BeanAnimal
Premium Member
Man your just keep going.... HAHN I WAS CORRECTING YOUR COMMENTS.
Once again you stated EXTRUDED in several different contexts. Extruded and COLD ROLLED are 2 very differnet process. Niether matter to the thread or the argument, other than the fact that once again you spouted off as an expert in something in an attempt to show I was wrong, and just didn't get it right.
If you only point was that glued up aluminum may be easier than cast, you could have said that. You DIDNT... it took you 5 posts and half a science book.
Hahn you keep getting stuck in useless details and dragging this thread through the mud. You know enough about heatsinks to be dangerous and that it. I am getting tired of showing you why and where you are wrong. You just keep going in circles like a broken record.
BUT ONCE AGAIN: A heatsinks ability to remove heat is not a sole function of the fin thickness. It is a function of the overall design and the way it handles airflow and distributes the heat from it's source.
Why are you stuck in irrelavant points. Pleae go back and read your first post and get it through your head that this conversation is a result of those comments.
Assuming too much? Sorry again dude, given the same base, thicker thins will conduct more heat than the same number of thinner fins. It is a simple matter of MASS. Like I said, your in over your head again. Please stop trying to explain things that you don't fully understand.
Of course we could use a small fan. We could use solid gold and a ducted turbine too. Your all over the place... and again this is all about your original comments CANT YOU SEE THAT YET?
I have not spun anything. I am just replying to your initial comments and the ever growing list of technology and terms you are bring into your responses that really have nothing to do with the original post or comments.
Shall I repeat what you said?
I then replied:
Please re-read those 2 posts until you understand. Then tell me why we are talking about grains, and boundries?
Once again you stated EXTRUDED in several different contexts. Extruded and COLD ROLLED are 2 very differnet process. Niether matter to the thread or the argument, other than the fact that once again you spouted off as an expert in something in an attempt to show I was wrong, and just didn't get it right.
If you only point was that glued up aluminum may be easier than cast, you could have said that. You DIDNT... it took you 5 posts and half a science book.
Hahn you keep getting stuck in useless details and dragging this thread through the mud. You know enough about heatsinks to be dangerous and that it. I am getting tired of showing you why and where you are wrong. You just keep going in circles like a broken record.
BUT ONCE AGAIN: A heatsinks ability to remove heat is not a sole function of the fin thickness. It is a function of the overall design and the way it handles airflow and distributes the heat from it's source.
Why are you stuck in irrelavant points. Pleae go back and read your first post and get it through your head that this conversation is a result of those comments.
Assuming too much? Sorry again dude, given the same base, thicker thins will conduct more heat than the same number of thinner fins. It is a simple matter of MASS. Like I said, your in over your head again. Please stop trying to explain things that you don't fully understand.
Of course we could use a small fan. We could use solid gold and a ducted turbine too. Your all over the place... and again this is all about your original comments CANT YOU SEE THAT YET?
I have not spun anything. I am just replying to your initial comments and the ever growing list of technology and terms you are bring into your responses that really have nothing to do with the original post or comments.
Shall I repeat what you said?
heatsinks are best if they are extruded from copper or aluminum.... casts or mixed materials usually have poor heat transfer.
I then replied:
Well lets look into this.
1) Alloys are used for heatsinks on a regular basis. What in the world do you think aluminum is? It is an alloy in the form we use it, not a pure element. It contains a fair amount of Iron, Silicon and Copper (among many other lesser quantits of metals).
2) Cast heatsinks are very common. VERY COMMON. Cost is a major factor. Needles to say, the thermal capacity between a cast and extruded part is dictated by much more than the base material or process.
3) We are certainly not out to engineer a heatsink to eeek every watt out of our pumps. The idea is for a general design that will remove some heat and help the pump run a bit cooler.
4) MOST COPPER heatsinks are either CAST or BONDED.
So in a nutshell, your statements are not really valid. There may be some truth to the statements (other than the comment about extruded copper), but they just has no bearing here. It is like saying "gold is a better conductor than copper, so you should not use copper for wire, you should look into Gold" The statement has some truth but is useless in most cases... I hope you see the point here.
Please re-read those 2 posts until you understand. Then tell me why we are talking about grains, and boundries?