There is no ideal power transformer with perfect magnetic
coupling and no leakage flux. So the impedance will be always
higher than winding resistance. No one would want to add more resistance to what
is already there in order to keep the impedance of the secondary winding and the
power supply as low as possible. Impedance is the current limiting characteristic of a transformer. If the amp
needs a lot of current to drive a speaker load it will be audible if the impedance is high.
A fuse on the other hand has to be a resistive load if the
current in the power supply rises in order to operate as a fuse in case of
failure . That will be audible if the amp has to drive demanding speakers at
high volumes or dynamic peaks. This shouldn’t affect class A amps but definitely
class A/B designs.
So how would different material of the fuse wire which has
to be a resistive load by design (gets hot and burns up if it reaches its
breaking point) influence the SQ?
A piece of wire that would not increase the impedance of the
transformer would be the only logical solution in order to avoid these current limiting
effects. But then it’s no longer a fuse.
How does this all fit together with those expensive fuses? Any explanation?