Cheers,
- Ian
On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 10:52 AM, Toby Thain <toby at telegraphics.com.au>
wrote:
On 2015-10-26 1:23 PM, Ian Finder wrote:
This thread took a turn for the absurd. Oil?
Water? What a practical
bunch of people. /s
They make resistors with adequate cooling... Almost as if they're
rated for a certain number of watts of dissipation and you can buy
them based on that. They are resistors after all.
And if they overheat-- oh wait, they're heavy duty resistors, not
ICs. Get a couple, put them in a metal project box, put it inline
with the cable, and call it a day.
Damn, I already ordered a pile of HVAC gear.
j/k - yeah that was what I was basically planning, Ian ... just as a noob,
I'm not totally confident with what a single air cooled part can dissipate.
(The thread was kind of interesting anyway!)
--Toby
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 26, 2015, at 09:24, simon <simski at dds.nl> wrote:
please skip this ridicule and grab yourself a couple of headlights from
a car.
On 26-10-15 17:16, Dale H. Cook wrote:
> My recommendation of oil is based upon my decades of experience with
> broadband dummy loads from 60 watts to 2.5 kilowatts. The dummy loads that
> I have worked with for medium wave and below and from 5 kilowatts down have
> all been convection air cooled. Broadband dummy loads that I have used for
> higher powers (up to 25 kilowatts) have been forced air cooled.
>
> I prefer to stick with what I have experience with. As for water, YMMV.
>
> Dale H. Cook, Radio Contract Engineer, Roanoke/Lynchburg, VA
>
http://plymouthcolony.net/starcityeng/index.html
>
--
Met vriendelijke Groet,
Simon Claessen
drukknop.nl