Joe34
Active Member
@mahiluana Did you run that closed loop? Or its just passive with empty chamber(no water)?
Pic is too small for me to see
Pic is too small for me to see
Heatsinks don't have to be anodized, but they would be better if they was.Look at all the people who have used extruded aluminum from HeatsinkUSA, none of it is anodized and they've been using them for years with no concern.
Heatsinks are not Anodized to stop corrosion.The only important aspect is that it's anodized, and this is pretty much irrelevant in our case also since how many decades of use would it take before our heatsinks start corroding even when they aren't anodized?
Stop now pal. You are just making things worse for yourself.Nice Idea Brainiac only one problem, you clearly have not thought your "brilliant" answer through properly have you lol?
Brainiac which side up is the Led package bolted to the heatsink, light emitting side or back?
Tell me does the back of the led package emit light or Heat?
Riiiight and which colour has the highest absorbption/emissivity value white or black?... Do you see where I am going with this?... No of course you don't well let me carry on for you.
What would happen to the emissivity value if you polished the Aluminium?
Yes of course it would plummet Brainiac... and how would that affect heat transfer from the back of the LED package?... Yes that's right Brainiac it's ability to absorb/emit heat would plummet due to the reduction of it's emissivity value.
Final question why do most of the major LED heatsink companies dye their heatsinks black?
Noobs looking for sound advice "IGNORE" Mr Brainiac Danielson because he's clearly lost without Mr Miyagi, to the point that he cannot fathom what the heck he is talking about.
If you look through the posts you will see as his posts go along he slowly concedes each point as he gets called out on it but never actually admits he was wrong in the first place.
IGNORE IGNORE IGNORE, because this idiot is CONFUSED CONFUSED CONFUSED and he will only end up confusing you further with his BAD ADVICE!
Black anodized is one of the best options out there period, so do not let Braniac make you think otherwise!!!
Maybe so because I "stopped" a long time agoStop now pal. You are just making things worse for yourself.
I'm not that smart, but just reading your work is making me dumber.
it`s aircooled - blowing the air through the tube with the drivers inside.@mahiluana Did you run that closed loop? Or its just passive with empty chamber(no water)?
Pic is too small for me to see
I think the part you're not understanding is that we use our heatsinks with forced convection. Think of all the heatsinkUSA extruded aluminum sinks people have with fans mounted on them. Pin-fin sinks also get fans mounted on them. Even if you have no fan mounted on them there is always ambient airflow or tent fans pointed directly at heatsinks.Heatsinks are not Anodized to stop corrosion.
You have a mis understanding of one of the benefits(big benefit too) of anodizing.
Anodizing makes loads of little tiny holes in the material, those holes allow more air to come into contact with the material than if it wasn't anodized. That creates a bigger surface area which would allow for quicker or more cooling capacity.
Edit - Just for the fun part, sometimes you notice bright coloured aluminium electronic devices which are coloured, and you cant scratch the colour off - this is because the fine ink dye is embedded deep into all those tiny holes which the anodizing created - its not a layer of paint on the top. Painting with common paint would likely remove any gain's from anodizing, as the paint would cover all those holes.
Maybe so because I "stopped" a long time ago
The problem with that is that increasing surface area by anodizing is at a microscopic level at best. If I added even a millimeter in diameter of aluminum to my SST120 heatsinks it would add more surface area than anodizing. So in essence, anodizing for the purpose of increasing surface area on our heatsinks helps us so little it just doesn't seem worth it (even if you can get it done for the amazing price of 50c per part!!!).I asked the guy if I could get a cheaper deal by not anodised...
He said 0.50 usd cheaper per heat sink.... and said I would not recommend it as it won't look good lol
Bigger heatsink is definitely more expensive than anodising
probably less than 1% difference between ano and ano free....this has been killed to death@Danielson999 From an anodized perspective it is irrelevant if you use the heatsink w/o a fan, its scientifically proven that anodizing increases the surface area, so a anodized heatsink being better than a non anodized one is still correct.
Your right that in our uses cases, the differences maybe hard to measure and therefore it may not matter if its anodized or not, but anodized is still better.
Also regarding heatsinkUSA, ive already said that you dont have to anodize, and if you are at the point of running a heatsink where it meets your requirements anodized but doesn't non-anodized, then you should really over compensate more on your measurments...
Additional surface area is better.
If I have time, il look at some percentage gains from anodizing, il have a wild guess at its 5-20%
Johnny, Dan is correct around the black body information. Basically it is something that absorbs all light.
For us the word black usually means a color, but it in this case it is lack of reflection in order to give true measurements of a light source.
So although you are partially correct, he is one step further.
That's the problem with a lot of these debates, there are multiple correct answers.
Regarding mahiluna and his condom heat trapping experiments, the flaw is that he is also measuring the heats coming from the light, not just conductive heat from the cob. Now if he can determine the amount of conductive heat using some other method, then he will know how much energy is in the light.
Sound right guys?
You're right it was about color. Here's some things I've learned. The color of a heatsink only affects it's radiative heat transfer ability. Heatsinks use (almost entirely) convective heat transfer to cool themselves up until the surface starts to glow because it's so hot (well over 1000°F).Anyways, this whole debate mite aswell be ended.
I think the original debate was the colour of anodization, not anodization itself lol.
Since I started reading this before realizing it was you I will take the time to answer as best I can.Sure would be nice of you to post evidence and these experiments you mention to back up your claim Danielson
The Leslie cube experiment clearly proves that black is the best emitter of heat radiation, and when you consider heatsinks for LEDs will usually be sitting in ambient air temps of no more than 25 degrees celcius, then a black heatsink is hardly going to pull in more heat than it is emitting, in fact heat transfer is going to be much better under such circumstances so I call Bs on your post so does this infrared footage which clearly proves surface treatment has a visible effect!
"The use of a thermal camera will show the comparison quickly. A piece of masking tape applied across one edge and two walls will show the same reflectivity and confirms that the surface treatment is behind the different radiation characteristics. The image (below) is obtained from a FLIR I7 camera. The left hand side of the cube is matt black and the right hand side is polished copper"
http://www.techknow.org.uk/wiki/index.php?title=Leslie's_Cube
Here's a youtube video explaining the anodizing process. It will show you why anodizing's biggest benefit is to prevent corrosion and it will also show you why all those tiny holes you talk about don't actually make the surface area bigger at all if you dye and seal it. The dye fills the holes completely and once it's sealed through hydration sealing (boiling water) or impregnation sealing (de-ionized water) the added surface area is gone. It's my understanding that if you wanted to take advantage of the added surface area created by anodizing then you would stop before the dye and seal stages. Hope this helps a bit.Heatsinks don't have to be anodized, but they would be better if they was.
Heatsinks are not Anodized to stop corrosion.
You have a mis understanding of one of the benefits(big benefit too) of anodizing.
Anodizing makes loads of little tiny holes in the material, those holes allow more air to come into contact with the material than if it wasn't anodized. That creates a bigger surface area which would allow for quicker or more cooling capacity.
Edit - Just for the fun part, sometimes you notice bright coloured aluminium electronic devices which are coloured, and you cant scratch the colour off - this is because the fine ink dye is embedded deep into all those tiny holes which the anodizing created - its not a layer of paint on the top. Painting with common paint would likely remove any gain's from anodizing, as the paint would cover all those holes.