How to Choose the Right Output Transformer Impedance
Published by IWISTAO
A practical, no-nonsense guide to matching primary impedance, calculating turns ratio, and selecting the correct output transformer for your vacuum-tube amplifier build.
If you have ever wired up a pair of EL34s only to hear a thin, fizzy, lifeless signal, chances are your output transformer impedance was wrong. The output transformer (OPT) is the single most critical component in any vacuum-tube power amplifier — it is the bridge between high-voltage, low-current tube circuits and low-impedance loudspeakers. Choosing the wrong impedance wastes power, distorts the signal, and can even damage your tubes.
This guide walks you through the theory, the math, and the practical decisions you need to make when selecting an output transformer for your next build.
1. Understanding Impedance Matching
Every vacuum tube has an optimal load impedance — the impedance it "wants" to see on its plate (anode). This value is specified in the tube's datasheet and is critical for achieving rated power output with acceptable distortion.
The output transformer's job is to transform the loudspeaker's low impedance (typically 4 Ω, 8 Ω, or 16 Ω) up to the much higher impedance the tube requires (typically 1,000–8,000 Ω for common power tubes).
2. The Core Formula
Zp / Zs = (N₁ / N₂)² Where: Zp = Primary impedance (plate-to-plate for push-pull, plate-to-ground for SE) Zs = Secondary impedance (speaker load) N₁ = Number of primary turns N₂ = Number of secondary turns Turns Ratio: N₁/N₂ = √(Zp / Zs)
This single relationship is the foundation of every output transformer selection. If you know your tube's optimal plate load and your speaker impedance, you can calculate the required turns ratio — and from there, determine whether a given transformer is suitable.
3. Finding the Correct Primary Impedance
The primary impedance you need depends on your tube type and circuit topology (single-ended vs. push-pull).
Single-Ended (SE) Circuits
In a single-ended amplifier, one tube (or parallel set) drives the full signal. The primary impedance is measured from plate to ground. Consult the tube datasheet for the recommended load resistance (Ra or Raa).
| Tube | Example Plate Voltage | Example Load (Ra) | Example Power |
|---|---|---|---|
| EL84 | 250 V | 5,200 Ω | 5.5 W |
| 6V6GT | 250 V | 5,000 Ω | 4.5 W |
| EL34 | 250 V | 2,000 Ω | 6 W |
| 6L6GC (pentode) | 250 V | 2,500 Ω | 16.5 W |
| 300B | 300 V | 3,000 Ω | 8 W |
| 2A3 | 250 V | 2,500 Ω | 3.5 W |
Push-Pull (PP) Circuits
In push-pull, two tubes work in anti-phase. The primary impedance is measured plate-to-plate (across both primary windings). Push-pull transformers typically allow lower primary impedance for the same tube type, yielding more power.
| Tube Pair | Example Plate Voltage | Plate-to-Plate Load | Example / Max Power |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2× EL84 | 300 V | 8,000 Ω | 15 W |
| 2× 6V6GT | 300 V | 8,000 Ω | 14 W |
| 2× EL34 | 400 V | 3,800–6,600 Ω | 50 W |
| 2× 6L6GC | 400 V | 4,000–6,600 Ω | 55 W |
| 2× KT88 | 450 V | 3,300–6,600 Ω | 100 W |
| 2× 6550 | 450 V | 3,400–6,600 Ω | 100 W |
4. Worked Example
Let's say you are building a single-ended 6L6GC amplifier and want to use an 8 Ω speaker.
Find Optimal Load
For a 6L6GC in single-ended pentode service at 250 V, a common datasheet operating point uses a 2,500 Ω load.
Calculate Impedance Ratio
Zp / Zs = 2,500 / 8 = 312.5 : 1 impedance ratio.
Calculate Turns Ratio
N₁/N₂ = √312.5 ≈ 17.7 : 1 turns ratio.
Select a Transformer
Look for an OPT that reflects ~2,500 Ω to the primary with your chosen speaker tap. Common options include a universal model such as Hammond 125DSE configured for the required reflected impedance, or a fixed-impedance model such as Edcor XSE15-8-2.5K.
"The output transformer is the soul of a tube amplifier. Get it right, and the music sings. Get it wrong, and no amount of circuit cleverness will save you."— Merlin Blencowe, Designing Tube Preamps for Guitar and Bass
5. Multi-Tap Transformers & Speaker Matching
Many output transformers offer multiple secondary taps (e.g., 4 Ω, 8 Ω, 16 Ω). Each tap changes the effective primary impedance seen by the tube:
Zp(eff) = Zs × (N₁/N₂)² Example: Turns ratio 25:1 4 Ω tap → Zp = 4 × 625 = 2,500 Ω 8 Ω tap → Zp = 8 × 625 = 5,000 Ω 16 Ω tap → Zp = 16 × 625 = 10,000 Ω
6. Beyond Impedance: Other Selection Criteria
Impedance matching is the primary concern, but a good transformer choice also requires attention to:
6.1 Power Rating
The transformer must be rated for at least the maximum power your amplifier will deliver. Undersized transformers saturate at high signal levels, causing bass distortion and core heating. A common rule of thumb: rate the transformer at 1.5× to 2× your target output power.
6.2 Frequency Response
The transformer's primary inductance (Lp) determines low-frequency rolloff, while leakage inductance and winding capacitance determine high-frequency rolloff. Key specs to look for:
- Primary inductance (Lp): Higher is better for bass. SE transformers need very high Lp (typically 10–30 H) because of DC bias current. PP transformers can get away with lower values (5–15 H).
- Frequency range: Look for a rated bandwidth of at least 20 Hz – 20 kHz (±1 dB).
- Leakage inductance: Lower is better for high-frequency extension. Interleaved windings reduce leakage inductance.
6.3 DC Current Handling (Single-Ended)
SE transformers must handle the DC plate current flowing through the primary without saturating the core. This requires an air gap in the core (or a gapped ferrite core). In a well-balanced push-pull stage, the DC currents in each half-winding largely cancel, so push-pull transformers are usually built without the same kind of air gap. A standard ungapped push-pull transformer is generally unsuitable for single-ended service, because the standing DC current will drive the core toward saturation.
6.4 Construction Quality
Not all transformers are created equal. Premium transformers use:
- Grain-oriented silicon steel (M6, Z11) laminations for lower core loss
- Interleaved windings (sandwich construction) for wider bandwidth
- Multi-section winding to reduce capacitance
- High-purity copper wire for lower DCR
7. Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Using a standard PP transformer in a SE circuit. Without a suitable air gap, DC current can drive the core toward saturation, causing high distortion, reduced bass headroom, and excess heating.
- Ignoring the speaker tap. A transformer rated "5,000 Ω primary" is only 5,000 Ω at a specific secondary tap. Using the 4 Ω tap instead of 8 Ω halves the effective primary impedance.
- Oversizing without checking the real specifications. A larger transformer is not automatically better. Verify primary inductance, DC current rating, leakage inductance, and bandwidth instead of assuming that more iron alone guarantees better bass.
- Assuming all 8 Ω taps are equal. Two transformers with "8 Ω" taps may have different primary impedances depending on their turns ratio. Always verify the primary impedance.
8. Quick Reference: Impedance Selection Flowchart
9. Popular Output Transformer Manufacturers
If you are shopping for an output transformer, these manufacturers are well-regarded in the DIY and professional audio communities:
- Hammond Manufacturing — Wide range, good value, readily available. The 125-series (SE) and 1600-series (PP) are popular choices.
- Edcor — Excellent custom options and competitive pricing. Known for the CXSE and XSE series.
- Heyboer — Custom-wound transformers, trusted by many boutique amp builders.
- Magnequest / Tribute — Premium, hand-wound transformers for audiophile-grade SE and PP designs.
- Lundahl — Swedish-made, high-end audio transformers with exceptional bandwidth and consistency.
- Sowter — British manufacturer with decades of experience in broadcast and studio-grade transformers.
10. Summary
Selecting the right output transformer impedance is not guesswork — it is a straightforward calculation rooted in the impedance ratio formula. To recap the process:
- Identify your tube type and circuit topology (SE or PP).
- Look up the recommended plate load impedance from the datasheet.
- Determine your speaker impedance.
- Calculate the required turns ratio: N₁/N₂ = √(Zp / Zs).
- Select a transformer that matches the primary impedance, power rating, and bandwidth requirements.
- Verify the secondary tap gives the correct primary impedance.
Get this right, and your amplifier will deliver its full potential — clean power, rich harmonics, and the kind of dynamic response that makes vacuum tubes irreplaceable.
References & Further Reading
- Blencowe, M. (2009). Designing Power Supplies for Valve Amplifiers. The pages on output transformer design and impedance matching are invaluable. valvewizard.co.uk
- Blencowe, M. (2012). Designing Tube Preamps for Guitar and Bass, 2nd ed. valvewizard.co.uk
- RCA (1962). RCA Receiving Tube Manual, RC-30. Classic reference for tube characteristics, load lines, and operating data. Available as a free PDF at tubebooks.org
- Langford-Smith, F. (1953). Radiotron Designer's Handbook, 4th ed. Chapter 13 covers output transformer design in extensive detail. Available at tubebooks.org
- Merlin Blencowe's Valve Wizard articles on transformer design: valvewizard.co.uk/transformer.html
- Hammond Manufacturing transformer datasheets and application notes: hammondmfg.com/audio.htm
- Edcor USA transformer specifications: edcorusa.com
- Tube data sheets (searchable): frank.pocnet.net — Excellent resource for vintage and current tube datasheets.
- Single-Ended Output Transformers: Core Size, DC Bias, and the Art of the Air Gap
- Unlocking Superior Audio: The 4-Over-3 Winding Method for Tube Amplifier Output Transformers
- The Heart of Harmony: A Deep Dive into Push-Pull Output Transformers
- Output Transformer: Key Components of Tube Amplifier
- Output Transformers in Vacuum Tube Push-Pull Amplifiers: Core Size, Power, and the Science Behind the Iron
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