I have an electronics related problem I have been trying to solve for at least a month and I'm hoping your guys could help me with a functional strategy to solve it.
I am basically trying to power my project which requires 12 Volts DC and up to 5 Amps (typically runs at 3.7 Amps). I need to support AC and DC power from a range of 17V to 30V. The issue here is heat management. I am using two voltage regulators each capable of handling up to 3 Amps using a shared current configuration with 3 Amp diodes acting as load balancers. I am also using a 6 Amp bridge rectifier active only when AC power is applied.
The Bridge rectifier and Voltage regulators get quite hot and require a very large heat sink. The heat sink does the job fine, but it idles at up to 70C which i'd prefer not to happen in this particular application.
Is there a way I can lower the heat output of this circuit without adding too much extra cost? Could I somehow use a transformer to improve my heat problem? I can't use a fan in this application so its either use a very large aluminium heat sink or find some strategy that tempers the heat with a high amp load. I am also open to use 120VAC if this somehow improves my heat issue as long as it does not add too much cost.
Thank you in advance for your help.

I am basically trying to power my project which requires 12 Volts DC and up to 5 Amps (typically runs at 3.7 Amps). I need to support AC and DC power from a range of 17V to 30V. The issue here is heat management. I am using two voltage regulators each capable of handling up to 3 Amps using a shared current configuration with 3 Amp diodes acting as load balancers. I am also using a 6 Amp bridge rectifier active only when AC power is applied.
The Bridge rectifier and Voltage regulators get quite hot and require a very large heat sink. The heat sink does the job fine, but it idles at up to 70C which i'd prefer not to happen in this particular application.
Is there a way I can lower the heat output of this circuit without adding too much extra cost? Could I somehow use a transformer to improve my heat problem? I can't use a fan in this application so its either use a very large aluminium heat sink or find some strategy that tempers the heat with a high amp load. I am also open to use 120VAC if this somehow improves my heat issue as long as it does not add too much cost.
Thank you in advance for your help.
