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#1
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I have been wondering which way the fans on my TS-930 should be
blowing. Should they take the ambient air from outside and blow it on the heatsink, or should they be evacuating the inside air in the vicinity of the heatsink and blowing it out? I have been restoring the unit and both fans required replacement. I've surfed a number of sites on the subject but can never get a definitive answer. Thanks in advance for any assistance... de Irv, VE6BP |
#2
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![]() Quote:
We tried push pull on a set of car stereo amplifiers in a box and found that if the fans drew the air away from the box, the amplifiers ran cooler than if we tried to push air into the box and then draw air back out of the box. You need almost twice as much fan drawing the hot air out as what you use to push it in. I would make sure that I used your radio in an open air space and not inside of a box or cabinet. Too many people tries to hide their ham radios, out of sight, out of mind, out of the old lady's sight and they don't think about what it does to the transceiver - since it both transmits and receives. They confuse it with a plain old radio that just receives. A radio that just receives shouldn't get very hot. Then they wonder why it gets so hot when they transmit and do not have airflow around the radio. Dumb!
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No Kings, no queens, no jacks, no long talking washer women... |
#3
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On 6/12/2015 8:27 AM, Channel Jumper wrote:
Irv Finkleman VE6BP;840688 Wrote: I have been wondering which way the fans on my TS-930 should be blowing. Should they take the ambient air from outside and blow it on the heat sink, or should they be evacuating the inside air in the vicinity of the heat sink and blowing it out? I have been restoring the unit and both fans required replacement. I've surfed a number of sites on the subject but can never get a definitive answer. Thanks in advance for any assistance... de Irv, VE6BP If the fans are forcing the air in, it is forcing the hot air deeper inside of the heat sink, making it hotter, not colder - unless the air outside of the radio is colder than the air inside of the heat sink. Not necessarily. For instance, many tube type rigs blow air directly on the finals to keep them cool, with vents over the finals to let the hot air out. Much more efficient than trying to draw air through the case. We tried push pull on a set of car stereo amplifiers in a box and found that if the fans drew the air away from the box, the amplifiers ran cooler than if we tried to push air into the box and then draw air back out of the box. You need almost twice as much fan drawing the hot air out as what you use to push it in. It depends on where the heat is generated and how the fan is designed to handle the heat. Both methods are used. I would make sure that I used your radio in an open air space and not inside of a box or cabinet. Too many people tries to hide their ham radios, out of sight, out of mind, out of the old lady's sight and they don't think about what it does to the transceiver - since it both transmits and receives. They confuse it with a plain old radio that just receives. A radio that just receives shouldn't get very hot. Then they wonder why it gets so hot when they transmit and do not have airflow around the radio. Dumb! I would find someone with the same radio and ask them which way the air is blowing. But then this once again shows you have no inkling about ham radios. Go back to your CB pals. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry Stuckle ================== |
#4
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Channel Jumper wrote:
Irv Finkleman VE6BP;840688 Wrote: I have been wondering which way the fans on my TS-930 should be blowing. Should they take the ambient air from outside and blow it on the heat sink, or should they be evacuating the inside air in the vicinity of the heat sink and blowing it out? I have been restoring the unit and both fans required replacement. I've surfed a number of sites on the subject but can never get a definitive answer. Thanks in advance for any assistance... de Irv, VE6BP If the fans are forcing the air in, it is forcing the hot air deeper inside of the heat sink, making it hotter, not colder - unless the air outside of the radio is colder than the air inside of the heat sink. Which it obviously will be and your wording implies that the heat sinks are closed to air flow. In a good design, heat sinks are put on the hottest part of the equipment and the thing that needs cooling the most. The best way to do that is to blow outside air into the heat sink. If the design was done properly, there will be an air path out of the heat sink back to the outside. We tried push pull on a set of car stereo amplifiers in a box and found that if the fans drew the air away from the box, the amplifiers ran cooler than if we tried to push air into the box and then draw air back out of the box. That result will depend on where you put the fans and the air flow in the box. If the box was not originally designed for forced air cooling, your results with add on fans will be entireyly random. You need almost twice as much fan drawing the hot air out as what you use to push it in. Again, that would entirely depend on the equipment design. I would make sure that I used your radio in an open air space and not inside of a box or cabinet. Lots of equipment routinely operates inside of a box or cabinet. If the enclosed equipment generates much heat, then the cabinet needs its own set of fans to ensure enough cool outside air for the enclosed equipment. Obligatory war story: Years ago we were building racked equipment and the controversy arose as to whether it was better to blow air into the rack from the top or the bottom. The bottom blower group maintained that since heat rises, you would get better airflow from blowing in from the bottom. A quick calculation showed that the fans overpowered the convection flow by many orders of magnitude, so it should be irrelevant. So an empirical test was done with two cabinets side by side. The long term result was ths bottom blower cabinet got hotter because the fans at the bottom picked up more dust and crap from the environment clogging things up while the top blowers remained much cleaner. -- Jim Pennino |
#5
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#6
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#7
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Thanks Ian,
There were existing fans and holes in the rear panel, and I was just curious before replacing the fans. Both had become noisy and I removed them without checking air flow direction. The new fans blow air in and onto the heatsink, and there is a good outflow for the heated air. I've run the unit into a dummy load for some time and everything is working well now. My only regret is that the original fans are no longer available and consequently the restoration of the unit is not 'perfect', but the TS-930S is a lovely unit and is now running well again. Thanks also to all those who replied to my queries. Irv VE6BP |
#8
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In message , Irv Finkleman VE6BP
writes Thanks Ian, There were existing fans and holes in the rear panel, and I was just curious before replacing the fans. Both had become noisy and I removed them without checking air flow direction. Ah.... I was thinking more of a 19" rack horizontal fan tray (holding maybe a couple of 6" diameter fans - which can sound like a hovercraft on full power!). -- Ian |
#9
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![]() "Irv Finkleman VE6BP" wrote in message ... I have been wondering which way the fans on my TS-930 should be blowing. Should they take the ambient air from outside and blow it on the heatsink, or should they be evacuating the inside air in the vicinity of the heatsink and blowing it out? I have been restoring the unit and both fans required replacement. I've surfed a number of sites on the subject but can never get a definitive answer. Thanks in advance for any assistance... de Irv, VE6BP Hi My opinion is quite simple: Pulling air out of an enclosure will ,at the limit, create a vacum inside In such case radiators are totaly useless only ,by inertia,delaying complete failure. Pushing air in allows filtering it from dust and is clearly the way to go. |
#10
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![]() bilou wrote: "Irv Finkleman VE6BP" wrote in message ... I have been wondering which way the fans on my TS-930 should be blowing. Should they take the ambient air from outside and blow it on the heatsink, or should they be evacuating the inside air in the vicinity of the heatsink and blowing it out? I have been restoring the unit and both fans required replacement. I've surfed a number of sites on the subject but can never get a definitive answer. Thanks in advance for any assistance... de Irv, VE6BP Hi My opinion is quite simple: Pulling air out of an enclosure will ,at the limit, create a vacum inside In such case radiators are totaly useless only ,by inertia,delaying complete failure. Pushing air in allows filtering it from dust and is clearly the way to go. As a retired broadcast and CATV engineer, I find all of this amusing. The worst install that I've run into was at a TV station. Six or seven full sized racks for the control room for the video gear, and three 1" Sony VTRs. They were framed into a closet, with sliding doors on the outside, in the hallway. They had a separate 15 ton A/C for that closet, yet equipment had a high failure rate. The HVAC contractor had installed the supply and return vents in the ceiling. They had been screwing around for several years, and losing about $500 a month in failed capacitors. I took one look, felt around in the racks and told them that the supply line should come in at the floor. Since they racks were sitting on a poured concrete floor, there was no way to feed the air into the bottom of the racks. They called me a fool, and told me that engineers from the equipment OEM had been to the site. I got them mad enough to prove me wrong by removing the ceiling vents and using a piece of flex duct on each, that dropped to the floor. In under five minutes, there were no hot spots in any of the racks, and after a month, the capacitor failure rate dropped to an acceptable level. BTW, one of the racks had a 5 kW linear 5V power supply in the bottom. Even that ran cool. Another site used open racks for microwave equipment at a CATV headend. They had a large A/C mounted through the wall. MOving one rack just four inches to the side eliminated the problems. it was deflecting the air flow away from the other equipment racks, and the return air was being pulled behind it, back to the A/C. You are never going to create a vacuum with the fans used to cool relay racks, they just aren't designed to be that tight. Instead, they are designed to run quietly, and for a long operating life. Decent vacuum motors are two or more stages, and the individual fans are in enclosed areas. AMETEK/Lamb made most of the vacuum cleaner motors in the US at one time. They were reliable, and easy to repair. Their website has some good information about blower/vacuum motors. I repaired some of the motors for a local steel mill, where they were used for air quality sampling. I also rebuilt a few truckloads of them for a guy who rebuilt and sold used vacuum cleaners. He would give me a truckload of motors that he considered scrap. I would repair them, and sell them back to him. He always wanted to see my armature lathe. He freaked out when I showed him how to clean and true an armature with a variable voltage DC power supply, and a hard gray in eraser. ;-) |
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