The cut out sw is nearest the hottest part of the h/s so cuts out before the
fan drive has really got going, it still has to cool down the bulk of the
heatsink, all the while the underside is still going up. I can see a diode
going in "under" the LM35 to raise the 0V output for 0 deg C to a voltage
that will at least turn on the pass transistor to the fan, at room
temperature, and then increase it with use. As it is the heatsink gets too
hot to keep fingers on (50 deg C?) before the fan gets any voltage at all ,
surprisingly 24V but 3V will start to turn it.
Ask the owner, chances are they will want it on all the time. I used a
Crown Microtech 1000 for a bass head for many years and it's still part
of my rig along with a BBE 383 preamp. The fan was loud and ran full
speed but the din of the audience nulled any noise it made between songs/
sets and of course when we played all you could hear during silent
periods were your ears ringing.
The other great advantage with always-on is that the user knows the fan is
in working order right from the off.
I remember my sarcastic drummer calling the Crown a microwave oven :)
because of the fan noise. It never bothered me. Also used a BGW prior to
the purchase of the crown. Larger in size but only 700 into 8ohms. It
also had a loud fan but still hefty enough to have reserve on those low
5th string bass notes without distortion. That's the main reason I
snagged the Crown. And I got many compliments from my band mates on the
sound.
so if Vbe rises a ......