Insights · Report · Rugged Hardware · Apr 2026
Combatting the unique thermal challenges of unpressurized airspace: understanding the loss of convective cooling, mitigating arcing risks, and specifying specialized heat pipes for high-altitude hardware.
Deploying electronic hardware in the thin atmosphere of high altitudes drastically diminishes its thermal reliability. At 25,000 feet, the air density plummets significantly. A robust fan designed to aggressively push heavy sea-level air across a hot processor heat sink will merely spin futilely in the thin upper atmosphere, completely failing to provide the required convective cooling.
Conduction becomes the primary thermal escape path. If the hardware cannot push heat into the air, it must pull heat aggressively out through the chassis. Engineers must heavily utilize massive internal thermal blocks, specialized graphite pads, and pure copper heat pipes to directly route the thermal energy away from the delicate processors and strictly into the outer metal shell of the unit.
High voltage arcing is a distinct high-altitude hazard. In a dense sea-level atmosphere, air acts as a capable insulator. In the thin stratosphere, the dielectric strength of the air drops dramatically. Two power supply traces placed closely together on a PCB that performed perfectly safely on the ground may suddenly arc violently at 30,000 feet, resulting in a devastating electrical short circuit.

Validation testing absolutely dictates operating specialized environmental chambers. The testing sequence must specifically combine extreme cold simultaneously with massive atmospheric depressurization. Simply testing the hardware in a cold freezer is insufficient; the exact combination of low air density and low temperature determines exactly whether the internal components will overheat internally despite the frozen environment outside.
We can present findings in a working session, map recommendations to your portfolio and risk register, and help you prioritize next steps with clear owners and timelines.