• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Temperature controlled fan

Some of those thermostats work with bimetallic... If you don't draw enough current, it doesn't ever turn off.
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@JMF: What amp of mine? (Post No. 19 above)
Oh OK, I got it now...

Here daytime summer temperatures of 45 Celsius are normal for weeks on end.
It is almost November, 36 at day and 20 at night temperatures, so no air conditioner for now.

I said A/c thermostat, cut in at heat, cuts out at low.
And also an AC fan is quite reliable, use the biggest size that will fit, use a low cfm (= least sound level) model.

Maybe you can use a BC547 or similar transistor as sensor, and trigger fan through that, some circuits will be available on net.
 
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@JMF: What amp of mine? (Post No. 19 above)
Oh OK, I got it now...

Here daytime summer temperatures of 45 Celsius are normal for weeks on end.
It is almost November, 36 at day and 20 at night temperatures, so no air conditioner for now.

I said A/c thermostat, cut in at heat, cuts out at low.
And also an AC fan is quite reliable, use the biggest size that will fit, use a low cfm (= least sound level) model.

Maybe you can use a BC547 or similar transistor as sensor, and trigger fan through that, some circuits will be available on net.
The simple schematic that I previously supplied controls a 120V AC water pump as shown.
But connecting the relay to the +12 volt supply to power a small DC fan is also possible.
The circuit includes a variable temprature range pot, and hysteresis, (150K resistor) which also can be modified to suit.
It can be built on a tiny perf board.
 
I use plastic encased or made switches, fuse holders, IEC connectors, mains plugs, terminal blocks, transformer bobbins, power transistors and Triacs, etc. any day of the week.
Don´t you?

As of other comments, just by sheer chance on Cable TV now they are playing:

in-gran-torino-2008-clint-eastwood-plays-a-racist-grumpy-68904677.png


Small World.
 
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I mold plastics, and am considered a specialist in that field.
So your comment is justified, many specially made plastic parts in use, as say fuse holders etc. as mentioned above.

The problem with this was that it is a thermal cut out, to cut the supply in case of temperature rise.
The contacts are set in plastic, not ceramic, and the plastic is not as resistant to temperature rise as ceramic.
Which is why I said it is dangerous. Not fail safe in catastrophic conditions.
 
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I use plastic encased or made switches, fuse holders, IEC connectors, mains plugs, terminal blocks, transformer bobbins, power transistors and Triacs, etc. any day of the week.
Don´t you?

As of other comments, just by sheer chance on Cable TV now they are playing:
Small World.
Plastic has its uses.
But materials like bakelite or other high strength high temp materials (polymers-phenolic-etc) are much safer around high voltages and reliability is insured.
That lousy to220 "circuit breaker" is crap.

By the way, I have the DVD of that movie - loved it. 😉
 
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In a catastrophic failure, it'll explode, just like a failed MOSFET or a shorted diode... So what? It's not supposed to need to deal with external fire as a failure mode, right?
Also were talking 30°C to 120°C and fire is a lot hotter than that.
 
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