Center tap

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In electronics, a center tap is a wire that is connected to a point half way along one of the windings of a transformer , inductor or a resistor. Center taps are sometimes used on inductors for the coupling of signals, although most tappings are not at the centre but usually near one end. In the case of resistors, tapping is usually done only with potentiometers, and center tapping is just a special case of normal operation of these devices.

  • In a rectifier, a center-tapped transformer and two diodes can form a full-wave rectifier that allows both half-cycles of the AC waveform to contribute to the direct current, making it smoother than a half-wave rectifier. This form of circuit saves on rectifier diodes compared to a diode bridge, but has poorer utilization of the transformer windings. Center-tapped two-diode rectifiers were a common feature of power supplies in vacuum tube equipment. Modern semiconductor diodes are low-cost and compact so usually a 4-diode bridge is used (up to a few hundred watts total output) which produces the same quality of DC as the center-tapped configuration with a more compact and cheaper power transformer. Center-tapped configurations may still be used in high-current applications, such as large automotive battery chargers, where the extra transformer cost is offset by less costly rectifiers.
  • In an audio power amplifier center-tapped transformers are used to drive push-pull output stages. This allows two devices operating in Class B to combine their output to produce higher audio power with relatively low distortion. Design of such audio output transformers must tolerate a small amount of direct current that may pass through the winding.
    Hundreds of millions of pocket-size transistor radios used this form of amplifier since the required transformers were very small and the design saved the extra cost and bulk of an output coupling capacitor that would be required for an output-transformerless design. However, since low-distortion high-power transformers are costly and heavy, most consumer audio products now use a transformerless output stage.
    The technique is nearly as old as electronic amplification and is well-documented, for example, in "The Radiotron Designer's Handbook, Third Edition" of 1940.
  • In electronic amplifiers, a center-tapped transformer is used as a phase splitter in coupling different stages of an amplifier.
  • A Centre tapped recifier is preferred to the full bridge rectifier when the output dc current is high and the output voltage is low.

See Diode bridge.

F. Langford Smith, The Radiotron Designer's Handbook Third Edition, (1940), The Wireless Press, Sydney, Australia, no ISBN, no Library of Congress card

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