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#1
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I need advice on replacing the cooling fan on my GAS Ampzilla.
The current fan was too loud, so I tried slowing it down with an inline resistor. I got the voltage so low that the fan will not even spin unless I reach inside and give the blade a spin. That is both easy to forget and annoying to do. Can I replace this with a computer cooling fan? What size do I need? How about a speed control? My Ampzilla needs very little cooling, but if the fan is all the way off it will overheat after a few hours. Advice please. Thanks, Phil |
#2
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![]() "Phil Anderson" wrote in message news:WMgZa.74397$Oz4.17285@rwcrnsc54... I need advice on replacing the cooling fan on my GAS Ampzilla. The current fan was too loud, so I tried slowing it down with an inline resistor. I got the voltage so low that the fan will not even spin unless I reach inside and give the blade a spin. That is both easy to forget and annoying to do. **Er, use a smaller value resistor. Alternatively, you could replace the fan with a new one, which has better bearings and can cope with lower Voltages. You could also kick the fan into high speed, at switch on, then allow the resistor to come in, to drop the speed down. Can I replace this with a computer cooling fan? **Not usually. Computer fans are generally 12 Volt DC and pretty crappy. They're also difficult to add speed control to. What size do I need? **Same size as the oringal. How about a speed control? My Ampzilla needs very little cooling, but if the fan is all the way off it will overheat after a few hours. **Papst make some excellent termperature-sensitive fans, which would be appropriate for your needs. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#3
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Thanks for the reply. More below.
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Phil Anderson" wrote in message news:WMgZa.74397$Oz4.17285@rwcrnsc54... I need advice on replacing the cooling fan on my GAS Ampzilla. The current fan was too loud, so I tried slowing it down with an inline resistor. I got the voltage so low that the fan will not even spin unless I reach inside and give the blade a spin. That is both easy to forget and annoying to do. **Er, use a smaller value resistor. Alternatively, you could replace the fan with a new one, which has better bearings and can cope with lower Voltages. You could also kick the fan into high speed, at switch on, then allow the resistor to come in, to drop the speed down. As it stands, the fan has only one speed with the resistor in place. I do not know how to "allow the resistor to come in" later. The resistor I used was recommended at the time by the amps designer, though he sounded very much like he was guessing. With my luck, if I guess at another value, I will get one that makes it loud again. I would just as soon start out by completely replacing the puppy with something quieter, i.e., better bearinged, as you advise. Can I replace this with a computer cooling fan? **Not usually. Computer fans are generally 12 Volt DC and pretty crappy. They're also difficult to add speed control to. The Antec and Zalman fans in my computer are speed controlled, and mighty quiet, too. More important, I am pretty sure the fan in my 'zilla is 12V DC. What size do I need? **Same size as the oringal. I guess I deserved that answer. My hope was that someone knew the size offhand so I would not have to take the puppy apart once to measure, and another time to put a fan in later when the order arrives. How about a speed control? My Ampzilla needs very little cooling, but if the fan is all the way off it will overheat after a few hours. **Papst make some excellent termperature-sensitive fans, which would be appropriate for your needs. I've heard all sorts of good things about Papst computer fans, but it seems like going the temp sensitive route is just a more complex guessing game than is playing with resistor values. I have no idea what temps I want. I do know the amp sounds better when it is quite warm, and that a very slow turning fan seems to move enough air over the heat sinks that it will never overheat under the conditions I expose it to. Which takes me back to wanting some sort of speed control. I can turn it up just high enough to be sure the fan will spin at turn on, but remain inaudible. And, on the off chance I decide to drive it a lot harder than I do now, I can just turn it up further still. A Papst that is not temp-sensitive might well fit the bill, if I can just figure out what size to get. Again, thanks for the reply. Phil -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#4
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![]() "Phil Anderson" wrote in message news:uoiZa.74573$Oz4.17482@rwcrnsc54... I would just as soon start out by completely replacing the puppy with something quieter, i.e., better bearinged, as you advise. Be aware that the bearings are not the only thing that make a noise. The air flow itself is a major factor. Papst and others make fans with different CFM ratings (cubic feet per minute) and corresponding SPL levels, for the common sizes. Temperature sensitive electronic fan speed control, is usually the best option though. TonyP. |
#5
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"Phil Anderson" wrote in
news:WMgZa.74397$Oz4.17285@rwcrnsc54: I need advice on replacing the cooling fan on my GAS Ampzilla. The current fan was too loud, so I tried slowing it down with an inline resistor. I got the voltage so low that the fan will not even spin unless I reach inside and give the blade a spin. That is both easy to forget and annoying to do. Can I replace this with a computer cooling fan? What size do I need? How about a speed control? My Ampzilla needs very little cooling, but if the fan is all the way off it will overheat after a few hours. Advice please. Thanks, Phil Do like McIntosh does and put a thermoswitch on the output heatsinks and wire it to the fans. The fans will then only come on when needed. r -- "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Arthur C. Clarke (1917 - ), "Technology and the Future" |
#6
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"Phil Anderson" wrote in message
news:WMgZa.74397$Oz4.17285@rwcrnsc54 I need advice on replacing the cooling fan on my GAS Ampzilla. The current fan was too loud, so I tried slowing it down with an inline resistor. I got the voltage so low that the fan will not even spin unless I reach inside and give the blade a spin. That is both easy to forget and annoying to do. Can I replace this with a computer cooling fan? Yes. What size do I need? Start out with a fan the same size as the existing fan. How about a speed control? Computer cooling fans typically are rated for use with 12 volt DC power at something like 0.1 amp. Therefore you need to arrange for an appropriate voltage source in your ampzilla. There's plenty of power DC there, but you'll need to drop the voltage. An ideal way to accomplish this would be to build a variable voltage DC regulator whose output voltage is controlled by a simple potentiometer. Then adjust this potentiometer for the desired fan speed. Most PC-style fans operate pretty stably down to 7 or 8 volts. Much below that, stalling at power up can be a problem. My Ampzilla needs very little cooling, but if the fan is all the way off it will overheat after a few hours. If a fan the size of the existing fan is too noisy and pushes too much air, replace it with a smaller fan mounted in a baffle plate. Your goal is to use a larger fan spinning at the slowest speed that moves enough air and avoids stalling at power up. One way to avoid stalling at start-up is to drive the fan through a resistor with a fairly large electrolytic cap in parallel. The cap will provide a kick to get the fan rolling, and the resistor will run it at a slow steady speed. |
#7
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Which version of this GAS unit do you have? I owned the original (model with
crazy lettering logo). The fan was very noisy, and I reduced it by elevating it up from the shelf. I put 4 of my kid's building blocks beneath the feet and most of the noise was gone, as if it were in large part caused by the rush of air upon the shelf surface. My Ampzilla IIi, never remained in repair long enough for me to be bothered the fan noise (which was far less). I think you are extremely fortunate in having a working unit. (None of the GAS amps generated the current required to drive speakers of 4 ohm impedance, so mine ended up driving a pair of Stax headphones.) My GAS unit is really idling since is too big to use as a doorstop and not owning a boat, I'm not in any need of an anchor. "Phil Anderson" wrote in message news:WMgZa.74397$Oz4.17285@rwcrnsc54... I need advice on replacing the cooling fan on my GAS Ampzilla. The current fan was too loud, so I tried slowing it down with an inline resistor. I got the voltage so low that the fan will not even spin unless I reach inside and give the blade a spin. That is both easy to forget and annoying to do. Can I replace this with a computer cooling fan? What size do I need? How about a speed control? My Ampzilla needs very little cooling, but if the fan is all the way off it will overheat after a few hours. Advice please. Thanks, Phil |
#8
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![]() "Norman M. Schwartz" wrote in message ... Which version of this GAS unit do you have? I owned the original (model with crazy lettering logo). The fan was very noisy, and I reduced it by elevating it up from the shelf. I put 4 of my kid's building blocks beneath the feet and most of the noise was gone, as if it were in large part caused by the rush of air upon the shelf surface. My Ampzilla IIi, never remained in repair long enough for me to be bothered the fan noise (which was far less). I think you are extremely fortunate in having a working unit. (None of the GAS amps generated the current required to drive speakers of 4 ohm impedance, so mine ended up driving a pair of Stax headphones.) My GAS unit is really idling since is too big to use as a doorstop and not owning a boat, I'm not in any need of an anchor. This one started out really original. I bought it from the original owner, who built it from one of the original kits offered before GAS got together enough money. The only thing that was not original in mine was the fan. Shortly after I received the amp, one channel died. I contacted the designer, James Bongiorno, and sent him the 'chimney' and he replaced and updated the circuitry, as well as added a bass servo unit of his design. I sought his advice on the fan, but since it was not the original, he was not sure about the proper resistor to slow it down. He noted that the amp only needed a very small amount of cooling from the fan, so how slow it was was not an issue. I installed the resistor he thought of as his best guess but the hystersis effect (is that the right term) means it often does not spin when I turn it on. I finally got tired of having to pull out the amp and reach up inside it every time I turned it on, and posted my question here. I am currently leaning toward a German made Papst fan, since they seem to have the reputation of spec'ing their noise figures much more accurately than most. BTW, I am using the amp to drive Dahlquist DQ-10s, and have a Thaedra for my pre-amp. I got the Zilla and the Thaedra from different owners over the net. Both are the 'original' model 1, but I do not know the Thaedra's pedigree. |
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