If you are going to add heat sinks, the voltage regulators are a great place to start.
Thanks, I'll keep that in mind.
Thanks for the article!
The question was whether heat sinking would sound better. The answer is no. Is it worth heat sinking these op amps to improve reliability? Well, it’s nice to do but we used thousands of these in our designs in relatively hot projection booths and never had an issue with them. OTOH, tiny heat sinks are cheap and easy to apply, and they look pretty damn cool. If you are going to add heat sinks, the voltage regulators are a great place to start. Odd places where I have found heat sinks matter are CPUs on Wifi routers. For many years these things were grossly undercooled and several brands I used got a lot more reliable after adding heat sinks and/or fans and ventilation holes. |
Crazy? Not really. Thermal Design Basics - Analog Devices
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Most definitely. I didn't reply, because I had already decided in my mind that I was going to do a little experimenting anyways. IMO, it's the perfect winter project. I have some NE5532's that have been powered up for around 21 years 24-7-365. I applaud that chip, and the design of the piece of equipment they are installed in. I know it sounds crazy, but maybe keeping them even a little bit cooler might be beneficial. |
Nope. Great little op amps though, shame the 5535s didn’t last. I think Benchmark wrote a paper on them, pointing out that they are great if you deal with the power supply properly. That may be worth investigating. We used them a lot with +- 15V supplies and had tiny local bypass caps for the power supplies. 1-4.7uF or something |