One of the first concepts engineers encounter when designing transformers is turns ratio.
Turns ratio determines how voltages and currents are transformed between the primary and secondary windings.
Whether designing a flyback transformer, forward converter transformer, or line-frequency transformer, understanding turns ratio is essential.
This guide explains what transformer turns ratio is, how it affects voltage conversion, and the practical considerations engineers use when selecting winding ratios.

What Is Turns Ratio?
A transformer contains two or more windings wrapped around a common magnetic core.
The ratio between the number of turns on each winding is called the turns ratio.
For example:
- Primary winding = 100 turns
- Secondary winding = 10 turns
The turns ratio is:
10:1
This means the secondary voltage will be approximately one tenth of the primary voltage.
Voltage Transformation
The basic transformer relationship is:
\frac{V_s}{V_p}=\frac{N_s}{N_p}
Where:
- Vs = Secondary Voltage
- Vp = Primary Voltage
- Ns = Secondary Turns
- Np = Primary Turns
This equation is one of the most fundamental relationships in transformer design.
Step-Up Transformers
When:
- Secondary turns > Primary turns
The transformer increases voltage.
These are called:
Step-Up Transformers
Examples include:
- High-voltage power supplies
- Ignition systems
- Specialized industrial equipment
Step-Down Transformers
When:
- Secondary turns < Primary turns
The transformer reduces voltage.
These are called:
Step-Down Transformers
Examples include:
- AC adapters
- DC power supplies
- Industrial control systems
Current Transformation
Transformers also affect current.
Current changes inversely with turns ratio.
\frac{I_s}{I_p}=\frac{N_p}{N_s}
As voltage decreases:
- Current capability increases
As voltage increases:
- Current capability decreases
This allows transformers to transfer power efficiently between circuits.
Power Relationship
In an ideal transformer:
P_{in}=P_{out}
Ignoring losses:
- Power in equals power out
Real transformers experience:
- Copper losses
- Core losses
- Leakage inductance losses
which reduce efficiency.
Turns Ratio in Flyback Transformers
Flyback transformers use turns ratio differently than conventional transformers.
๐ Related Guide: Flyback Transformer Design Basics
In flyback converters:
- Energy is first stored.
- Energy is then released.
Because of this, duty cycle also influences output voltage.
Turns ratio remains critical but is only one part of the design equation.
Isolation Benefits
Transformer turns ratio works together with galvanic isolation.
Benefits include:
- Safety
- Noise reduction
- Ground separation
- Regulatory compliance
Isolation is one reason transformers remain essential in power electronics.
Core Selection Matters
Changing turns ratio affects:
- Core flux density
- Saturation margin
- Copper losses
Engineers must ensure the chosen ratio does not push the core toward saturation.
๐ Related Guide: Understanding Magnetic Saturation
Too Many Turns vs Too Few Turns
Both extremes create problems.
Too many turns:
- Higher copper losses
- Larger winding resistance
- Increased size
Too few turns:
- Higher flux density
- Saturation risk
- Reduced reliability
Good transformer design balances these competing factors.
Temperature Effects
Turns ratio indirectly affects thermal performance.
Higher winding resistance increases:
- Copper losses
- Temperature rise
๐ Related Guide: Inductor Temperature Rise Explained
Thermal analysis should always accompany magnetic design.
Practical Design Considerations
When selecting turns ratio, engineers evaluate:
- Input voltage range
- Output voltage
- Output current
- Core geometry
- Isolation requirements
- Switching frequency
- Efficiency goals
No single parameter should be considered independently.
Modern Design Software
Modern magnetic design tools can automate:
- Turns calculations
- Core selection
- Saturation analysis
- Thermal evaluation
- Manufacturability checks
This helps reduce development time while improving design quality.
Conclusion
Turns ratio is one of the most important concepts in transformer design.
It determines how voltage and current are transformed between windings while influencing efficiency, thermal performance, and saturation margin.
Understanding turns ratio provides a foundation for more advanced transformer and magnetic design topics.
Looking Ahead
Future SolidMagnetics platform releases are planned to include transformer design capabilities alongside automated inductor design tools.
These future tools will help engineers optimize turns ratio, core geometry, thermal performance, and manufacturability while automatically generating CAD models and engineering documentation.
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