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Normal for FET to heat up?
I was wondering if it is normal for a FET to heat up?
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Yes.
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Thanks MacGuyver, I figured it was normal, can it it overheat if something is wrong? what can cause one to fry out?
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Water for one thing. :(
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Overheating to the point of melting is bad.. Other than that it will be fine. Caused by too much current/voltage
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Quote:
There are a thousand ways to kill a FET. They are actually quite delicate, and can be killed by heat, over/under voltage, stray static discharge, etc. |
If it's a Mosfet it will have a thermal shut down so it does no pop,but you I guess it depends on what it's in and whats it doing? Is it a Drive transistor? They usally run on the warm side.Fans are your friend,keeping them cool helps them live longer:)
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Most mosfets don't have a thermal protection system. They just pop. I've replaced one or 2 that could have benefitted by that.
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since we are on the subject. Can you hook up mosfets in paralle?
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Quote:
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Water , hahaha yeah don't it get wet. hahaha Thanks for the input guys. Just doing some studying on FETs.
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The Trigger Master has thermal shutdown, but it is controlled by the microcontroller, not the FET itself.
Usually, all the limits/rating of any electronic part is listed in the datasheet. The FETs I am installing as a trigger switch replacement are rated for 110A continuous current and 350A pulsed. They can run from -40 to 175 degC. And they have a built-in diode to prevent EM spikes from burning the FET. Still, I saw some burn by missuse, moisture/water, phisical shock etc. They are sensitive parts, and they are supposed to heat a little bit. Nothing electric is 100% efficient (yet), so there HAS to been heat generated somewhere. |
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