Latango
Electrical
- Dec 12, 2006
- 28
I'm looking at making a submerged PC, which is part for fun and part so that it is completely silent. What that basically means is the motherboard, plugged in expansion cards, and the power supply are all submerged in a dielectric liquid - generally oil.
However, a lot of the capacitors in the system have rubber seals at their bases, where they are soldered to the pcb's. Is there a mineral oil that doesn't attack rubber? Possibilities available to me are liquid paraffin (known as Mineral Oil in USA I think), FR3 from Cooper, and R-temp from Cooper. I know for a fact Diala B inhibited transformer oil attacks rubber, so that's not an option.
If anyone has any experience or knowledge, I'd appreciate a heads up. I don't mind experimentation, but it's for personal reasons so I can't write off any failures, which could be costly. I have emailed Cooper about R-temp and FR3, but it takes them a few weeks to get back to me usually. Wanted to check feasibility before that.
Thanks guys/gals
However, a lot of the capacitors in the system have rubber seals at their bases, where they are soldered to the pcb's. Is there a mineral oil that doesn't attack rubber? Possibilities available to me are liquid paraffin (known as Mineral Oil in USA I think), FR3 from Cooper, and R-temp from Cooper. I know for a fact Diala B inhibited transformer oil attacks rubber, so that's not an option.
If anyone has any experience or knowledge, I'd appreciate a heads up. I don't mind experimentation, but it's for personal reasons so I can't write off any failures, which could be costly. I have emailed Cooper about R-temp and FR3, but it takes them a few weeks to get back to me usually. Wanted to check feasibility before that.
Thanks guys/gals