the overheating amp saga.
Hi again all,
Question: Am I correct in thinking a heat sink does just that? if so, that means some components get hot and need some way of dissipating the heat, which is through a large surface area of metal or some other medium. so, this amp of mine which overheats, and has three steel octagonal shafts standing up from the motherboard, needs some sort of additional cooling system. As I said before, the three shafts have threaded inlets on the top, which indicates to me that something should be screwed into them,( this amp was sold to me as not working, but brand new) so I intend to affix some aluminium strips laterally to them and tilt them towards the vent aperture. question is: is aluminium the best metal, or should I use some copper pipe, opened up and flattened, then convoluted to gain more area? My last resort will be to fit a fan to cool the amp, but that has proven a problem as there is only vents at one end of the chassis, and may mean I have to drill a 60mm hole in the other end. I must just say, in case you have not seen the other postings about this amp, that it works perfectly out of the cabinet,( for hours and hours) but put the chassis back into the cabinet, and after 10 minutes or less it either cuts out or goes haywire, lights flashing,making very loud noises like drum beats (75 watts, so very loud).