Comment on Bending fins in Active Cooler Pi5? PiNAS (Radax Penta SATA HAT + RaspberryPi5)

Cyberflunk@lemmy.world ⁨1⁩ ⁨week⁩ ago

A heatsink works by increasing surface area to dissipate heat through convection (air moving past it) and radiation (infrared energy). The key principle is:

Heat dissipation ≈ Surface Area × Temperature Difference × Heat Transfer Coefficient

but, for me, math is hard, so…

Why You Can Cut Fins Off (Usually)

  1. Diminishing Returns: Each fin you add provides less cooling benefit than the previous one because:
  1. The Rough Rule: A heatsink typically operates with 30-50% margin. So if it’s rated for 5W and your RPi CPU draws 3W, you have room to lose some fins.
  2. Fin Efficiency: There’s actually a mathematical concept called “fin efficiency” - fins that are too long or too closely spaced become ineffective. The last row of fins might only contribute 10-15% of total cooling.

Napkin Math Example

Say you have a heatsink with 8 fins:

Cutting off one row (2 fins) loses maybe 10-12% of cooling capacity. If your CPU was running at 65°C with the full heatsink, it might now run at 68-70°C - usually fine since RPi CPUs throttle around 80-85°C.

When You Can’t Cut Fins

The real question to ask: “What’s my current CPU temp under load?” If it’s 60°C, cut away. If it’s 78°C, maybe find a different heatsink.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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