i was thinking of using this http://www.conradheatsinks.com/products/double_f.html the MF30-2F-151.5 for en stereo amp in the future.. but wich aleph can it be used for...
it should be a stereo amp
is there any other places where i can buy heatsinks online with a visa card???
it should be a stereo amp
is there any other places where i can buy heatsinks online with a visa card???
Hi,
the heatsink will have around 0,3°K/W at 30°K temperature rise. So if you want your heatsink to be 50-55°C you can dissipate 30°/0,3 = 100watts.
This will be a very small Aleph stereo amp for example an Aleph 3/30 with 1A bias wich is really not enough or a mini-A. You will need at least two of those heatsinks for a stereo amp!
William
the heatsink will have around 0,3°K/W at 30°K temperature rise. So if you want your heatsink to be 50-55°C you can dissipate 30°/0,3 = 100watts.
This will be a very small Aleph stereo amp for example an Aleph 3/30 with 1A bias wich is really not enough or a mini-A. You will need at least two of those heatsinks for a stereo amp!
William
Hi Wuffer,
You need to apply a correction factor of 1.4 to the Conrad rating to compensate for the right operating range.
.30 * 1.4 = .42 C/W
These heatsinks make are great for about 60 watts, mono A60 or stereo A30.
Unless you really need the flanges, the flatback models have a thicker base and better C/W rating. Personally I'm using the model MF35-151.5 at .21C/W (corrected to .29 C/W), for a stereo A30.
BTW, the Conrad build quality is beautiful. They are also black powder coated and will turn purple over time.
Good luck,
-David
You need to apply a correction factor of 1.4 to the Conrad rating to compensate for the right operating range.
.30 * 1.4 = .42 C/W
These heatsinks make are great for about 60 watts, mono A60 or stereo A30.
Unless you really need the flanges, the flatback models have a thicker base and better C/W rating. Personally I'm using the model MF35-151.5 at .21C/W (corrected to .29 C/W), for a stereo A30.
BTW, the Conrad build quality is beautiful. They are also black powder coated and will turn purple over time.
Good luck,
-David
Hi David,
sorry to disagree but a stereo Aleph 30 doesn´t dissipate 60 watts and a mono Aleph60 doesn´t dissipate 60 watts either. (A30 100watts/channel, A60 155watts/channel)
I already added a bit to the Conrad specs (at 80°C temp rise) so if1.4 is the right faktor it will be 0,35°K/W
William
sorry to disagree but a stereo Aleph 30 doesn´t dissipate 60 watts and a mono Aleph60 doesn´t dissipate 60 watts either. (A30 100watts/channel, A60 155watts/channel)
I already added a bit to the Conrad specs (at 80°C temp rise) so if1.4 is the right faktor it will be 0,35°K/W
William
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Joined 2002
wuffwaff said:Hi,
the heatsink will have around 0,3°K/W at 30°K temperature rise. So if you want your heatsink to be 50-55°C you can dissipate 30°/0,3 = 100watts.
This will be a very small Aleph stereo amp for example an Aleph 3/30 with 1A bias wich is really not enough or a mini-A. You will need at least two of those heatsinks for a stereo amp!
William
I agree on this for a mini a'' You might need a fan to cool these sinks if you do a stereo aleph 30. The mini a's are not a cold running amp..
I agree with wuffwaff and jleaman. I should have mentioned that I'm using 2 of Conrad's larger mf35-151.5 heatsinks for my stereo Aleph30, with good open ventilation. One heatsink per channel.
I could be a bit optimistic and may need to back off on the bias or add a fan.
I also left out the word NOT. They will NOT turn purple over time since they are not anodized, but powder coated.
-David
I could be a bit optimistic and may need to back off on the bias or add a fan.
I also left out the word NOT. They will NOT turn purple over time since they are not anodized, but powder coated.
-David
Banned
Joined 2002
dw8083 said:I agree with wuffwaff and jleaman. I should have mentioned that I'm using 2 of Conrad's larger mf35-151.5 heatsinks for my stereo Aleph30, with good open ventilation. One heatsink per channel.
I could be a bit optimistic and may need to back off on the bias or add a fan.
-David
This is funy.. I have yet to find the resistor that i have to change to bring up the bias on the aleph Mini -A id like to push them a little Brian said o could leave the reistor out and it would be full bias.
My plann is to have a switch to have full open bias and then to have it not full bias.
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Joined 2002
wuffwaff said:jleaman,
try changing the resistor that is connected between the base of the small transistor in the current source and the plus side of the 220uF bootstrap cap. Leaving it out gives max bias, if this is not enough try lowering the source resistors.
William
The only reason i ask is so i dont kill thes amps
what resistor R13 ?
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Wuffer, you might want to ask Magura for heatsinks, since you have a danish passportis there any other places where i can buy heatsinks online with a visa card???
Those sinks are just incredible Have a look. It takes a bit of hard work to finish a chassis from those, though
Steen
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Wuffer, you might want to ask Magura for heatsinks, since you have a danish passport
Those sinks are just incredible Have a look. It takes a bit of hard work to finish a chassis from those, though
Steen
just had him on the phone for and hour yesterday
but im not sure yet what to do.. i read a lot in here
Yes, he is a very nice guy, you can easily spend a hour on the phone with him Four of those heatsinks would easily accommodate an Aleph 5. But it is not an easy build If it were to be a bit more easy, chassis wise, I would order two of the biggest Conrad sinks with flat backjust had him on the phone for and hour yesterday
Steen
steenoe said:What amp are you planning on?
Here is a pic of my two finished monoblock chassis. They are almost too heavy, to carry
Steen
they look very nice.. and big
im not sure yet.. but i don wanna hurry into a project...
I can recommend the ZenV4, it just sounds great Have a look at this thread.
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=6008&highlight= That would be easy enough
Steen
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=6008&highlight= That would be easy enough
Steen
steenoe said:I can recommend the ZenV4, it just sounds great Have a look at this thread.
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=6008&highlight= That would be easy enough
Steen
thabks.. i will look at the ZenV4
This guy is using the same heatsinks for his Aleph 5. One per channel wich works but isn't ideal.
http://www.users.on.net/~mefinnis/passlabs/aleph5_construction.htm
I'm going to build two monoblocks with these heatsinks, then there should be room for upping the bias. I've already recieved the heatsinks, and they are very nice indeed. Cheap too.
http://www.users.on.net/~mefinnis/passlabs/aleph5_construction.htm
I'm going to build two monoblocks with these heatsinks, then there should be room for upping the bias. I've already recieved the heatsinks, and they are very nice indeed. Cheap too.
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