Interleaving means mixing the primary together with the secondary. For instance, recipe #2 in RDH4 says:
Wind one-quarter of the primary.
Then stop and wind one-half of the secondary on top of it.
Wind the second quarter of the primary, bring out the center tap and then wind the third quarter of the primary.
Wind the remaining half of the secondary.
Finally, wind the last quarter of the primary.
This would be called "once interleaved" and has one-quarter the leakage inductance of the "straight wound" transformer used in the Tweed Deluxe, which would be recipe #1. The RDH4 has recipes for up to 16x interleaving.
DC imbalance could be caused by mismatched tubes, or it could be caused by an unbalanced PI where the two outputs clip with different duty cycles. I remember seeing one amp where, when you cranked it right up, the blue glow in one power tube would get brighter and the other would go out. Maybe it was broken, but it seemed to sound pretty good. I bet money that this happens to some extent in all classic amps.
Saturation works on the average DC imbalance, not instantaneous. The OT is designed to handle one half-cycle of signal at full power and the lowest operating frequency without saturating. So in that sense, yes, it "cancels through time".
A while ago I did an informal test of some guitar amps I had around, and none of them showed signs of OT saturation when running full power at 84Hz, low E on the guitar. Even at 42Hz, low E on the bass, the waveforms were still remarkably clean. Remember the classic 50W amps were probably intended to be played with a bass guitar plugged in one channel and a lead guitar in the other.
Cheap SE OTs are half saturated all the time. Putting a bigger OT in a SE amp can blow your socks off, however the extra bass risks trashing the speaker.
Wind one-quarter of the primary.
Then stop and wind one-half of the secondary on top of it.
Wind the second quarter of the primary, bring out the center tap and then wind the third quarter of the primary.
Wind the remaining half of the secondary.
Finally, wind the last quarter of the primary.
This would be called "once interleaved" and has one-quarter the leakage inductance of the "straight wound" transformer used in the Tweed Deluxe, which would be recipe #1. The RDH4 has recipes for up to 16x interleaving.
DC imbalance could be caused by mismatched tubes, or it could be caused by an unbalanced PI where the two outputs clip with different duty cycles. I remember seeing one amp where, when you cranked it right up, the blue glow in one power tube would get brighter and the other would go out. Maybe it was broken, but it seemed to sound pretty good. I bet money that this happens to some extent in all classic amps.
Saturation works on the average DC imbalance, not instantaneous. The OT is designed to handle one half-cycle of signal at full power and the lowest operating frequency without saturating. So in that sense, yes, it "cancels through time".
A while ago I did an informal test of some guitar amps I had around, and none of them showed signs of OT saturation when running full power at 84Hz, low E on the guitar. Even at 42Hz, low E on the bass, the waveforms were still remarkably clean. Remember the classic 50W amps were probably intended to be played with a bass guitar plugged in one channel and a lead guitar in the other.
Cheap SE OTs are half saturated all the time. Putting a bigger OT in a SE amp can blow your socks off, however the extra bass risks trashing the speaker.
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