On Thu, 9 Jan 2003, Alvin Starr wrote:
> George Gambill wrote:
> > In the late 1970's a friend (an engineer for Motorola) showed me a study,
> > indicating that for each 10 deg C (18 deg F) you increased the temperature
> > of an IC, you cut it's life in half.
> >
> > Does that rule still apply??
George Gambill wrote:
In the late 1970's a friend (an engineer for Motorola) showed me a study,
indicating that for each 10 deg C (18 deg F) you increased the temperature
of an IC, you cut it's life in half.
Does that rule still apply??? Who knows?
It may still be true but if you take into con
Hi
> The AT power supply in my workstation kept getting noisier and noisier so
> this morning I got fed up and replaced the fan. While I was at it, I hooked
> it up at 6 volts instead of 12. I figure that my diskless workstation is not
> drawing much power so why do I need such a powerful fan?
In the late 1970's a friend (an engineer for Motorola) showed me a study,
indicating that for each 10 deg C (18 deg F) you increased the temperature
of an IC, you cut it's life in half.
Does that rule still apply??? Who knows?
-Original Message-
From: Stuart Baird <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Or