Passive Preamplifiers and Step-Up Transformers: The Complete Audiophile Guide
Published by IWISTAO
In the world of high-fidelity audio, the signal chain from stylus to speaker is everything. Yet few components are as misunderstood — or as quietly transformative — as the passive preamplifier and its close cousin, the step-up transformer (SUT). Unlike active preamps that rely on transistors or tubes to amplify voltage, these passive devices achieve gain through purely electromagnetic means: no batteries, no power supplies, no active noise sources. The result, when done well, is a sonic transparency that active circuits often struggle to match.
This guide explores both technologies in depth — from the physics of transformer action to the practical art of matching a SUT to a low-output moving-coil (LOMC) cartridge.
1. What Is a Passive Preamplifier?
A passive preamplifier — sometimes called a passive linestage or passive control unit — is a volume and source-selection device that contains no active gain stage. It typically consists of:
- A precision attenuator (resistive potentiometer, ladder network, or transformer-based)
- Source selector switch(es)
- Input and output connectors
Because it introduces no gain, a passive preamp works on the assumption that the source component (a CD player, DAC, or phono stage) already provides sufficient output voltage to drive a power amplifier directly — typically 1 V RMS or more. Modern solid-state sources almost always satisfy this requirement.
1.1 Resistive Passive Preamps
The simplest passive preamp is a metal-film potentiometer or a discrete resistor ladder (switched attenuator) wired between source and amplifier. Advantages include dead-flat frequency response and extremely low distortion. The critical limitation is impedance interaction: a high source impedance combined with a low input impedance on the power amplifier creates a voltage-divider effect that varies with pot position, causing frequency response anomalies and loss of bass weight at lower volume settings.
1.2 Transformer-Based Passive Preamps (TVC)
A transformer volume control (TVC) replaces the resistor attenuator with a transformer whose secondary has multiple taps. Selecting different taps changes the voltage ratio — and therefore the volume — while maintaining a low impedance at all attenuation levels. The transformer also provides galvanic isolation between source and amplifier. Lundahl, Stevens & Billington, and Dave Slagle's EMIA designs are well-regarded in this category.
2. Step-Up Transformers (SUT) — The Basics
A step-up transformer in the phono context is a small, precision audio transformer placed between a low-output moving-coil (LOMC) cartridge and a Moving-Magnet (MM) phono stage. Its job is to raise the tiny LOMC signal — often 0.2–0.6 mV — to the 2–5 mV level expected by a standard MM phono input.
2.1 Faraday's Law and Transformer Action
The operating principle of all transformers is Faraday's Law of electromagnetic induction: a changing magnetic flux through a coil induces a proportional electromotive force (EMF). When two coils share a common core, energy is transferred from primary to secondary through the changing magnetic field.
The fundamental relationships are:
- Voltage ratio: Vs / Vp = Ns / Np = n (turns ratio)
- Current ratio: Is / Ip = Np / Ns = 1/n (current steps down as voltage steps up)
- Impedance transformation: Zs / Zp = (Ns / Np)² = n²
For a SUT with a 1:10 turns ratio (n = 10), a 0.3 mV cartridge signal becomes 3 mV at the secondary — a voltage gain of 20 dB. Simultaneously, the source impedance seen at the secondary is multiplied by n² = 100.
3. Why Use a Step-Up Transformer?
The question is valid: a high-quality, low-noise MC phono stage can amplify an LOMC signal without a SUT. Why bother with a transformer at all? The answer lies in the noise floor.
3.1 The Noise Advantage
A SUT provides passive voltage gain — it raises the signal level without introducing active device noise; the remaining noise is dominated by winding resistance and source impedance. An active amplifier, by contrast, always adds its own noise. The key metric is Equivalent Input Noise (EIN):
- A typical low-noise op-amp (e.g., NE5534) has an EIN of about −120 dBu
- A precision bipolar transistor stage (e.g., 2SB737 in Denon's classic phono stages) can reach −140 dBu
- A quality SUT + MM stage effectively "pre-amplifies" passively, so the noise floor referenced to the cartridge output is determined almost entirely by the winding resistance — not by an active device
For a cartridge outputting 0.2 mV, even a 3 dB difference in noise floor is clearly audible as a quieter, blacker background.
3.2 Impedance Matching
A moving-coil cartridge is a low-impedance source — typically 2–40 Ω. For optimal loading for noise performance and frequency response (rather than maximum power transfer), the load presented to the cartridge should ideally be 5–10× the cartridge's internal impedance. A SUT automatically performs this matching: a 1:10 transformer reflects the 47 kΩ MM load back to the primary as 47 kΩ / 100 = 470 Ω — well suited for a 10–40 Ω MC cartridge coil.
3.3 Galvanic Isolation and Ground Loops
Because primary and secondary coils are electrically isolated, a SUT naturally breaks ground loops between turntable and phono stage. Cartridges with chassis-connected grounds benefit greatly; many audiophiles report a dramatic reduction in hum and RF interference after inserting a SUT.
"When I added a quality SUT to my LOMC setup, the noise floor dropped so significantly that I could hear details in familiar recordings I simply hadn't noticed before — decay tails in reverb, the scrape of chair legs, the breath before a vocal phrase."
— A common sentiment in audiophile forums, echoing decades of SUT adoption
4. Key SUT Design Parameters
4.1 Turns Ratio Selection
The turns ratio is the most critical selection parameter. Common ratios available in commercial SUTs are 1:5, 1:10, 1:20, and 1:30. The correct ratio depends on the cartridge's output voltage:
| Cartridge Output | Recommended Ratio | Voltage Gain | Gain (dB) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.4 – 0.6 mV (Med-High MC) | 1:5 | ×5 | +14 dB |
| 0.2 – 0.4 mV (Standard LOMC) | 1:10 | ×10 | +20 dB |
| 0.1 – 0.2 mV (Very Low MC) | 1:20 | ×20 | +26 dB |
| <0.1 mV (Ultra-Low MC) | 1:30 – 1:40 | ×30–40 | +30–32 dB |
The goal is to raise the signal to approximately 2–5 mV at the MM phono input — enough for the MM stage's gain to work optimally without saturation.
4.2 Core Material
The core material determines frequency bandwidth, saturation level, and distortion. The three main options are:
- Silicon steel (grain-oriented, GOSS) — Economical, good saturation, but limited high-frequency extension. Common in budget SUTs.
- Permalloy (Ni-Fe alloy, e.g., Mumetal) — Very high permeability (μ up to 100,000), low-frequency extension to sub-1 Hz, low core losses. Used in high-end designs (Lundahl LL1931, Bob's Devices). Sensitive to mechanical stress.
- Amorphous alloy (e.g., Metglas) — Extremely low hysteresis loss, wide bandwidth. Used in top-tier modern SUTs (Hashimoto HM-7, some Cinemag designs).
- Nanocrystalline (Vitroperm 500F) — Highest permeability, widest bandwidth, lowest distortion. Increasingly popular in audiophile-grade designs.
4.3 Winding Geometry and Shielding
At the tiny signal levels involved (microvolts to millivolts), electromagnetic interference (EMI) pickup is a serious concern. High-quality SUTs address this through:
- Electrostatic (Faraday) shielding between primary and secondary — a grounded copper foil layer that blocks capacitively coupled noise
- Mumetal enclosures — the transformer case itself is made from high-permeability alloy, attenuating magnetic field ingress from power transformers or motors
- Interleaved winding — alternating layers of primary and secondary reduce leakage inductance and extend high-frequency response
4.4 DC Resistance and Insertion Loss
Every winding has resistance (DCR). The primary DCR adds in series with the cartridge, forming a resistive divider with the secondary-reflected load. A high DCR relative to the cartridge's internal impedance causes:
- Reduced voltage transfer (insertion loss)
- Increased noise floor
- Possible bass rolloff if primary inductance is also low
Quality SUTs keep primary DCR below 5–10 Ω; premium designs achieve under 1 Ω using heavy-gauge, high-purity copper winding wire.
5. Frequency Response, Bandwidth & Loading
An ideal transformer has flat frequency response from DC to infinity. In practice, two mechanisms limit bandwidth:
- Low-frequency rolloff: determined by primary inductance (Lp). Below the LF cutoff (fL = (Rsource + Rreflected) / (2πLp)), response falls. A permalloy core can achieve Lp > 100 H, pushing fL below 1 Hz even with a 40 Ω source.
- High-frequency rolloff: caused by leakage inductance (Llk) and inter-winding capacitance. Good interleaved designs extend −3 dB bandwidth to 100 kHz or beyond.
5.1 The Loading Resistor
The resistive load at the secondary (typically the 47 kΩ MM input impedance) is transformed to the primary as Zp = 47 kΩ / n². An optional parallel loading resistor can be placed at the secondary to fine-tune the effective load on the cartridge. This affects both frequency response and the damping of resonance peaks in the cartridge/arm system.
A useful rule of thumb: start at the manufacturer's recommended cartridge load, calculate what secondary resistor achieves that, and adjust by ear. Many experienced audiophiles find that loading a SUT slightly heavier than theory suggests results in better tracking behavior on sibilants.
6. Notable Step-Up Transformer Manufacturers
The SUT market spans a wide range from budget-friendly Japanese vintage units to contemporary artisan designs. Here is an overview of key players:
| Brand / Model | Country | Core Material | Ratio(s) | Approx. Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lundahl LL1931 | Sweden | Permalloy (C-core) | 1:8, 1:16, 1:32 | ~$300–500 (DIY) | Industry reference; exceptional bandwidth and low DCR |
| Hashimoto HM-7 | Japan | Permalloy | 1:10, 1:20 | ~$400–600 (DIY) | Traditional Japanese craftsmanship; smooth, natural tone |
| Bob's Devices Sky 20 | USA | Cinemag (Permalloy) | 1:20 | ~$900 | Mu-metal shielded; widely reviewed; very quiet |
| Ortofon T-5 / T-20 | Denmark | Permalloy | 1:5, 1:20 | ~$400–700 | Matches Ortofon MC cartridges natively |
| Denon AU-320 / AU-340 | Japan | Silicon steel | 1:10, 1:40 | $80–300 (vintage) | Classic vintage design; excellent value for budget builds |
| Audio Note AN-S2 / S3 | UK | Silicon steel (grain-oriented) | 1:10 | ~$600–1200 | Used with Audio Note MC cartridges; silver winding option available |
| Stevens & Billington TX-103 | UK | Mu-metal, Permalloy | 1:10, 1:20 | ~$500–900 | Used in TVC designs; excellent shielding |
| Jensen JT-44K-DX | USA | Permalloy | 1:10 | ~$350 (DIY) | Broadcast-grade; very flat response; used in pro and audiophile contexts |
7. Matching a SUT to Your MC Cartridge — Practical Guide
7.1 Step-by-Step Selection
- Find your cartridge's output voltage. Check the manufacturer's datasheet. Typical LOMC values: 0.2–0.6 mV.
- Determine target MM input level. Most MM phono stages work best with 2–5 mV input. Choose a ratio: target_mV / cartridge_mV (e.g., 4 mV / 0.3 mV ≈ 13×, so a 1:10 or 1:12 ratio is appropriate).
- Calculate the effective load. Z_primary = 47 kΩ / n². Compare this to the cartridge manufacturer's recommended load impedance.
- Check for compatibility. Some cartridges are "transformer-unfriendly" — very low internal impedance (<2 Ω) can cause instability. Consult the manufacturer. Cartridges such as the Denon DL-103 (40 Ω) are extremely SUT-friendly.
- Listen and adjust secondary loading. Add a resistor in parallel with the MM input to change effective cartridge load. Try 100 Ω, 470 Ω, and 1 kΩ secondary resistors and compare tracking on complex piano passages or high-frequency string harmonics.
7.2 Common Mismatches and Symptoms
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Bright, harsh treble; sibilance distortion | Cartridge under-loaded (too high impedance seen at primary) | Add secondary loading resistor to reduce effective Z |
| Dull, rolled-off highs | Excessive capacitive loading from cable; core resonance with loading | Shorten interconnect; reduce secondary loading resistor value |
| Soft, loose bass; lack of punch | Primary inductance too low for cartridge impedance (LF rolloff) | Switch to higher-permeability core; use SUT with larger core cross-section |
| Midrange hum or 50/60 Hz noise | Insufficient magnetic shielding; bad ground connection | Improve shielding; ensure signal ground continuity; orient SUT away from power transformer |
| Clipping / distortion on loud passages | Ratio too high; MM stage overdriven | Switch to lower ratio SUT |
8. Passive vs. Active Preamplifier: A Balanced Comparison
The passive vs. active preamp debate has divided audiophiles for decades. Neither approach is universally superior — the choice depends on system context.
| Parameter | Passive Preamp (Resistive) | TVC (Transformer Volume Control) | Active Preamp (Tube or Solid-State) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Signal Gain | Attenuation only (≤0 dB) | Attenuation; some designs offer slight gain | Typically +6 to +26 dB |
| Noise Floor | Excellent (no active devices) | Excellent; isolation from external noise | Adds amplifier noise; depends on design quality |
| Output Impedance | Varies with attenuation (can be high at mid-volume) | Low at all settings (transformer driven) | Low (solid-state) or moderate (tube) |
| Cable Sensitivity | High — long cables degrade response | Moderate — transformer output is more robust | Low — buffered/low-Z output drives cables easily |
| Distortion | Near-zero (resistive only) | Very low; some core saturation possible at extremes | Depends on design (tube 2nd harmonic, SS near-zero) |
| Power Required | None | None | Yes (transformer, heaters for tubes) |
| Ideal Application | Short cables; high-output sources; insensitive power amp input | Flexible use; best transparency with isolation | Long cable runs; low-output sources; any power amp |
| Typical Cost | $100 – $2,000+ | $500 – $10,000+ | $200 – $50,000+ |
"A passive preamp with a quality power amplifier and a modern high-output source is arguably the shortest path between a digital file and your ears. Whether that translates to the most musical result is a question only your system — and your ears — can answer."
9. The Transformer Volume Control (TVC) — Deep Dive
The TVC is a fundamentally different topology from both resistive passive preamps and active linestages. A transformer with a multi-tap secondary allows the volume to be set by selecting the ratio of turns between primary and the chosen secondary tap.
The TVC's key advantage over a resistive attenuator is that its output impedance remains low across all attenuation levels (though not strictly constant). A pot's output impedance peaks at mid-position; a TVC's output impedance is always low (it is a transformer secondary, essentially an EMF source). This makes TVC-based passive preamps far more compatible with cables and power amplifiers over long interconnects.
Notable TVC products include designs by Dave Slagle (EMIA), Intact Audio autoformers, and Sowter custom transformers. The autoformer (single winding with taps, not a dual-winding transformer) is a cost-effective variant that provides the same low-impedance behavior but without galvanic isolation.
10. System Integration Tips
10.1 Placement and Orientation
Place the SUT as close to the turntable as possible to minimize cable length on the low-level MC signal. The SUT is magnetically sensitive — keep it at least 30 cm from power transformers, motor drives, and switching power supplies. If hum is present, rotate the SUT on its axis in 15° increments to find the null orientation in the ambient magnetic field.
10.2 Cable Quality Matters More Here
Between cartridge and SUT, you are dealing with sub-millivolt signals in the microvolt range for the softest musical passages. Any tribological noise (microphony) or dielectric absorption in the cable becomes audible. Shielded, low-capacitance cables with Litz-type conductors and silver or copper foil shields are recommended. Keep cable length under 0.5 m where possible.
10.3 Ground Connections
The SUT chassis ground, cartridge ground, and phono stage ground must form a single, star-grounded connection point. Loops in the ground path are the primary cause of hum in SUT installations. Use the turntable's dedicated ground lug; do not rely on signal ground through the RCA connector alone.
10.4 Break-In Period
Some audiophiles report that permalloy-core transformers may exhibit changes over an initial 50–200 hour usage period, though this is not universally confirmed by engineering measurements. The magnetic domains gradually settle into lower-energy states, and many audiophiles report a progressive improvement in low-frequency weight and midrange liquidity over this period. Allow adequate burn-in before critical listening evaluations.
11. Audio Transformers in the Broader Signal Chain
While this guide focuses on phono SUTs and TVC passive preamps, audio transformers appear throughout the signal chain:
- Output Transformers (OPT) — Used in single-ended and push-pull tube amplifiers to match the high-impedance plate circuit to the low-impedance loudspeaker load. The OPT is arguably the most critical component in a tube amplifier's sonic character.
- Interstage Transformers (IST) — Drive grid-to-cathode between tube stages with galvanic isolation, enabling direct coupling without cathode followers or coupling capacitors.
- Input Transformers — Balanced-to-unbalanced (BAL/UNBAL) conversion in professional audio equipment; also used as grounding and noise-isolation devices.
- Line-Output Transformers — Used in tube DACs and CD players with transformer-coupled outputs to eliminate high-frequency switching artifacts.
Each of these applications places different demands on core material, winding geometry, and DCR — yet the underlying electromagnetic principles are identical.
12. Conclusion
Passive preamplifiers and step-up transformers occupy a unique position in the audiophile toolkit: they are uncompromisingly honest devices that impose almost nothing of their own on the signal, yet the care and precision required to realize that ideal is extraordinary. A well-matched SUT with a quality permalloy core, interleaved winding, and Mu-metal shielding can transform an LOMC cartridge's minuscule signal with a purity that even the best active MC stages struggle to equal — not because active designs are inferior in principle, but because every active component introduces variables that careful transformer design simply avoids.
Whether you are exploring a transformer volume control for a linestage, seeking a SUT to partner a low-output moving-coil cartridge, or simply curious about the physics behind these elegant electromagnetic devices, the journey rewards patience. Start with the fundamentals: understand the turns ratio, choose a core material appropriate for your cartridge's impedance, and listen critically. The physics have been understood for over a century — the art lies in the implementation.
Find More
- Inside the Phono Cartridge: Why MM and MC Use Different Generator Designs — and Often Sound Different
- The Complete Guide to Phono Preamps: Unlocking the Full Potential of Your Vinyl Collection
- The Complete Guide to Vinyl Phono Tonearms: Design, Geometry and Setup
- The Complete Phono Cable Guide: MM vs MC, Capacitance and Shielding
- Passive Preamplifier Audio Signal Boosting Transformer for Smartphone PC CD Player MC Phono Sound Quality Enhancer HIFI
References
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- Ballou, G. (Ed.). (2008). Handbook for Sound Engineers, 4th ed. Focal Press. https://www.routledge.com/…
- Lundahl Transformers. (2023). LL1931 Datasheet: Moving Coil Step-Up Transformer. https://www.lundahl.se/products/audio-transformers/mc-step-up/
- Jensen Transformers. (2022). JT-44K-DX Phono Input Transformer Application Notes. https://www.jensen-transformers.com/product/jt-44k-dx/
- Bob's Devices. (2024). Sky Series SUT Product Documentation. https://www.bobsdevices.com/sky-series/
- Ortofon A/S. (2023). Technical Background: Moving Coil Cartridges and Step-Up Solutions. https://www.ortofon.com/mc-transformers
- Slagle, D. (2015). "Autoformer Volume Controls: Theory and Practice." AudiogoN Discussion Forum. https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/autoformer-volume-controls
- Broskie, J. (2021). "Step-Up Transformers for Moving-Coil Cartridges." Tube CAD Journal. https://www.tubecad.com/2021/step_up_transformers.html
- Hagerman, J. (2009). "Phono Preamp Design." HagTech Audio Blog. https://hagtech.com/pdf/phonoeq.pdf
- Hashimoto Electric Co. (2023). HM-7 & H-7 Step-Up Transformer Specifications. https://www.h-sound.co.jp/hashimoto/trans_mc.html
- Sowter Transformers. (2024). Type 9335 / 9336 Moving Coil Step-Up Transformer. https://www.sowter.co.uk/specs/9335.php
- Ortofon SPU Royal GM MkII image. Wikimedia Commons, by RCraig09 (CC BY-SA 4.0). https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ortofon_SPU_Royal_GM_MKII.jpg










