I have been enjoying watching how heated the rhetoric gets on the right way to build an output transformer. Apparently it is a pretty lucrative market to have cornered, or else there wouldn't be too much to say I guess.
Much of the contention seems to revolve around the material used for the bobbin: paper or plastic?
The Mercury website is confusing in that has testimonials from industry professionals who simultaneously say, "musicians prefer the sound of paper" and then "it doesn't matter which is used because both are magnetically neutral" or "transparent".
A friend of mine is a scientific minded guy and likes to keep notebooks of measurements on OTs, reverse engineer them, etc. So his opinion was the first one I sought on the issue, primarily since he had nothing to sell me... was a seeker of truth, had no horse in the race... you get the picture.
his take was that there was an effect on the sound, and it has nothing to do with the electromagnetic properties of the bobbin material, but everything to do with its width. He said that one job of the bobbin is to separate primary from secondary windings, and that the gap of this separation was determined by the thickness of the bobbin material. The plastic used in the sample he reverse engineered being thicker than the paper he found in others (mostly older examples - he called it "fish paper?") In any case, he explained that a closer gap improves the inductance of the transformer, and that inductance was a key property (measured in henries is it?) In any case, the reduced inductance caused by the wider gap of the plastic bobbin he said would not be noticeable until the amp was being pushed to "near wide open" at which time the difference would become audible.
So I continue to wonder about this famous "paper v plastic" debate. Is this some weird science? the ramblings of a madman?? or does it sound plausible? and if so, is the prevalence of plastic bobbins due to increased profit (use cheap materials and then charge expensive prices)?
your 2 cents please
Much of the contention seems to revolve around the material used for the bobbin: paper or plastic?
The Mercury website is confusing in that has testimonials from industry professionals who simultaneously say, "musicians prefer the sound of paper" and then "it doesn't matter which is used because both are magnetically neutral" or "transparent".
A friend of mine is a scientific minded guy and likes to keep notebooks of measurements on OTs, reverse engineer them, etc. So his opinion was the first one I sought on the issue, primarily since he had nothing to sell me... was a seeker of truth, had no horse in the race... you get the picture.
his take was that there was an effect on the sound, and it has nothing to do with the electromagnetic properties of the bobbin material, but everything to do with its width. He said that one job of the bobbin is to separate primary from secondary windings, and that the gap of this separation was determined by the thickness of the bobbin material. The plastic used in the sample he reverse engineered being thicker than the paper he found in others (mostly older examples - he called it "fish paper?") In any case, he explained that a closer gap improves the inductance of the transformer, and that inductance was a key property (measured in henries is it?) In any case, the reduced inductance caused by the wider gap of the plastic bobbin he said would not be noticeable until the amp was being pushed to "near wide open" at which time the difference would become audible.
So I continue to wonder about this famous "paper v plastic" debate. Is this some weird science? the ramblings of a madman?? or does it sound plausible? and if so, is the prevalence of plastic bobbins due to increased profit (use cheap materials and then charge expensive prices)?
your 2 cents please
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