the author of the book "Transformers and Tubes". Designing tube amplifiers is his vocation--combined with playing the Jazz guitar. Currently he is writing two new books on tube amplifiers.

 

Copyright text and figures (c)1998, 2005 Menno van der Veen


THE VOLTAGES IN THIS AMP WILL KILL YOU.

GET EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION IF IT IS YOUR FIRST TUBE AMP