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I will drill some small holes for cool air intake on the sides and on top.
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I will drill some small holes for cool air intake on the sides and on top.The fan will be drawing out air from the bottom. I won't change that. With the heat dispersed, it will not be issue as it is in one concentrated spot. I am more concerned with the questions I have in mind from the original post, please.Thanks,-Darin
On Tuesday, October 7, 2014 8:18:59 PM UTC-5, Dman777 wrote:
I have a 6 digit Nixie ZM5660 clock that I got from pvelectronics that is beautiful and super cool. Everything is perfect about it. However, since it is multiplexed there is one spot that has a very high concentration of heat. I want to place a fan underneath the clock to draw out this hot air, otherwise the life of the clock will not be as long as it will without the heat.I will be taking dremel and drilling a large area underneath the case and placing a fan against the case surface(outside of the case) to draw out the hot air. I will then wire the 12v fan to the power supply connectors. When done, I will be placing the clock case on two blocks so there will be about 3 inches of area between the bottom of the clock(with the fan) and the shelf it sits on. I addition, I will drill some small holes for cool air intake on the sides and on top.A few questions come to mind, please:1) The case is only 3/4 of inch deep. Should I go for a 2 inch fan or 1 inch fan? Typically, a 2 inch fan will draw more heat out. But since there will only be able 3/8" of space between the fan and circuit board, I am not sure which would be more effective in drawing heat out.2) The source of heat is in the center middle of the clock. If I place the middle of the fan directly underneath the heat concentration, will that heat just sit since it won't be above the blades but instead above the rotor? Should the fan be off center to the actual heat concentration?3) I would like a fan with a good ratio of not to loud but move enough heat out. Not sure which would be a good cfm.4) I don't understand why, the heat concentration is in the dead center of the clock, but the source of what I think is the source of the heat...the 7805 voltage regulator... is of to the side of the source of the heat concentration area.5) Do I need to worry about trace erosion from air flow and friction? On my old Xbox I had the fan running high in it and one of the traces eroded.Here are some of the fans(Would like to stick with ball bearing) I have been looking at. I am big fan of Sunon:1 inch:2 inch:
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If you really want to take away some heat, a huge mass
of metal does the best job, in my humble opinion.
My first question is “How hot is it?” If you can keep your finger on it, it is probably OK, but you should use a thermometer instead of just saying “hot”.
My prejudice is that the only likely sources of excessive heat are the 7805 and the cpu, but they are both too far away. The only components I see in the area are the two resistors; if one or both are the incorrect values (probably too low) they could be dissipating a lot of heat. Check the color codes against the schematic, or get out your handy dandy ohmmeter (if you don’t already have one, digital multimeters are cheap at Harbor Freight).
I don’t think it is the heat source, but you can replace the 7805 with a pin-compatible switching mode regulator, available for less than $10 from http://www.ebay.com/itm/3-Terminal-5V-1A-Switching-Voltage-Regulator-Power-Supply-/261243604047?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3cd3550c4f
And "trace erosion" ???? Really? I've never heard of it, much less of having it caused by airflow. Other things can degrade traces, poor processing, chemicals, acidity, but airflow? MAYBE compressed air over the course of decades... MAYBE.
And "trace erosion" ???? Really? I've never heard of it, much less of having it caused by airflow. Other things can degrade traces, poor processing, chemicals, acidity, but airflow? MAYBE compressed air over the course of decades... MAYBE.
And "trace erosion" ???? Really? I've never heard of it, much less of having it caused by airflow. Other things can degrade traces, poor processing, chemicals, acidity, but airflow? MAYBE compressed air over the course of decades... MAYBE.It was a known issue for a few(very small quantity) Xbox's...most of those modded and with high air current. I placed the motherboard on a scanner and magnified the scanned picture and saw the eroded trace with my own eyes.
"Electromigration (EM) remains a serious problem for the reliability of VLSI integrated circuits, and will become an even more serious issue as future IC's employ linewidths below 0.2 micron...."
My guess is the heat is coming from the 7805 - they tend to generate heat with even modest current draw. I believe a simple linear voltage regulator is around 40% efficient - the rest goes to heat. The circuit uses 2 74141 type IC's, they draw a lot of current. If it was a problem (too much heat) the regulator would shutdown.The power supply looks good, I'm guessing neither the FET or the inductor even get warm.
I have built lots of PV Electronics clocks 60+ and not had an issue with any of them
The brown gooey-looking stuff is probably flux residue from soldering
the component (which is on the other side). The component warms up the
flux residue and it turns from transparent or yellow-ish to brown. This
is nothing to be worried about, but if you want to get rid of it you can
clean it off with some isopropanol.
----- Original Message -----From: Tidak AdaSent: Saturday, October 11, 2014 5:48 PMSubject: RE: [neonixie-l] Re: Nixie Clock Cool Project- a few questionsWhat I see are very poor solderings!. Best would be to clean the print with IPA, as arne suggests. Then take a magnifier glass and inspect the solderings carefullyand resolder bad ones. Then again clean with IPA.eric
From: neoni...@googlegroups.com [mailto:neoni...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dman777
Sent: zaterdag 11 oktober 2014 3:38
To: neoni...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [neonixie-l] Re: Nixie Clock Cool Project- a few questions
I was studying the area where the heat is trying to figure out where the heat is coming from, since there are no real components near the heat concentration.Using my camera and zooming in, I see some strange markings on PCB board surface and some brown/burn spots also. Could this have anything to do with the heat concentration? What are these from? I attached a couple of pictures.Thanks,-Darin
...clip....
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The more active the flux the easier a solder connection can be made and the fewer rejects that occur. However, if not properly removed after soldering, active fluxes can lead to corrosion and electrical failures.
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After doing research, I see thatThe more active the flux the easier a solder connection can be made and the fewer rejects that occur. However, if not properly removed after soldering, active fluxes can lead to corrosion and electrical failures.What is the best way to remove the flux? If it's a chemical, do I just wipe down that one side of the pcb board that is flat and leave the other side alone?Thanks,-Darin
Even though, I've held a soldering iron, almost daily since, I was ~12-ish, and I'm 55 now, my rework leaves its mark. My mother worked as an assembler for some 30 years. And a rework assembler most of that time. If she had done the rework, you would never had known. Up until only a few months before her passing, she would still critique my soldering work.
----- Original Message -----From: Terry Kennedy
Sent: Sunday, October 12, 2014 5:12 PMSubject: Re: [neonixie-l] Re: Nixie Clock Cool Project- a few questions...clip...All rework leaves its mark. As long as it works well (both right away and after extended use), it's good. Extra points for not causing needless damage (lifting traces and then repairing), but normally this is all inside the case and out of sight. Here's my most recent work, removing and replacing 2 66-pin TSOPs on a Cisco switch. More info here for interested parties (and larger versions of the pictures).
On Saturday, October 11, 2014 12:56:37 PM UTC-4, threeneurons wrote:
... My mother worked as an assembler for some 30 years. And a rework assembler most of that time. If she had done the rework, you would never had known....All rework leaves its mark. As long as it works well (both right away and after extended use), it's good. Extra points for not causing needless damage...
Here's my most recent work, removing and replacing 2 66-pin TSOPs on a Cisco switch. More info here for interested parties (and larger versions of the pictures).
Nice job Terry. Did you cut off the pins of the old chips? I've found that the cleanest way to get them off and not damage the board if I'm not worried about destroying the chip I'm removing... either fine snippers or a Dremel...Of course, having a Metcal QX2 (or similar) with the correct head would be quicker and neater, but that option costs about USD 5,000 !
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No magnification? You nuts.
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Now for my two cents. I have not looked at the schematic due to time issues, but I know I ran into issues driving a standard mosfet with a logic level gate signal. It got hotter than blue blazes! If the gate signal only goes to 5 volts, you must use a mosfet that will turn on fully at this level otherwise, it acts like a power resister.