I have a few boost converters that are supposed to be 6A (Max) but I seem to keep burning up a resistor on the bottom of the unit. IDK much about SM resistors, it just says R010 on it, so IDK the value. Here are pic's of the unit but on the bottom of this one, it says 10M, but mine say R010.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/150W-DC-DC...A-Step-Up-Voltage-Charger-Power-/171907240597
There are 3 pins from an IC right next to it as well as 2 larger pins from the (inductor?) which make attacking a heat sink difficult though I could grind them down with a dremel or something. But even if I do that so I could put a small heat sink on it (like a 20mm x 20mm x 5-8mm), I didn't know if the aluminum would short out the two ends when it makes contact with the soldered ends - or if the thermal compound would also short it.
So, is there any way that I can stop burning these up? I'd also like to replace these resistors b/c I'll have 5+ dead units before long if they keep up at this rate.
I guess I could try to current limit the unit, but I'm not sure how. I've been using this to charge batteries with a 12v PC PSU (output of 12.32v), I was running at 28.5 the last time it burnt up and it's also done it at lower voltages as well, so IDK if it is the voltage that is doing it. I basically need multiples of 4.0-4.2v for charging lithium cells.
This last time I did add a 100mm x 100mm fan (taken from an old room heater, it moves a good bit of air) blowing air up from underneath. The sinks still get very hot, though the IC's don't seem to be burning up. The directions for the unit say to add "extra cooling" to run it at 6A, IDK if that means just a fan or what.
Any suggestions on what to do here?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/150W-DC-DC...A-Step-Up-Voltage-Charger-Power-/171907240597
There are 3 pins from an IC right next to it as well as 2 larger pins from the (inductor?) which make attacking a heat sink difficult though I could grind them down with a dremel or something. But even if I do that so I could put a small heat sink on it (like a 20mm x 20mm x 5-8mm), I didn't know if the aluminum would short out the two ends when it makes contact with the soldered ends - or if the thermal compound would also short it.
So, is there any way that I can stop burning these up? I'd also like to replace these resistors b/c I'll have 5+ dead units before long if they keep up at this rate.
I guess I could try to current limit the unit, but I'm not sure how. I've been using this to charge batteries with a 12v PC PSU (output of 12.32v), I was running at 28.5 the last time it burnt up and it's also done it at lower voltages as well, so IDK if it is the voltage that is doing it. I basically need multiples of 4.0-4.2v for charging lithium cells.
This last time I did add a 100mm x 100mm fan (taken from an old room heater, it moves a good bit of air) blowing air up from underneath. The sinks still get very hot, though the IC's don't seem to be burning up. The directions for the unit say to add "extra cooling" to run it at 6A, IDK if that means just a fan or what.
Any suggestions on what to do here?
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