drillz
Mechanical
- Sep 15, 2007
- 21
I have thick film planar resistors dissipating 2KW.
They are mounted on a heatsink with thermal resistance = 0.144 degree C/watt.
The resistor datasheet says that if the heatsink gets above 210 degrees C then the resistors can handle zero percent of their rated power. (Each resistor can handle 900W continuous power. -there are eight 1000 ohm resistors which are in four blocks of parallel pairs to give 2Kohm.-They are across 2000V. Each resistor dissipates I^2R = 500W.)
This is a problem as the 2KW will make the heatsink go to 288 degrees C. (0.144 * 2000 = 288 degrees C)
I am wondering if i have made some mistake here?
They are mounted on a heatsink with thermal resistance = 0.144 degree C/watt.
The resistor datasheet says that if the heatsink gets above 210 degrees C then the resistors can handle zero percent of their rated power. (Each resistor can handle 900W continuous power. -there are eight 1000 ohm resistors which are in four blocks of parallel pairs to give 2Kohm.-They are across 2000V. Each resistor dissipates I^2R = 500W.)
This is a problem as the 2KW will make the heatsink go to 288 degrees C. (0.144 * 2000 = 288 degrees C)
I am wondering if i have made some mistake here?