Garyh
09-12-2006, 10:09 AM
Hi all again in the IIS world.....:hi:
I thought I would share my experiment into cooling my 300d and to find out if this mod is worth the trouble!!
After seeing Gary Honis and Terrys site to there goes at this mod, I thought I would give it a go myself. Only if we can keep the sensor down to zero in our DSLRs or close to we would have a ccd sensor with noise levels close to the big guns in the astro ccd imagers..
Started with a old coolmaster cpu heatsink (aluminium) as a copper one was too heavy and it was floating around in a box of spare box of computer bits. Purchased a peltier cooler from Jaycar for around $15 drawing about 4 amps at 12 volts and some heatsink adhesive.
To this I glued a plate 40x60mm x 5mm thick as the cooling element which covers half the cameras base connecting to the tripod socket mount.
The other side the heatsink with a 4000 rpm fan mounted on little rubber pads to stop vibration. Exposed areas on the cooling plate were covered in insulating rubber. a rca plug was screwed to the side for quick and easy connecting to 12v battery.
Next I made a insulating inclosure for the camera out of waterproof foam 6mm thick. Cut little access windows to get at the major controls etc with flaps that velcrose up to help keep the heat out as well as condensation.
Attached are some pics of the camera, cooler and enclosure.
Next: Test time: does it work?
I thought I would share my experiment into cooling my 300d and to find out if this mod is worth the trouble!!
After seeing Gary Honis and Terrys site to there goes at this mod, I thought I would give it a go myself. Only if we can keep the sensor down to zero in our DSLRs or close to we would have a ccd sensor with noise levels close to the big guns in the astro ccd imagers..
Started with a old coolmaster cpu heatsink (aluminium) as a copper one was too heavy and it was floating around in a box of spare box of computer bits. Purchased a peltier cooler from Jaycar for around $15 drawing about 4 amps at 12 volts and some heatsink adhesive.
To this I glued a plate 40x60mm x 5mm thick as the cooling element which covers half the cameras base connecting to the tripod socket mount.
The other side the heatsink with a 4000 rpm fan mounted on little rubber pads to stop vibration. Exposed areas on the cooling plate were covered in insulating rubber. a rca plug was screwed to the side for quick and easy connecting to 12v battery.
Next I made a insulating inclosure for the camera out of waterproof foam 6mm thick. Cut little access windows to get at the major controls etc with flaps that velcrose up to help keep the heat out as well as condensation.
Attached are some pics of the camera, cooler and enclosure.
Next: Test time: does it work?