Mounting TO-3 Transistors, thermal compound or insulators?

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Hi,

Paste properly done is always better. Pads are quicker and consistent, but worse.

rgds, sreten.

Thanks. I ordered a set of 4 TO-3 transistors to replace a mis-matched set on a Dokorder 800X receiver. Great sounding receiver, but having 2 different pairs means that one channel is louder than the other, in this case the right channel. Not sure why it was done that way, but I suspect that the owner or repairman just wanted a quick fix and the particular transistors were available.
 
Pads are the only option in your case, since it sounds like you're planning on using only thermal compound. If you do this there will be fire. You must use mica sheets too!

I recommend the pads, they are a much better solution. Mica is uneven in quality and thermal compound is always applied wrong, even by experts. Pads can't go wrong, as long as your heat sink is burr free.
 
Pads are the only option in your case, since it sounds like you're planning on using only thermal compound. If you do this there will be fire. You must use mica sheets too!

I recommend the pads, they are a much better solution. Mica is uneven in quality and thermal compound is always applied wrong, even by experts. Pads can't go wrong, as long as your heat sink is burr free.

Thanks. They would certainly be simpler.
 
Thermal compound is there to exclude air from the interface.
The heatsink to To3 interface is metal to metal. It is a shortcircuit to electrical current.
If your To3 needs to be isolated electrically you must use an electrical insulating film. That could be a Thermal pad, or a mica sheet, or an Alox pad.
Any of the "hard" films/pads must use a very thin layer of Thermal compound to exclude air from both interfaces, i.e heatsink to mica and mica to To3.

A soft Thermal pad does not need Thermal compound. The soft material squeezes into the tiny surface imperfections to exclude the air from the interface.
 
Thanks. I ordered a set of 4 TO-3 transistors to replace a mis-matched set on a Dokorder 800X receiver. Great sounding receiver, but having 2 different pairs means that one channel is louder than the other, in this case the right channel. Not sure why it was done that way, but I suspect that the owner or repairman just wanted a quick fix and the particular transistors were available.

the difference in volume could be caused by a variety of reasons, some of them could be,
1. volume control pot (if dual gang) could be a source if gangs are not matched especially at listening levels.
2. amplifier gain setting resistors could be mismatched in both amps.
3. speaker could also be a source if the sensitivity of drivers is different on both channels. This can be easily confirmed/eliminated as a source of variation by changing left speaker to right channel and vice versa.

edit: just read your recent post, so you could eliminate reason 3.
 
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Thanks everyone. I just might mount the 4 output transistors onto a pair of extruded aluminum heatsinks as the Dokorder has them mounted directly onto the back panel with a shield over them. I have a Sansui 3000A that does the same thing, and it conducts heat everywhere on the back panel. Not a good design but typical of the 60s.
 
Here's the power amp part of the schematic. All 4 output transformers are NPN. And when's the last time you saw a mono speaker out? I could run it to an EV corner speaker if I had one.

29755391046_342cbe0c68_o.jpg
 
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