- Joined
- Jan 14, 2011
- Messages
- 3,816
- Points
- 63
Hey everyone!
So I was thinking, how do we go about telling how good a heatsink is? We don't, really, besides just guesstimating.
So what if someone designed a "heatsinkometer" (hahaha)? I figure that it would have two probes - one probe gives off a certain amount of wattage of heat (one side is insulated, the other side is the heated side so you can press it against the first surface of the heatsink) and the second probe would be a temperature measuring device, which would also be pressed against the first surface, so that one could effectively measure how well the whole system is heatsinked, right?
Or, maybe make that whole thing one probe (temperature measurement and heating element), and then have a temperature probe on the final surface of the heatsink?
I was thinking about this because it would be a good way to see how well the whole system interacts - it could essentially be used to figure out what kind of power dissipation could be handled by a whole system, instead of doing the math in order to figure out the junctions between components.
Any thoughts?
So I was thinking, how do we go about telling how good a heatsink is? We don't, really, besides just guesstimating.
So what if someone designed a "heatsinkometer" (hahaha)? I figure that it would have two probes - one probe gives off a certain amount of wattage of heat (one side is insulated, the other side is the heated side so you can press it against the first surface of the heatsink) and the second probe would be a temperature measuring device, which would also be pressed against the first surface, so that one could effectively measure how well the whole system is heatsinked, right?
Or, maybe make that whole thing one probe (temperature measurement and heating element), and then have a temperature probe on the final surface of the heatsink?
I was thinking about this because it would be a good way to see how well the whole system interacts - it could essentially be used to figure out what kind of power dissipation could be handled by a whole system, instead of doing the math in order to figure out the junctions between components.
Any thoughts?