Frank,

Thanks for the info.  I've wondered about that.

In the days of 3D printers and CAD/CAM, it might be possible to have a 'run' of 
these 'made to order', so to speak.

I wonder if Linear Technology would have any information about them?

Thanks again.

Joe

-----Original Message-----
From: volt-nuts [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Frank Stellmach
Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2015 5:28 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [volt-nuts] plastic caps on 3458A reference board

Hello Joe,

yes the cap consists of two parts.
The upper one serves for thermal isolation of the LTZ1000A TO99 case against 
the environment and therefore reduces the power dissipation of the oven.

The part on the solder side is much more important, as it covers the solder 
joints and avoids air draught over these pins. That avoids these low frequency 
voltage variations, which are mentioned in the LTZ data sheet.

Anyhow, there are no further shieldings around the PCB, so the solder joints of 
the OP Amp and the precision resistors are exposed to that air draught, maybe 
from the fan.
That's a further engineering fault they made on this reference.

(The other faults are the 95°C oven temperature, the use of the A version 
instead of the non A, and the use of R417,200k temperature compensation 
resistor, which is necessary for the non A version only.)

The hat is not included in the BOM inside the CLIP, therefore can not be 
ordered from HP, obviously.

It is a smooth, shiny plastic, resembles the one used around the LM399H.
Wasn't latter one something like polysulphone?

Maybe suitable pieces of polystyrol foam will do the job also.

Frank
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