As with most of the HAT devices, it is connected directly onto the gpio 
pins. So the CPU is almost completely covered by the board. No chance to 
get it fixed that way.
https://phoscon.de/de/raspbee

<https://phoscon.de/raspbee2/img/raspbee2-close-up-2_2000x.jpg>


Thanks anyway.
Peter  

Am Freitag, 3. April 2020 09:29:23 UTC+2 schrieb Mike Revitt:
>
> Don't know the ZigBee gateway and hard to tell from the pictures what it 
> needs.
>
> But the Flicr case is very similar to most cases, but with the Flicr the 
> case is the heat sink, so instead of attaching the standard heat sink to 
> the CPU module you attach the case via a rectangular extrusion that matches 
> the size of the CPU and goes vertically to the top of the case.
>
> Unfortunately I can't send photos or anything as mine is assembled and the 
> downsize is I can't get to the mother board now as it is attached to the 
> lid. which is an obvious drawback if you want to be able to plug things in 
> etc. I guess that as long as you have a supply of double sided thermal tape 
> you could remove the case and reattach it when required though.
>
> On Thursday, April 2, 2020 at 7:49:30 PM UTC+1, Vetti52 wrote:
>>
>> Looks pretty nice, Mike!
>>
>> do you know, if there is enough room inside the flirc case for a hat 
>> module? My RPi4 also serves as a ZigBee gateway. The zigbee thing is a hat 
>> mounted module board. All of the RPi4 cooling cases, I tried, do not have 
>> enough space for this HAT board. 
>>
>> BTW, after using your solution, the CPU temp is monitored at 54 °C. It 
>> was at ybut 60 °C, but is lower since the latest kernel update. In 
>> comparison to the output of "cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp", 
>> the values vary less then 2 degrees, but they almost always vary. Maybe an 
>> academic question...
>>
>> Thanks so far!
>>
>> Peter
>>
>> Am Samstag, 28. März 2020 15:46:21 UTC+1 schrieb Mike Revitt:
>>>
>>> Can't find the CPU frequency code, but while I am looking I thought you 
>>> might find this interesting, this is the CPU temperature graph from my 
>>> Raspberry Pi.
>>>
>>> On the left is the temperature from the standard case, on the right is 
>>> the temperature after I get a Flirc case, This case not only looks really 
>>> cool but my Raspberry Pi now runs 20 degrees cooler. I am using a Raspberry 
>>> Pi 4 by the way which runs 10 degrees hotter than my 3+.
>>>
>>> https://flirc.tv/more/raspberry-pi-4-case for product data
>>>
>>> https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07WG4DW52/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>>>  
>>> if you want to buy one in the UK
>>>
>>>
>>> [image: daytemp.png]
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thursday, March 26, 2020 at 5:45:52 PM UTC, Meteo Oberwallis wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Am Donnerstag, 26. März 2020 17:42:14 UTC+1 schrieb Mike Revitt: 
>>>> > O have worked out how to get the CPU frequency which sort of helps, 
>>>> but would need to look into this 
>>>> > 
>>>> > On Thursday, March 26, 2020 at 4:09:05 PM UTC, Meteo Oberwallis 
>>>> wrote:Hello. 
>>>> > Is it also possible to read out the CPU load from the Raspberry and 
>>>> write it to the database? 
>>>>
>>>> Sounds good ;-) 
>>>
>>>

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