Stu, a fan is about the worst thing you can do for your Z3805 it will significantly worsen the stability of the output frequency. The oven inside does get warm, that's why it is an oven :) The power consumption will go down once it heats itself up, the unit is designed to work without a fan sitting on a desk etc. Just make sure the vent holes are not clogged. Sounds like your Z3816 had a failure that caused the units power supply to overheat. bye, Said In a message dated 12/11/2012 16:22:10 Pacific Standard Time, [email protected] writes:
This may be a newbie question, but I'm a newbie, so: Do the HP telecom GPSDOs (Z38xx) require external airflow for cooling? They don't have built-in fans, but they sorta look like they depend on a rack-level cooling fan, which a telecom rack would almost certainly have. I ask because I bought a Z3816 awhile back which worked for about a week and then failed. I traced the failure to an internal power supply brick, which had a big finned heat-sink attached but nevertheless smelled overheated and was shorted internally. I never found a replacement power brick, and I don't have time to mess with it right now, so I recently bought a Z3805A. It, too, looks like it's working, but it started to feel awfully warm after a few hours, so I unplugged it for now. It probably wouldn't take much of a fan to bring the internal temperature down close to ambient, and the fan could be powered easily enough from the supply rails. But that might create a temperature gradient where the designers didn't intend one. Or it might cause problems I don't even know about yet. At the moment, the Z3805A is in a fan-less 19-inch rack with a bunch of other equipment, in a lab environment. Should it have its own fan? Cheers! --Stu _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
