I should be getting my pi in a week or so (ordered from Newark in early August). I came across this method of heatsinking the chips and thought some might find it interesting.
http://www.michaeldornisch.com/2012/06/ ... -sink.html
Bob
Re: Heat
I just ordered these from ebay... they make the Pi look kind of chique

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Re: Heat
I got two copper ones from a seller in China (about 10 days to arrive) for the princely sum of £2.
They look cool but run pretty hot, so they must be doing something.
Just need to get around to cutting down a low profile black aluminium heat sink for the LAN enclosure - I've got a few spare ones lying around, so may as well make use of one.

They look cool but run pretty hot, so they must be doing something.

Just need to get around to cutting down a low profile black aluminium heat sink for the LAN enclosure - I've got a few spare ones lying around, so may as well make use of one.
Re: Heat
The problem with all these heatsink with regards to the broadcom chip is this. You're not connecting the heatsink to the broadcom chip, you're connecting it to the RAM mounted on top of it. I'm doubtful you're doing any meaningful cooling to the broadcom chip.
Of course, the LAN/USB chip gets really hot, and cooling that is probably not a bad idea
Of course, the LAN/USB chip gets really hot, and cooling that is probably not a bad idea

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Re: Heat
I beg to differ, given the proximity of CPU/RAM. Extracting the heat from the RAM must logically cause a temperature differential, for the CPU heat to go some place. Simplistically, the heat from the CPU has to go somewhere: CPU-->heat-->RAM-->heat-->air/cooler.Wendo wrote:... You're not connecting the heatsink to the broadcom chip, you're connecting it to the RAM mounted on top of it. I'm doubtful you're doing any meaningful cooling to the broadcom chip.
Re: Heat
And if it does'nt..... it still looks kind'a chiqueejsolutions wrote:I beg to differ, given the proximity of CPU/RAM. Extracting the heat from the RAM must logically cause a temperature differential, for the CPU heat to go some place. Simplistically, the heat from the CPU has to go somewhere: CPU-->heat-->RAM-->heat-->air/cooler.Wendo wrote:... You're not connecting the heatsink to the broadcom chip, you're connecting it to the RAM mounted on top of it. I'm doubtful you're doing any meaningful cooling to the broadcom chip.
