If the transformer steps up the voltage provided by the source by a factor of 4 (which is a 12 db increase in gain), it will result in the source component seeing a load impedance of 1/16th of the impedance that exists "looking forward" from the output of the transformer.
If the autoformer is set so as to step down the voltage that is applied to it to a significant degree, it would result in the impedance "looking forward" from the output of the transformer being significantly greater than the input impedance of the amplifier (or whatever component is being driven). But since what you are apparently trying to accomplish is a net overall increase in voltage, presumably the attenuator would often be set to not much lower than 1:1. For a 1:1 setting of the attenuator and a 4:1 transformer ratio the source component would see a load impedance of 1/16th of the input impedance of the amp. Which in many cases will result in a poor impedance match and consequently in degraded sonics, depending on the impedances of the specific components and on how those impedances vary as a function of frequency.
Also, while I’m not certain, it seems conceivable to me that sonics could also be adversely affected by things like ringing, phase shifts, etc.
Regards,
-- Al
If the autoformer is set so as to step down the voltage that is applied to it to a significant degree, it would result in the impedance "looking forward" from the output of the transformer being significantly greater than the input impedance of the amplifier (or whatever component is being driven). But since what you are apparently trying to accomplish is a net overall increase in voltage, presumably the attenuator would often be set to not much lower than 1:1. For a 1:1 setting of the attenuator and a 4:1 transformer ratio the source component would see a load impedance of 1/16th of the input impedance of the amp. Which in many cases will result in a poor impedance match and consequently in degraded sonics, depending on the impedances of the specific components and on how those impedances vary as a function of frequency.
Also, while I’m not certain, it seems conceivable to me that sonics could also be adversely affected by things like ringing, phase shifts, etc.
Regards,
-- Al