Structo wrote:How come more guys aren't using these?
Is there something wrong with using a toroid PT?
bigbeck wrote:I've only seen them in HI-FI builds. But the price kind of makes me wonder too. Maybe they're better in some ways than conventional iron? In the majority of cases, you get what you pay for. But there are exceptions.
Since a PT has no bearing on tone,unless it's vibrating like hell or injecting noise into the circuit, I don't see why they can't be used.
Toroids differ from EI transformers in a number of areas. One is that magnetic leakage is much lower, which is a good thing. It means that you can place it much closer to the OT or to other sensitive components and it won't induce 50/60Hz hum anywhere near as much.
Another is that their regulation tends to be better for a broadly equivalent size. This means that under load they'll typically sag less, so exactly what you'd want in a hi-fi build.
If the sag under load is different, the voltages in the amp under load will be different and consequently the sound will be different. This is a fact, and is how power transformers
do affect tone. For the most part though, a 50W PT (for example) from most manufacturers will have a broadly similar stack size and similar winding gauges, so its performance will also likely be in the same ballpark. It will have more of a bearing when a transformer's ratings are really pushed, which is common of vintage amps.
However, since we don't know what the regulation figure on the original Wreck PTs was, and I don't imagine anyone has measured it and compared it to this particular toroid we can't say whether or not it will practically behave differently in its real world application, even though the specified secondary voltage may be the same.
Toroids are also more prone to core saturation and have a wider passband, which means that noisy mains can result in more noise reaching the secondary than with an EI transformer, so it's something else to consider.
If you're specifying a new transformer for a ground-up build I can't see a good reason for not using one as the behavioural differences between a toroid and an EI can be factored in to the design. If you're trying to clone an amp and the original iron is still available though, it is one less variable to worry about to go for the same iron.