marcush. wrote:ribbed to cool from the outside environment?
you think by putting ribs on a case you could prevent the inside of the case is getting as hot asits surround ?
thermodynamics don´t work like that.
No not what I meant, but rather dissipate heat away from the PCB's inside due to exterior heating (the environment the box is sitting in). A heat sink for the case to "slow" transfer of heat to the internals.
There are some people who believe, incorrectly IMHO, that the "ribbed case" is to dissipate internal heat caused by the electronics rather than the real reason, heat transferring to the case from outside sources.
IE... a race car coming to a halt after running and the side pods and engine bay becoming "ovens".
with the water and oil temps in the 130 to 140 °C area -you don´t want direct contact of anything with things connected to rads and coolers.
Question is how hot will those inlet ducts get-you can clearly see the rads are rubber mounted to those ducts so the heat transfer is not that easy..
Most of the electronic boxes are specified to fairly low temps only -under 100°C so you have not much choice where to put them as downstream of the rads you will inevitably reach temps well above 100°C no matter how much gold foil you happen to apply.
I´d think the tub will heat up as well fairly quickly with large portions of the surface are licked by hot air or fluids .
Thickness of the carbon plays into this and side pod panels tend to heat first as they are thinner, and cool faster with air flow. Thus if the car is stationary for very long, the enclosed panels are like an oven,even an engine bay with all it's heat retention wraps, will still migrate hot air to the side pods.
Putting a bare hand on a side pod, you will get burned quickly .
The internals of ECU's and Loggers have become quite rugged. With surface mount technology, PCB boards don't need to be twice or three times as thick (vibration reasons) and vibration mounting of the boards to the casing, don't need to be as beefed up. Though they still need to be water/fluid resistant, heat resistant, impact resistant, RF noise resistant. The casings are enclosed for these very reasons. The hotter the casings get, the greater the chance of melting the internals, thus the ribs to help transfer heat away from inside and cool the case quicker with air flow.
"Driving a car as fast as possible (in a race) is all about maintaining the highest possible acceleration level in the appropriate direction." Peter Wright,Techical Director, Team Lotus