|
Re: Speaker Voice Coil Cooling System Valve [message #47211 is a reply to message #47206] |
Tue, 28 June 2005 13:14 |
ToFo
Messages: 219 Registered: May 2009
|
Master |
|
|
Hi Wayne, that is really great looking. I will be excited to see what happens next. I have often scratched my head when simulating some of the long coil drivers, only to see that in my desired alignment (or any other in some cases) they can't reach xmax within thermal power limits. your package actually looks small enough to work with the small amount of air slug volume available from the dustcap back.too cool, Thomas
|
|
|
|
Re: Speaker Voice Coil Cooling System Valve - Initial Tests [message #47213 is a reply to message #47212] |
Tue, 28 June 2005 18:09 |
|
Wayne Parham
Messages: 18792 Registered: January 2001
|
Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
|
|
I am running a LAB12 with the valve installed. The signal is 40Hz, 40VRMS, which is approximately 400WRMS. I am running the driver open, so there is no pneumatic load to help the driver mechanically but it is not reaching its mechanical limits. I've even put 50VRMS into the speaker, which is 625WRMS. That exceeds both electrical and mechanical limits, but not violently.I'm very excited about what we've done so far. We're really on to something here. There is obvious unidirectional flow. So that part is working. The heat generated by the speaker is tremendous, and my gut feel is that when the driver is used in a small sealed box such as the rear chamber of a basshorn, it must be superheating the air inside. I'm fairly confident that the majority of failures are thermal, provided it is used above the quarter-wave frequency, within the pass band of the basshorn. Whatever the case, we will certainly be reducing the heat inside by a lot. Now the question is how much is a lot. We were going to use an infrared sensor to get some readings of the voice coil and magnet today, but we ran out of time. We also learned enough to realize we need to make a change first. Then we'll get some quantified measurements. The thing we plan to change is the inlet. Right now, it's just a pipe. We plan to machine one from aluminum that has a lot of very small holes instead of one large one. The idea is to increase surface area. What we discovered today is that most of the voice coil heat is radiated onto the front plate and center pole instead of being convected into the air surrounding the coil. So we want to increase heat conduction from the center pole to the inlet, and use it as a heat exchanger from magnet to air going into the device. This will make total heat transfer better, and the system will be more effective. After we've made this change, we'll take heat measurements and make comparisons.
|
|
|
Re: Speaker Voice Coil Cooling System Valve - Initial Tests [message #47214 is a reply to message #47213] |
Tue, 28 June 2005 20:28 |
|
Wayne Parham
Messages: 18792 Registered: January 2001
|
Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
|
|
One other thing I forgot to mention. The venting system in the driver itself appears to introduce some unidirectional flow. The port tends to exit air more than it takes in. I expect there are turbulent regions that make the system tend to draw air in more around the spider and exit air more through the vent. The center pole gets extremely hot way down inside the motor, getting hotter as you get closer to the front plate. That's why we want to heat sink it to a metal duct that contains several small capillary-like passages. The metal duct will conduct heat away from the motor, and the capillary-like passages will have a large surface area to transfer this to the air.If I were installing a cooling device like this in a loudspeaker with one of the cabinet walls very near the magnet, I might be tempted to make a large plate that acted as a heat sink, and connect it to a heat-conductive metal duct inserted deep inside the motor. This would allow air to pass through the duct, but would also heat sink to the plate. So for basshorns made this way, that might be a very attractive option. It's a similar system, but it uses the access panel as the heat sink. Don't just place the heat sink near the speaker and hope convection will cool the motor. It won't. You'll need physical contact between the access plate and the vent, preferably via a metal duct that extends deep into the motor, and so has a lot of surface area contact with it. Also, I found that once a panel is placed within about 1/4" of the vent, it was shrouded so effectively that flow was reduced to almost nothing. So be careful that the vent isn't restricted and there is adequate flow.
|
|
|
Re: Speaker Voice Coil Cooling System Valve - Initial Tests [message #47216 is a reply to message #47213] |
Wed, 29 June 2005 09:55 |
ToFo
Messages: 219 Registered: May 2009
|
Master |
|
|
Wow, internal heatsink, crazy! As a quiet pc enthusiast I have considerable experiences to share in a couple of areas. You may already know these, but it can't hurt, so... Steel and iron are bloody awful as a heat sink material. About 1/4 of the efficiency of aluminum or copper. You will never get great cooling from a speaker pole, but you can make it better. A great thermal interface for your aluminum capilary or fluted pipe might do it. While we may never escape thermal runaway, we only need to significantly raise the threshold to be a success. My two cents is to go with the best thermal paste you can get. Using better paste will give you a 3-5 degree celcius advantage on a cpu. Most dismiss this seemingly tiny "advantage", but my experiments show that on otherwise identical systems, you would have to use twice the airflow to match the effect of the better paste. Try your best to get a really nice fit on the sink in the pole. Paste manufacturers say the thinner the paste the better the transfer, so close fit is it. Thomas
|
|
|
|
Re: Speaker Voice Coil Cooling System - Heat Sink [message #47231 is a reply to message #47221] |
Thu, 30 June 2005 11:59 |
|
Wayne Parham
Messages: 18792 Registered: January 2001
|
Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
|
|
Since the motor core becomes extremely hot from induction and radiation, one could sink the heat into a device like that shown below.
It's a simple device, just two parts.
One part is a large aluminum panel that attaches to the cabinet. If the system is a basshorn, this can double as the access panel. It is just a large sheet of aluminum, thick enough to prevent vibration or panel flex, since it will be used as part of the loudspeaker cabinet. Grooves may be cut in its surface to increase surface area. That's the key, because it will function as a heat exchanger, as a radiator of heat.
The second part is an aluminum rod, of diameter that fits snugly in the speaker vent hole. On one end, it is drilled with a threaded hole to accept a bolt, so it can be attached to the radiating panel. On the other end, it is drilled with a larger diameter hole, to act as the duct for cooling air. Holes are also cross-drilled along its shaft so that cooling vent air can pass through it.
The duct should fit snugly. When completely inserted, the internal end should be approximately flush with the front pole piece. That way the aluminum tube touches as much of the pole piece as possible, for most effective heat transfer. But it is not longer, so that it doesn't interfere with the cone or dust cap at high excursion.
These parts are simple and can be machined at any competent machine shop. Assembly is straight-forward. Put some heat-sinking compound on the open end of the tube and slide it into the speaker magnet vent. Use the same compound that is used on power transistors when mounting on a heat sink. Put some heat sink compound on the threaded end of the tube also, and attach it to the radiating panel with a bolt. Tighten the panel down and you're done.
This kind of system can be used on basshorns with access panels near the speaker magnet. It can also be used in standard direct-radiating cabinets, by making a version with a longer rod that reaches from the cabinet to the magnet.
Speakers with exposed magnets, such as dipoles, isobaric and push-pull configurations may benefit from ducted arrangements since they serve to muffle vent noises in addition to assiting in cooling. But if the magnet isn't exposed, then this simple heat sink radiator might be more attractive.
|
|
|
Re: Speaker Voice Coil Cooling System - Heat Sink [message #47236 is a reply to message #47231] |
Thu, 30 June 2005 22:20 |
ToFo
Messages: 219 Registered: May 2009
|
Master |
|
|
I like this concept. I am not a master of heat, but I read from what I consider a good source, that beyond a certain short distance, heat conduction falls off rapidly. From what I remember it seemed like the inverse square law with shorter dimesions.(suposed to be the reason for heat pipes) Is this true? Would that force you to have a really short pipe? would a more heat conductive metal like copper help out? Maybe copper to move the heat and aluminum to get it into the air.(also read that copper is great for sucking up heat and crappy at disipating it into air. didn't understand exactly why) Food for though (or not, I am not sure) Thomas
|
|
|
|