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Making DIY cases.


headinclouds

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Cases and heatsinks are a problem for DIY builds.

Front panels of thick alloy need machining and tapping as do heatsinks. These items are hard to get machined or the sizes the builder wants are not available.

I devised a way of making cases, which eliminated these problems and made for easier case design, lower costs and quicker builds.

Cases

Made from sheet aluminium alloy of preferably 3mm so only single sheet of material needed.

I get the parts laser cut by a company which will also supply the material.  The case parts need holes to be countersunk where necessary and are then taken for surface finishing, (bead blasting and anodising in my case).

I then take the front panels to be screen printed with the graphics I provide.  The assembly is with corner posts and angle brackets cut and drilled, and bolted together.  I only drill and tap corner posts to attach base and top panels.  The case is basically a box with a front panel on to cover the front of the box.

Heatsinks

https://uk.farnell.com/amec-thermasol/fch505010t/heat-sink-50mmx50mmx10-25mm-ceramic/dp/2499023

Edit; a link to these was omitted, http://www.amecuk.co.uk/    Element14 has them in many countries.

https://www.newark.com/c/cooling-thermal-management/heat-sinks?brand=amec-thermasol

I discovered porous ceramic heatsinks and realised that these small, light, self-adhesive items would solve problems.  I bought a few and tested to see if they did what was claimed.  A single 50mm square of 10mm thick could dissipate 5-10W stuck on sheet aluminium.  To make heatsinks you only have to bolt the semiconductors directly to the 3mm plates and place the ceramic heatsinks as needed.

They are not expensive, and with a range of sizes you can arrange heatsinks of different shapes.

I was concerned that they might unstick but the opposite has been true, they are hard to remove.

They are not pretty so I contain them inside the case and organise slots above and below to act as a chimney to allow convection.  This works well and they do not run hot.  The porous ceramic devices are very effective.

I have found that this method is much easier to procure and build.  The amplifiers built this way can be smaller and lighter.

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Edited by headinclouds
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Nice idea! I like how you did the front panel in two layers. Where are you located and doing/having this done at? And what kind of cost comparisons have you made? I know FPE is expensive for machining, as is Modushop. Why FPE doesn't add re-anodizing also is beyond me. The FPD software works pretty well (for those of us not versed in 2D/3D CAD), but does have a lot of limitations in terms of what it can do.

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Thanks, it's so much easier than drilling and tapping panels and heatsinks and I think it achieves an acceptable look.  My first build was an on-board heatsink KGSShv and used Modushop case. Since then I designed my own cases for the freedom it gives.  I use a simple 2D CAD to do sheet metal drawings and export as dxf.  I live in Shropshire, England on the edge of the West Midlands industrial area where I can get laser cutting, machining and metal finishing from industrial OEM companies. Unfortunately they don’t do retail or export.  They supply the metal (Alum 5251 as it lasers and anodises well).  A case like this would currently cost about £280 ($370) for the total of laser, finishing, screen printing. You have to add in the ceramic heatsinks which cost me about £50.   Aluminum section, brackets and nuts and bolts are needed for assembly. I don’t know how this compares with any other suppliers.

 

 

Edited by headinclouds
correct double paste
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