Valve (Tube-Based) Amplifi ers 351
audio frequency transformer. This is a diffi cult component to incorporate within a high-
fi delity system, and much thought must be given both to its design and the way it is used
in the circuit.
A very simple circuit layout embodying the structure outlined in Figure 11.6 , using
directly heated (battery operated) valves, is shown in Figure 11.7. This is the type of
design that might have been built some 50 years ago by a technically minded youngster
who wanted some means of driving a loudspeaker from a simple piezo-electric
gramophone pick-up.
For the maximum transfer of power from an amplifi er to its load it is necessary that both
of these should have the same impedance, and since the anode resistance ( Ra ) of the
output valve is of the order of 10 k Ω , and the most common speech coil impedance of
an inexpensive moving coil loudspeaker is 3 Ω , there would be a drastic loss of available
power unless some impedance converting output transformer was employed.
Input
C 1
C 3
0.1μF
0.1μF
C 2
100 μF
C 4
0.01μF
TR1
O/P
Trans
V 2
Output to LS
Vsupply
Vbias
Vf
0V
KT2
R 2
22 K
R 3
47 K
R 4
220 K
RV1
R 1
4M7
V 1
HL2
1M0
Gain control
Figure 11.7 : A simple valve amplifi er.