Rotary transformer

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The fixed portion of a 6 channel rotary transformer used in a six-head  VCR. Two additional shorted turns improve the isolation of the two outermost windings from each other and from the other, innermost windings.
The fixed portion of a 6 channel rotary transformer used in a six-head VCR. Two additional shorted turns improve the isolation of the two outermost windings from each other and from the other, innermost windings.
The rotating portion of the rotary transformer showing three of the six tape heads
The rotating portion of the rotary transformer showing three of the six tape heads

A rotary transformer is a specialized transformer used to couple electrical signals between two parts which rotate in relation to each other.

Slip rings could be used for the same purpose, but these would be subject to friction, wear, intermittent contact, and limitations on the rotational speed that can be accommodated without damage. By comparison, a rotary transformer has none of these limitations.

Rotary transformers are constructed by winding the primary and secondary windings into separate halves of a cup core; these concentric halves face each other, with each half mounted to one of the rotating parts. Magnetic flux provides the coupling from one half of the cup core to the other, providing the mutual inductance that couples energy from the transformer's primary to its secondary.

[edit] Uses

The most common use of a rotary transformer is within videocassette recorders. Signals must be coupled from the electronics of the VCR to the fast-moving tape heads carried on the rotating head drum; a rotary transformer is ideal for this purpose. Most VCR designs require coupling more than one signal to the head drum. In this case, the cup core has more than one concentric winding isolated by individual raised portions of the core; the transformer used with the head drum shown to the right couples six individual channels.

Another use is to transmit the signals from rotary torque sensors installed on electric motors, to allow electronic control of motor speed and torque using feedback.