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Re: [Amps] attaching a heat spreader to a heat sink

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] attaching a heat spreader to a heat sink
From: Steve Thompson <g8gsq@eltac.co.uk>
Date: Thu, 24 May 2007 10:48:33 +0100
List-post: <mailto:amps@contesting.com>

kg7hf@comcast.net wrote:

> I would think that might be overkill, because when you bolt the spreader to 
> the heat sink, the two pieces are going to conform to each other, in fact, 
> they are going to expand and contract as the heat is applied and dissipated 
> anyway.  
I like the idea of trying as planer - although I shudder to think what 
my wife would do to me if I sent metal through her big thicknesser :-)

Given the thickness of metal, I doubt there will be much movement in the 
surfaces conforming. The issue is metal to metal contact at a much 
smaller scale - undulations and high spots in the scale of 1" and 
smaller, and also at a microscopic level.

The glass plate work shows how far from flat an extruded heatsink 
surface is. If you take something that really is flat then centre punch 
a hole, drill, tap and deburr it, go back to the glass plate and see 
what a mound surrounds the new hole. Your heat spreader or transistor is 
sitting on a small raised area and you've lost most of the thermal 
contact area.

Air is a very poor heat conductor, and thermal grease is only marginally 
better. Neither is a substitute for close fitting metal-metal contact.

Steve
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