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| I just purchased two plastic cases to mount on top of T0-3 packages. The vendor claimed it to be heat sinks... I have never seen a plastic heat sink... Has anyone ever used a plastic heat sink??? Thank you.
__________________ Bharath Bhushan Lohray. M.Sc. Electronics. | |
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| how u purchased that if u know that heat sink cannot be made with plastic ?
__________________ Gods own Country Incredible !ndia www.flickr.com/photos/_akg/ "Give a man a fish, and he will eat for a day. Teach that man to fish, and he will eat for a lifetime." | |
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Vendors in India usually are bufoons who have the faintest idea of what they are selling... Just know that it is used for this... Cost me this and I should sell it for that and make this much of profit. About the heat sink... If it is not a heat sink, it ought to be something else... It surely has some utility.... I would like to know what is this object... Description : Black plastic case that covers a TO-3 package on it's upper surface...The surface that has no pins.
__________________ Bharath Bhushan Lohray. M.Sc. Electronics. | ||
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| Who knows...maybe it is a heatsink. Stick one in an oven not used for food and see if it melts at 100C. Or maybe you could just try and see if it works as a heatsink. Ive heard of non-metals like mylar being used to act as an electrically-insulating thermally-conductive interface between two surfaces. Probably won't work as well as metal though...its worth a shot. Does it have fins and stuff like that on it? Or is just a flat surface that attaches to a TO-3? Last edited by dknguyen; 8th May 2006 at 08:06 AM. | |
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| Just a flat surface... And I do not think it makes any good contact with the steel surface of the transistor as well... I used heat sink compound on it. But it was already tried using a wire to a CPU heat sink (I did not have a proper TO-3 heat sink). So it didn't show any much effect.
__________________ Bharath Bhushan Lohray. M.Sc. Electronics. | |
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| try a little experiment - put one end in contact with a heat source (low wattage light bulb, for example) and then see how long the other end takes to heat up. If it's reasonably quick, it may be heat a decent heat sink material. Instinct tells me that it isn't even close - plastic generally has some heat insulating properties. | |
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| I am beginning to think that it is to prevent people who accidentally touch hot TO-3 packages from burning their hands. Or electrical insulation. But what about case to plastic and plastic to air thermal resistance?
__________________ Bharath Bhushan Lohray. M.Sc. Electronics. | |
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| They are just covers for the transistor, it's to prevent accident shorting from the collector - you don't see them very often these days. So NOT heatsinks, as you can tell by looking at them. | |
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