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Re: Heat sinks


 

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I am using this with my Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W and it works well.

Has a built in heatsink.

I too used some thermal grease.



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73 - Bill KA8VIT/W8COD



From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Ken Curtis via groups.io <kcurtis51@...>
Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2021 12:01 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [RaspberryPi-4-HamRadio] Heat sinks
?

The issue/problem is with a RPi zero 2 W overheating, whereas this case specifies that it is for a RPi 4. Totally different case requirements. However, this case DOES SHOW it is for a zero 2 W, and it shows a heat sink:

Maybe it will work?

Ken KC3ROF

On 11/17/2021 10:10 AM, Tadd KA2DEW in NC via groups.io wrote:
have you seen the FLIRC case??

It makes a marvelous heat sync, is quiet and looks good.?
The downsides of it is access to internal connectors requires opening the case, and the WiFi / Bluetooth performance suffers. ?



Tadd / KA2DEW ?.com/db/ka2dew
tadd@...
Raleigh NC ?FM05pv

North Carolina ham-radio chatRoom Network:?
Packet networking over ham?radio:?
Local Raleigh ham radio info:?
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On Nov 17, 2021, at 9:55 AM, Doc Dowd, W1DOC <bdowd48@...> wrote:

Maybe "up your heat sink" game:
Use a copper, rather than an aluminum heat sink. It transfers heat more efficiently.
Fins are only effective if you are using a cooling fan to move the air around.
Use thermal paste instead of a stick on pad.

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