I was wondering about the alignment of the chassis holes and the printed circuit board holes for the driver and pre-driver transistors. It seemed like that could have been an Achilles heel not knowing the tolerance Phase Linear adheared to when punching the holes. The board looks great and I'm glad this all worked out so well.
This is an awesome advancement - kudos again.
Hi Dennis
Thermal coupling via a short aluminum standoff gets the bias tranny up on top of the board where you can properly connect it and provide a secured attachment point for the wires. The thermal path is short and all aluminum for good conductivity.
The PL chassis were punched pretty accurately on the X-Y coordinate basis. The only observation that I have is they seemed to have worn punches in 2 locations near the RCA inlets. Those end up slightly undersized but are easily made the right size by a twist of a 0.234" drill bit.
I determined the original locations by caliper measurements first and then confirmed same by comparison to the readout from a CMM machine scan that I had done on the chassis. I converted all that into a SolidWorks model for the back wall.
The board is dual to allow that AC thermal cutout and the standoffs for the board with no practical interference. I did look at one board early on but the size is unwieldy and you end up paying a lot for a 4 layer board that size with a lot of cutouts. I gravitated to the 2 board set to keep costs down to a minimum. 4 layer boards are still expensive but not as much as one big board would have been. The smaller size also makes it easier to assemble each and keeps flexing with the chassis to a minimum.