To: | "amps@contesting.com" <amps@contesting.com> |
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Subject: | [Amps] Quiet Cooling |
From: | Will Matney <craxd1@ezwv.com> |
Date: | Mon, 06 Sep 2004 19:24:26 -0400 |
List-post: | <mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
Hal, and others, There may be a way of using baffles with an internal enclosed fan. Speaker cabinet construction uses some features where acoustic engineers design a majority of them in industry. That would be a good person to speak with if we could stir one up. Suppose a high output muffin fan were placed in an acoustic deadened enclosure using available sound deadening materials. There's some foam sheet available really cheap for this at Parts Express (http://www.partsexpress.com/). Another thought would be to make the amp chassis like large speaker and guitar amps and or speaker enclosures using the leather look vinyl, etc. I have to say, I have always wanted one built this way as they really look good compared to plain painted aluminum, or steel chassis. This way, any ugly enclosure could be made exceptionally good looking with exceptional sound deadening. A 1/4" plywood carcus with the black vinyl cover, black or chrome corner guards, black anodized face plate, white silk screening, would be the berries. A standard bright aluminum skinned chassis underneath for shielding would be all thats needed. Scuffs, etc on the aluminum or steel wouldn't matter. An example would be the Cobra 2000 11 meter transceiver. They had a plywood cover with a woodgrain veneer, which looked sharp, over a plated steel chassis. Even an amp with a good varnished plywood cover would make the aesthetics very good and deaden sound. If the air was routed around correctly, and the fan placed correctly, I think it would be a good bit what were wanting. Mounting the blower remotely has always been a good option to get rid of noise and is easy to do using clothes dryer or vacuum cleaner hose. This hose is pretty cheap and available from McMaster Carr and other vendors. On large amps, the exhaust can be routed out of the building via dryer hose and a dryer vent. I've done this myself on amp projects, one using a 4CX5000 back in 1988. Another insulation material that could be mounted around a fan, away from major heat would be foam board used in home insulation. This stuff is really cheap in 4" X 8" sheets. This would effectively deaden noise radiating from the fan itself. If the output air hit some baffling before coming out of the chassis, it too should die down to an acceptable level I would think. Anymore, you cant hardly here automobile engines run because of insulation under the hood and on the firewall. Open the hood, and you can then hear it. A good method of cooling in an amp would be blower cool the tubes, then use a fan to blow across the transformer, the power supply, then the tank circuit on its way out. One amp in particular, though illegal, did have a very good cooling scheme like this. The Kenrich Eagle 515 used a back mounted muffin fan blowing first over the control circuitry, then the transformer, through the driver stage, the the final stage, and out the side of the chassis. The air was routed by baffles made of aluminum sheet. It went through the chassis in the shape of a U. When running, it could barely be heard but you could easily feel the output from the fan at the vent hole in the side. If anyone here could take a look at a picture of one of these, you'll see what I'm speaking of. If interested, I could do a drawing of how this was and save it as a jpeg. The manufacturer was a Ham and was doing this back in the 70's until the very early 80's. This was a well thought out design and probably the best I've ever seen for these amps. The methods your mentioning in organs could certainly be used on a remote blower which could feed several pieces of equipment. Will Matney Sirs, The thread about quiet cooling of amplifiers made me think back to my college days when among studies of alcoholic consumption, music appreciation and techniques for attracting YL's I studied pipe organ construction and repair. The musicians do not want to hear the air blower mechanism when they're keyboarding and neither does any audience or congregation. What pipe organ builders do is to isolate the blower in another room and use a "wind-column" to supply the wind chests under the pipes with pressurized air. Could not this technique be applied to amplifiers? Remove the noisy blower from the shack and connect flexible hose to a clamped fitting on any equipment needing cooling. A much beefier fan could be employed than would fashionably fit on a rear apron, and a manifold system could be arranged so that more than one piece of gear could benefit Hal W4HBM
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