"The Heat Pipes are coming"... The Heat Pipes are


What is a Heat Pipe? and why you should care. A Heat Pipe( hp from hear on out)is a heat transfer mechanism that combines the principles of both thermal conductivity and phase transition to efficiently manage the transfer heat between two solid interfaces. And why should you in Audio-land care. In short the Heat Pipes (hp) transfers heat from audio equipment and audio listening rooms to make them both sound better. That's a bold statement for sure. But before you boil over and get ready to blast my post, remember there is Heat Pipe (hp) in the very computer or Laptop you are on right now. It's keeping everything in your computer cool inside so it can work as efficiently as possible. A hp contains no mechanical moving parts, and typically require no maintenance. The hp's are PASSIVE devices that are place on top of equipment and placed in your listening room. In short my dedicated listening room with sound reinforcement, diffusers, dedicated lines, and all kinds of isolation devices for my equipment. I Have never addressed the heat coming from my equipment. Since I have all solid state gear, I never thought it was necessary. But when I started putting the hp's on top of my amps near the transformer. There was a noticeable improvement. Then I did the same with my preamp near the power supply the same improvement. Then I put one on all 4 of my players, SACD,DVD-AUDIO,CD, CD 5-DISC players I was sold. The cherry on top was when I put the extra hp's around my listening room. IMPORTANT: I did not have to remove one piece of sound reinforcement when I introduce the hp's in the environment. They just make what's there work better. They look like Aluminum heat sinks with two copper tube coming out of them. I do have one that has 4 copper tubes in it, and looks to be all copper heat sinks included. I even have some that do not have any copper tubes at all , just all aluminium. The ones with the copper tube are better than the all aluminum ones everywhere I compared them at, which was everywhere. So let that Heat Pipe (hp) in your computer go to work and give me your feed back if you think like me that the "Heat Pipes are coming"... "The Heat Pipes are coming".
jejaudio

Showing 3 responses by paulsax

On the surface I can understand the enthusiasm of the poster. HP's are pretty neat and you can, again on the surface, see some advantages. No moving parts, no interference, no maintenance, silent, other things as well. Digging deeper and doing some thinking I would propose to the poster that a couple issues exist. First we are really talking about 3 systems here. First there is some component we wish to cool. That basically (thinking CPU model here) conducts to your heat pipe. Within the HP we get transfer driven by the phase change (with some temp delta and gravity to help out). Now though we need to get the heat away from the HP to keep the party going. This is why your laptop nearly always has a fan blowing across the hot side fins attached to the HP. I'm not going to mess with the math as I'm not really that interested, but as I recall the size v. power issues relegate HP's (the pure passive kind, no fans) to fairly low power stuff. In grad school we spent a term only on cooling on electronic systems and I cant recall finding much that the passive HP can handle by itself. Mind I did not look hard but.....? Other question is how this sort of thing affects sound and man I have no intention of even sticking my head in there, I'm still trying to find the audio equivalent of the bathroom.
Corazon you actually can reduce the temp of stuff without contact by ways other than a fan. Not helpful for us but radiative heat transfer only need a temperature delta and view to work. the old school arabs, before light polution, used to be able to make ice in the desert by digging a hole and putting a bucket of water at the bottom. the water only "saw" the night sky (ie. deep space) and the heat transfer of that was enough to form ice on the water. I tried putting my amp in a hole in the back yard last night but could discern no audible effect. Maybe it's my cables.
6550c, actually it will make ice, or more correctly "can" make ice. this has been recreated but apparently the modern lighting even int he mideast desert places has resulted in enought light scattering and such that only on the darkest nights and often not even then will it work. goes without saying that it needs to be a very cold night in the desert.

wow, talk about off topic! sorry all.