i did cut an old p3 large heat sink to the size of 50x55x25 mm (25 mm is the original height)
i recovered from a broken laptop the copper plane used for cpu and gpu (2 parallelepiped copper-made 18x18x2.5mm) quite the same size of the zynq chip.
find out some piece to make sure the plastic band press on the zynq (place second copper parallelepiped over the epiphany just for having a large plane of contact that limit the instability and accidental movement
!!! make sure the copper do not touch the electronic components !!!
!!! place a good thermal grease between every surface contact !!!
!!! when you place the plastic band watch out to not damage the small component on the back side of the board !!!



results are showing that fanless is not trusty enough for me: fanless temperature is 60/67°C in idle and reach 72°C on a small time in full load. (don't want to reach 80° and risk to burn my board, even if limit temperature is 85 i usually keep my chip at maximum 70°C)
I just tested with ambient temperature of the summer (around 25°C that is quite hot)
note: just turning on the classic room ventilator (50W fan) that is usually running on summer time the temperature readed by xtemp drop to 48/50°C that is a good point.
Conclusion: still need a fan but is enough to blow a little amount of air to keep temperature problem under control (natural wind is enough
)
Hope this may be usefull for someone.
PS in the picture you can see a copper wire that is connected to the support screw (mounting hole behind the heat sink) that was thought to provide power for the board. I noticed a led intesity variation due to the contact of the micro HDMI cable so i'm using that wire as a ground that solve the the led intesity variation.Statistics: Posted by adexmont — Mon Sep 01, 2014 11:15 am
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