The first link in the post points to the construction of a Mag Amp using two transformers. I wasn't referring to the other page on that site regarding the use of torrid's to build an amplifier.
The first page is great if you need a light dimmer. Which is not trivial, cause as he mentions, that's normally done with transistor SCR's or triacs, and spews electrical noise. So the mag amp method is quite elegant in that setting.
I think you totally missed the points I raised. Let me say them more directly...
What I'm asking is: Would a Mag Amp type transformer be another method to control the output power in the power amp.
...
This would of course require changing the OT of an amp with a Mag Amp transformer.
- A magnetic amplifier is not a reasonable add-on for control of power
inside an amplifier.
- A magnetic amplifier cannot replace the output transformer in a tube amp and still have tubes as the amp's output device.
- A magnetic amplifier would
take the place of the output tubes if you wanted to use it as a way to raise/lower power delivered to a load. That's because the magnetic amplifier performs the function of the output tubes.
- A magnetic amplifier
could be used between the speaker output of a typical guitar amp and the actual speakers. However, at that point it boosts the power level.
- A magnetic amplifier may be heavy and expensive compared to simply using tubes (to boost power) or solid-state (to reduce power, as in powerscaling/VVR).
You would not replace the typical output transformer in a guitar amp with a "magnetic amplifier transformer". The guitar amp's OT performs the function of impedance conversion, and is needed unchanged for the output tubes to have a load they can actually work into. Meaning, the speaker is a low impedance and looks like a short-circuit to a tube's plate, so the OT is needed to make the speaker look like several-thousand ohms.
By controlling the level of saturation in the core of an inductor, the amount of power transferred to the output may be controlled.
... By passing a DC current through the control winding the core is saturated to some point between the min and max core saturation levels. ... If there is a large amount of flux level left to use in this process, the voltage or current transfer is large. A smaller degree of available flux level will result in a small power transfer.
All of that sounds reasonable.
But as you move to saturation, the primary inductance drops. The result is that power output of your lows/low-mids falls off before the output of highs. I'm thinking at a minimum, you will have an undesired tone control.
If you want to build something like this to satisfy curiosity, go for it. I know a guy (who briefly posted on this forum) who built an "inverted-mode" amplifier. The signal input was on the plates of the output tubes, and the speaker output came from the control grids. A horribly inefficient way to avoid having to use an output transformer, but he went through the design process and built it just to see for himself that it could be done. You won't see
any commercial amplifier using that approach because it is so wildly uneconomical for the modest performance it offers.
In a similar way, You
could use a mag amp in place of a guitar amp's output stage (output tubes, OT). I propose that you don't see this done anywhere because it is wildly uneconomical for small audio output powers (meaning, not on the order of several to hundreds of kilowatts).
For normal audio amplifiers, if you want to reduce the power output, it is much easier and cheaper to reduce the screen voltage of the output tubes (as in some early table radios), or plate-and-screen voltage (as in powerscaling/VVR), or use any of the very many master volume schemes out there. Also cheaper and easier for power reduction are any of the many ways to waste off a portion of output power (in a resistor, lightbulb, fan, etc) that attenuators use.
You should note that even the wiki article you linked points to this fact. The output tubes in a guitar amp control a relatively large output power by using a relatively small input power from the preamp as a control signal. The applications shown in the wiki list a number of ways of controlling very large powers with a relatively small control power, when other and simpler means aren't practical.