I've been thinking for a while about getting an iceprobe mini-chiller for my nanocube,,, the tank temperature in Summer last year was 82 degrees pretty much all the time (I got my first Cube a couple of months before they were readily available on the market). 82 is ok but doesn't leave much room for emergencies like the A/C not working due to power cuts (happens here all the time).
The iceprobe is a simple enough design, a heatsink with a fan mounted to the tank by a simple bulkhead. But at $100 for the probe and the risk of drilling my cube, I decided to try something else.
I figured if a small heatsink could cool the tank a bit,,, how good would a BIG heatsink be? In fact,,, why not cover the whole backside of the damn thing with heatsinks?
Rather than use cheap CPU heatsinks, I bought a 2 foot length of extruded aluminum heatsink and cut it to the desired sizes. The extrusion is 5 & 3/8" wide and about 1" tall with a 3/8 base so I ended up cutting a 11.75" piece and two 3" pieces (there is not enough room back there to simply mount 2 x 11.75" x 5.375" heatsinks laterally). The fin height on the heatsink is approx. 1".
I cut the black covering off the back of the Nanocube (it peels off easily) and mounted the heatsinks to the glass using 2 part epoxy. The tank is full of fish etc. so I had to jerry-rig something to support the heatsinks while the epoxy cured.
The results were almost instantaneous,,, less than an hour after the 3 heatsinks were mounted, the tank temperature dropped 2 degrees,,, by the time the epoxy had cured it was down to 76,, a total drop of 6 degrees. All this without the use of a fan!
That was yesterday,,,I don't have a spare fan big enough to blow air away from the heatsinks, but I'll be getting one today. Heatsinks are far more efficient when there is proper air circulation so I'm expecting big things,, perhaps another 6 degree reduction,, maybe more.
My digital camera is shagged so no pics until I get a new one,,,,, here's a crap drawing of the placement of the heatsinks:
Phear my photoshop skillz:
The iceprobe is a simple enough design, a heatsink with a fan mounted to the tank by a simple bulkhead. But at $100 for the probe and the risk of drilling my cube, I decided to try something else.
I figured if a small heatsink could cool the tank a bit,,, how good would a BIG heatsink be? In fact,,, why not cover the whole backside of the damn thing with heatsinks?
Rather than use cheap CPU heatsinks, I bought a 2 foot length of extruded aluminum heatsink and cut it to the desired sizes. The extrusion is 5 & 3/8" wide and about 1" tall with a 3/8 base so I ended up cutting a 11.75" piece and two 3" pieces (there is not enough room back there to simply mount 2 x 11.75" x 5.375" heatsinks laterally). The fin height on the heatsink is approx. 1".
I cut the black covering off the back of the Nanocube (it peels off easily) and mounted the heatsinks to the glass using 2 part epoxy. The tank is full of fish etc. so I had to jerry-rig something to support the heatsinks while the epoxy cured.
The results were almost instantaneous,,, less than an hour after the 3 heatsinks were mounted, the tank temperature dropped 2 degrees,,, by the time the epoxy had cured it was down to 76,, a total drop of 6 degrees. All this without the use of a fan!
That was yesterday,,,I don't have a spare fan big enough to blow air away from the heatsinks, but I'll be getting one today. Heatsinks are far more efficient when there is proper air circulation so I'm expecting big things,, perhaps another 6 degree reduction,, maybe more.
My digital camera is shagged so no pics until I get a new one,,,,, here's a crap drawing of the placement of the heatsinks:
Phear my photoshop skillz: