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Does a 1/4 watt resistor need any airflow if it is disapating 20mw ?

S

SA Dev

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,

I've made a really small LED light that I'm planning to use and I was
thinking about shrink tube wrapping the resistor in with the leads on the
LED. The LED is rated for 30ma continuous, but I'm only putting around 12ma
through it. Would this be an issue for heat?

Thanks,

SA Dev
 
L

Lord Garth

Jan 1, 1970
0
SA Dev said:
Hi,

I've made a really small LED light that I'm planning to use and I was
thinking about shrink tube wrapping the resistor in with the leads on the
LED. The LED is rated for 30ma continuous, but I'm only putting around 12ma
through it. Would this be an issue for heat?

Thanks,

SA Dev

If the voltage drop across the resistor multiplied by the current through it
is
close to the 250 mW resistor maximum, it is way too much and there is no
safety margin.
 
J

John Fields

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,

I've made a really small LED light that I'm planning to use and I was
thinking about shrink tube wrapping the resistor in with the leads on the
LED. The LED is rated for 30ma continuous, but I'm only putting around 12ma
through it. Would this be an issue for heat?
 
S

SA Development

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi John,
You don't say what your supply voltage is, or what ambient temperature
the device is supposed to work in, but if the resistor's only
dissipating 20mW I'd go out on a limb and say you'd be fine.

The drop across the resistor is 1.8v and the current is 11.3ma, if I
mutliply these I get 20.3mw, right? Ambient temp will be room temp ~75 deg
F.

Thanks,

SA Dev
 
J

John Fields

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi John,


The drop across the resistor is 1.8v and the current is 11.3ma, if I
mutliply these I get 20.3mw, right?
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi John,


The drop across the resistor is 1.8v and the current is 11.3ma, if I
mutliply these I get 20.3mw, right? Ambient temp will be room temp ~75 deg
F.

Sounds about right and safe.

A question not for you, exactly, but to anyone else would be "What is
the C/W specification for a 1/4 watt resistor body in still,
relatively dry air?" It would be hard to imagine it being much worse
than the Rja=200 or so for a TO-92.

You'd usually just multiply that Rja spec by the watts the resistor is
dissipating to get the relative change in equilibrium temperature. If
the value were 200, then the change would be about 4 Celsius or less
than 8F. That would seem quite a safe change, over 75 F ambient.

I'd suppose that you *could* wrap the resistor in thermal insulation
and that if you really tried hard you might cause a problem. But the
Rja would have to be in the area of 2500 or so before a 50 Celsius
change would be seen. Hard to imagine that big a number for Rja
unless you really worked at causing a problem.

Jon
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,

I've made a really small LED light that I'm planning to use and I was
thinking about shrink tube wrapping the resistor in with the leads on the
LED. The LED is rated for 30ma continuous, but I'm only putting around 12ma
through it. Would this be an issue for heat?

If you're running it at ~20V or more, yes. Otherwise, no.

Cheers!
Rich
 
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