Small circulating fan to cool amps


I have two tube amps that are on a rack system with wood shelves. Because of the space requirements of all the components on the rack, there is not as much space as I'd like to see between the top of the amps and the under side of the shelve above. Although I have not had any problem to date, I'd like to make sure it stays that way. These amps do throw a fair amount of heat. Has anyone had any experience with a small fan that could be used for ventilation? I looked at Radio Shack and although they had a number of small fans, the smallest and lightest ones were 12v. I'd much prefer to run off wall current, but I don't have alot of space in which to situate the fan. Their non-battery fans were just too big and heavy. Any suggestions?
frankm1

Showing 4 responses by nsgarch

A cool (no pun intended) way to do it if you have a couple inches under your amp shelf, is to cut a couple of four inch holes (or whatever the fan dia. is) in the amp shelf itself, and mount the fans to the bottom of the shelf blowing up at the amp's bottom, which if it's not solid, will provide sufficient air movement to keep them from overheating.

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Frankm1, you didn't say if your amps are tube or ss, but I was thinking that if space is tight, you could buy some of those really little computer fans (they're only about 1.5 in square) that they put right on the printed circuit boards over IC chips like on video cards. They're very quiet and powerful enough for your needs, and just set them on top of the tube cage or over the vent slots of a ss unit.
Guess I read too fast. What kind of tube amps are they. I want to look at how the tubes are arranged.
Bob, I was going to ask the same question a inpep. Mainly because for years, ARC used forced draft (I don't know if they still do.)