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The Unconventional PC - Noctua NH-P1 cooler
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- Опубликовано: 14 авг 2024
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Noctua’s new fanless CPU cooler is HUGE, but with a little elbow grease it can fit anywhere.
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CHAPTERS
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0:00 Intro
0:54 Tiny powerhouse
1:23 Linus Fashion Tips
1:43 The NH-P1
3:33 Will it fit?
4:27 Layout
5:17 Apply sparks to face
5:59 Mounting
7:37 Power on and testing
8:25 Results and Reasoning
9:36 NH-P1 Details
10:21 NH-U12S Redux comparison
11:12 Development and Cost
13:43 Bloopers
4:53 "It was yesterday, everything's a blur."
I have never related with a statement as much in my entire life. Thank you Colin.
It looks like a VCR with a supercharger protruding through the hood lol.
that's so true
That's some mean movie watching exp right there
Will these plastic tapes resist? Could you watch all Fast and Furious HD on it? ;)
@@OursK85 yes but not the new one
If only my VCR had one of those, maybe it wouldn't of died :(
"less dust being sucked into your case" says Linus while standing next to the Great Mariana Trench of gaps in a case
Still less air flowing through, less dust
@@EliteSniperTV if the case has holes im it.. dust is getting in. You are better with a filtered intake. And just make the case positive pressure. And at that point, who cares if your cpu has a fan or not. Passive only works if all cooling can be done passive on a sealed case. Otherwise since you need a fan and a case with holes to cool the rest of the components.. you are best to get a case that takes filtration seriously and just air cool everything. They did a case review that fits that niche.
@@jim4556 Exactly. Jim gets it.
LMG, demonstrably, does not.
I'm no expert on the topic, but it seems to me that dust in a workshop environment (thus including metal shavings) is more dangerous if it's accelerated by a fan (as opposed to falling down undisturbed in a passive case), thereby turning into (slow) miniature shrapnel. Of course, I don't know how big of an issue the dust's conductivity is in comparison if it settles on electronic components in a passive-cooled case.
@@pixelmaster98 biggest thing is just more airflow pulls more dust in. Simple as that. You're right about metal particles etc in shops, then again every mechanic has a 10yr old GRIMY BOI that seems to not care lmao
LTT: literally owns a 4 axis CNC machine, but they chose to cut with a Dremel. Facepalm.
To show you can do it at home
4 axis I think, but still.
@@CockatooDude the tormach is 6 axis capable. Iirc Linus only has a single rotation axis though so 4 axis is correct.
I mean yeah.. You even a little surprised lol?
Faster the way he did it. No need to mess up your cnc with cheap case steel.
Linus: "Don't show that David...Get my good side"
Shuts off camera
Linus metaphysical David Guetta perfect camera
Linus doesn't have a good side. Especially his(hers?) voice.
But apparently what separates him from other losers is a how to make a rather successful RUclips career.
6:10
@@maslascher yup
OOOOOOOOOOH BURN
I love how the pc just turns on, but then the wind just blows in a completely different direction.
You are watching pc builder of company, aren't you?
Have you heard of an intake fan?
Magic.
Jokes and gags, how do they work
if your pc is blowing more air than taking it in, you're doing it wrong.
9:01 This sort of synthetic test would never really happen unless you run, like, long blender renders
Me on my 16th hour of rendering: 🤔
🤔
🤔
Hello CS Ghost! I like ur vids
🤔
🤔🗿
I contracted with a foundry for a few months, back in my youth. The sampling lab PC was eating cooling fans due to metal particles.
Fanless operation absolutely has it's benefits.
The shop I used to work in used fanless thin clients for all of the PCs. Turns out tiny glass slivers from manufacturing combined with the dust the cnc and laser cutter would generate absolutely killed anything with a fan over time. There was a single Threadripper server in a sealed-off part of the building that ran like 5 office PCs.
@@DigitalJediso in other words the air in the office was too contaminated for it to contain normal PC's, but apparently ok for the officeworkers using them?
@@fuzz11111111 These PCs ran cnc machines and such. We wore appropriate PPE, but you can't exactly give a PC a face mask.
@@DigitalJedi lol I read "5 office PCs" and thought "well that doesn't sound like a nice office to work in" but if it was all in an area where PPE was expected then fair enough.
@@fuzz11111111 Yeah sorry about that. Office PC probably isn't the right word for it but that's all I've got for it in English. I'd call them "werkstattcomputer."
In this case, the heat sink is out of the CASE.
ayyyyyy
Case and point.
Get out.
@@walidfakhfakh3660 what
@@pauloa.7609 Mishawaka.
I was doing some 3D modeling work and had not saved for a while, then this sound (1:40) nearly gave me a heart attack
Same lol I was rendering tho
Save early, save often.
@@00O3O1B that can save your hide numerous times but I don't think it is to be relied upon
Still is better to learn manual save muscle memory
Quite a few times it had saved exactly where I hadn't done much work if at all.
@@necrobynerton7384 I "ctrl+s" about every 3 lines of code its a hold over from ctrl+alt+0-9 in the old ZSNESW in Win98 days... "I found a small key.. better save" "cleared a room... bet... *BSOD* "
hahahah i was working in After Effects on a massive Project with 4K Footages and I am dead now, thank you Linus' Cutter!
After trying a passive system, I found that having fans consistently at low speed was much better than having the fans spin up, even to a low speed, when the heat gets too much to dissipate.
What do you mean? You set the fans to kick in at 60°C, they'll kick in at that temperature, cool the system down to let's say 50°C and then they stop. What do you mean by "heat gets too much to dissipate?"
I've been running my machine semi-passive for 7 years and I never ran into such issue.
A real passive system has no fans.
The dust problem is a bigger one than the noise one, for many environments.
@@00O3O1B Like how I have an ac less than a foot away from my head when using my PC. Although it sometimes gets really annoying if I pay attention to it.
That's literally how quiet CPU coolers. They use bigger heatsinks so the fans have to work less hard
much better for what?
*LTT: Has an entire machine shop*
*Linus: Yeah I'm gonna use a Dremel for this*
Yeah, they spent how much on that Tormach CNC which they devoted an episode to already?
Why didn't they just fab a suitable case themselves at that point? Does LMG imagine that other vendors in the computer sector don't fab actual hardware? I know many do, firsthand. To paraphrase one of my old coworkers and managers: "I bled putting that together." And another: "We bent our own sheet metal on that iteration of cases."
The aforementioned coworkers and managers had customers of the likes of Microsoft, Bank of America, Google/Alphabet, Adobe, the US Army, and many more. Not exactly chump change nor in small quantities.
I myself have bent sheet metal for some HVAC systems, albeit using far less sophisticated tools than CNCs. One of the few times I got to use a laser cutter, was for a Burning Man art project (it was at least sponsored though!)
A Dremel was the sort of tool I was excited to get when I wasn't even a teenager. I mostly evolved beyond such things as an adult.
Linus uses basic household tools like a Dremel → people: "why isn't he using his industrial equipment? RAGE RAGE RAGE"
Linus uses industrial equipment → people: "why is he using these high-tech expensive machines? He has gotten so distant and aloof, what an arrogant bastard. Not everybody has access to such tools!"
@@pixelmaster98 dumb people be dumb
@@grey5626 How many people at home are gonna do that? They're gonna grab a dremel and modify some existing case.
@@grey5626 why would he use a CNC for this?
"There's an A hole if I've ever seen one.". Hands down the best Linus joke of all time.
It was literally a laugh-out-loud moment for me! I think primarily because it was so unexpected.
I just started watching. I think that every time I see him.
@@dlewis9760 I've been watching Lino for like a decade. I don't think he's really an a-hole. He seems like one of the coolest bosses on the planet. He holds his employees to a high standard but he seems to really care about them and they seem like a big Lino family. Hes often a clumsy goof who seems to be fine having a laugh at his own expense. Truthfully I have no idea. Maybe he is a giant a-hole.
"I saw what you did there"
I love how proud of himself he was after that one
My heat transfer professor always said the general guideline was 5mm spacing for passive fins… cool to see that in action!
What about for active ones?
@@suntzu1409 probably like 3mm
@@suntzu1409 depends on the fans and thickness. The stronger the fan and thinner the heatsink, the closer the fins. You can see that in watercooling radiators. Thick rads for silent fans have very low FPI (fins per inch), whereas high performance slim rads have very high FPI.
whats a heat transfer Professor?
@@johnmachter40 Engineering professor that teach Heat and Mass transfer course required in engineering degree, especially on chemical and mechanical engineers.
Stabby the knife says: "Never cut towards yourself"
Oh let's grants the metal right into our face next
It seems like production values of the videos are on the rise. Keep up the good work guys!
Just realize, If Linus is born in the 50s, he would probably do hot rod cars.
Linus Torque Tips
Linus tune tips
Or computers because they’ve been a thing since the 1800s 🤡
@Sig Bauer lmaoooo true though
Most likely Radios
Someone make a meme with casual pursepc Linus. Also: "it was yesterday, everything's a blur" is tombstone material.
Everyone: damn that thing would go HOT
Linus : touches it every chance he gets
Everyone: 🤔
Hey everyone, look at this expensive new CNC mill that we got. Ok, now let’s use this Dremel.
I have a CNC router.... and 3 Dremels, they all have a purpose, time and place.
@@DavidtheSwarfer congratulations, so do I. It doesn’t make it less funny.
@@hwgusn can you get less funny than "not at all funny"?
@@rossclutterbuck1060 you seem to be pretty good at it.
* owns a shop with a laser cutter, router, etc * * uses Dremel to mod case anyways *
I think many ltt videos have "you can do it too!" vibe to it. So in this case it is relieving to see that even without perfect precision it is still possible to get good results
@@Muhanoid another shot estufa morphine versus Pensacola Florida
Which tool in the shop would of been best for a thin, bent and painted piece like this?
@@jonasthemovie armandeus tool
@@jonasthemovie probably the small laser. if they wanted ultimate precision. But i think theyre mostly just wanting things Linus can use :P
"I can't recall. It was yesterday everything's a blur."
This is how I feel everyday after school
Fax no printer
More sleep will help with that. Maybe make a tuna fish sandwich for breakfast every once in a while.
6:10 - Best part of the video
if you're 13 year old maybe
Case manufacturer: "This case is smaller than a PS5"
LTT: "And I took that personally"
"Aluminium is pricey" The price you showed is for one ton of it. So one kilo is like $2.50...
True. Really should of added the new tooling costs. All those new die and cutters etc be the big cost after r&d.
The expensive part is the tooling of the Aluminum
@@joebob3683 its actually having 20 ppl sitting in r&d and the 2 big bosses that get paid for agreeing or disagreeing with the r&d designs. those are the cost killers not the tiny whiny production machines, ive seen how bq produces their coolers, the thing is really not that expensive, r&d and heatsink cost eat up 90%
@@tarkitarker0815 well it's true that R&D and stock holders add to the price, just the cost of the tooling it's self is already expensive. The cutting and stamping is very expensive.
@@joebob3683 do you know the cost of a single heatpipe? i bet if you would do your opinion would change. the machinery and the upkeep of it are a one time investment that pays off rather fast (albeit being really expensive at first) (exept for wage of the worker) if you pay for 200 6mm heatpipes 1 piece will cost you 5,60€ price drops to around 4€ at a quantity of 10000 pieces just imagine what 8mm heatpipes cost. heatpipes are IMO the most expensive part of production.
Heh, when you were getting to the "Why would anyone want this?" section, I *immediately* thought of my shop and how this would be *perfect* for my shop's machine which generally doesn't do a lot of super heavy loads but does deal with a crapload of dust.
Sonce I had a CNC machine, I built a chassis with 3 hepa-filters in front of the intake mounted underneath the machine.
But if you have a shop PC designed to not let dust in, aren't the components going to get dusty even without a fan, unless the PC is sealed (preventing the heatsink from convecting properly)?
@@nyanpasu64 actively letting dusty air circulating the pc is going to make the dust accumulate much faster than passively let the heat out. Also total sealing might work, heat can still transfer to the case and then to the outside air.
@@nyanpasu64 The 3 filters are in front of the intake so no dust or debree gets to the PC components. Only the PC exhaust fans are open.
@@Cspacecat I don't do any CNC to speak of, but I do a lot with Wood and the machine is there to have plans up and play music/podcasts while I work. The heaviest load it ever receives is if someone video calls me while I work. I already have a boatload of dust collection on each machine and a whole-shop dust filter, but the machine still attracts an annoying amount of dust in the filters I set up for it. Having a passive solution would obviate the need to change those filters as often as there's no fast moving air to draw it in.
Linus' segways and sponsor spots are like Dad jokes. You groan and moan and sit through them. Riley's are like golden nuggets of comedy. I imagine Colin and Madison would be exceptional as well.
Also from a practical point of view: why not place the PC outside the workspace. That's what I did for a plasma cutter at the company I worked as an intern. PC in the office, run cables for monitor / keyboard and mouse. These days that's even easier to do and keeps the PC well out of harms way.
You know you’re Linus when you segue into your segue
Convincible conventional all Targets Mr the year the brutal down and holds your muffler she instead of the good ideas creative
And you use your sponsor to clean your sponsor
6:10
Yes.
@@DeltaParadoxLLC Segue
Colin's lines are more what you'd call 'guidelines' than actual lines.
Keep slaying it LMG team. I was wondering when you would cover this cooler. And man. It was worth the wait! So creative
Thanks for watching and commenting
Feel free to directly send a text for immediate response WhatsApp/
📬(+1)(2)(3)(4)(7)(5)(7)(0)(4)(0)(1)....
5:59 love it
please, don't ever stop doing those moments/editing
There is something old folks use to measure distances. Its called a RULER.
They arguably had one RULER in a room, in this video, it is Linus. LOL
he could use the laser from his CNC to get the points
Old folks also like using CAPS LOCK
@@peperoni_pepino They called set squares (they're usually sold with two of them and a ruler that's as long as the base of both triangle ) in English but most people just call them triangles heh.
I thought it was called Lorde
"This will never really happen." _Meanwhile Windows starts an update, while I brush my teeth (PC is idle), hitting the TJM._
@@mikeycrackson is installing games on steam supposed to drop performance? I’ve played games while installing another one and I haven’t noticed any drop
what tjm? thermal junction mobile?
@@cmbcallum It decompresses on the fly
@@steriftes thermal junction max - i.e. CPU starts throttling
@@arcador ohhh... so when a cpu hits tjmax, it's starting to throttle, i thought cpu's gonna explode or something when hitting tjm (ngl)
0:23 "Hard to fit in many cases"
u can see his face being proud af for that perfect pun right there
Still had a missed opportunity to say "So we decided to do something out of the box" instead of "fun and creative"
'its hard to fit in any case'
chooses a case that barely has any height for even a normal tower cooler
it clearly hardly fits in any normal case. they chose it to be fun and creative, as he literally said in the video
@@noynayru yes i know he said its for fun, but its kinda infuriating for some reason
@@AgilesRem that's until you remember that most cases have a tempered glass side panel and you may not want to cut into that with a Dremel
@@noynayru likes to comment Starter by 14 with a snowy family
@@Everth97 i mean, assuming you dont NEED to use it in an sff and/ mid towers [i assume if you buy something like the nh p1 you're using a pretty big case]
"...Noctua switched to torx heads for deeze nuts..." made me chuckle
New passive cooler by noctua: exists
Sound Designers and Engineers: SHUT UP AND TAKE OUR MONEY!!!
They are certainly not first nor the only ones to come up with passive cooler. Pretty much any big tower cooler has quite a lot of passive cooling capacity.
I put electronics in small case on the wall made out of 2by4s and plexiglass. 4 120 fans runs as exhaust at the top and there's a intake on the bottom, infront of the intake there's a slot for thin scotch Brite and there's no dust, this system sits in a bakery as you understand there is a lot of flour everywhere except this small box. It stays closed for at least 6 years. The scotch Brite is changed every couple weeks and the one that is filled with flour goes to wash dishes, the new one goes to work as a filter.
Me: Sees thumbnail.
Also me: "Oh I've done that to an Optiplex twice lol"
Me too. Including the vertical video card lol
@@r1cdias We dropped a pentium and put in like an i5 and it was running nuclear meltdown hot so we chopped it and replaced the 115x cooler with a copper cored stock one with like 10x the thermal capacity and the fan and heatsink stuck out like 3 inches loool.
I did the same to a Silverstone Raven with the 92mm Noctua Chromax Black cooler.
Linus: This is an unconventional pc.
Dell: We'll take your entire stock!!
@asdrubale bisanzio are you an employee or sm lmao
@@l7ghtspeed would you like to invest in financing?
@asdrubale bisanzio baby I'm like Snoopy syndrome
@@Deinobi would you like antivirus?
@@tsunakko2293
Mac user: “what’s antivirus?”.
Lol that is one way of doing it... I daily drive this case in the RVZ-02 Version. With mod's it easily handle's the Intel i7-6700k and ASUS Strix 1080ti OC i have in it, silently.
All i did was add three 80mm Noisblocker NB BlackSilent Pro 80x15mm super slim fans as exhaust to the top of the case (with the correct holes made of course), and used the Scythe SCBSK-2100 Big Shuriken 2 Rev. B CPU Cooler for the CPU. The trick for silence was to replace the CPU cooler fan AND replace all the GPU cooler fans (by removing the shroud) with PROLiMA TECH Ultra Sleek Vortex 14 140x15mm fans. It is VERY TIGHT, but the case closes and there is no interference on any fans.
I custom wired the 3 80mm fans and the 140mm fans on the GPU to the GPU fan output harness, applied some silence based fan curves to everything and the PC is so quiet i honestly almost never hear it, unless im gaming at which time it makes more of an quiet air flow noise rather than a loud tingey noise that most small fans would.
It has a mild overclock on the CPU to 4.5ghz, i have the gpu in "OC" mode, and temps are typically in the low to mid 70's while gaming, and its quiet!
MOD's are honestly the only way to get any kind of performance out of these small cases. Rock on LTT!
I am very interested in the idea of the heat sink being outside, with a fan on it too.
Super interested in a design where the case itself is a giant heat sink. With electrical and thermal insulation where needed too of course, such as around soft plastic and grounded shielding.
Haha, I JUST finished building a PC out of this case as this gets uploaded.
If anyone is curious, I put an RTX 3060 Eagle and 5600X in it. Temps are pretty bad out of the box but with a little decrease in voltage/temp target and a Blackridge Heatsink with Noctua Fan, it's much more manageable. Neither the GPU or CPU gets higher than 75c under torture testing.
Pretty cool
Haha
@@adamhooper2476 that's pretty cool, I'm guessing you are trying to preserve the components over pure performance and I like that :D
@@dommert5907 Yea, I don't ever like having components running too hot. 75c is still running very warm but it's way better than running 85-100c, which to me is silly. They might be designed to withstand extreme temps but it's not worth it in my opinion. Sure I'm loosing out on a couple frames (literally 2 fps difference in unigine heaven), or a few seconds in rendering, but lower temps keeps it from wearing out sooner. :)
Industrial PCs have cases with filtered intakes. And you have to clean and replace filters at regular intervals. In case of damaging dust you can use large metal hermetic enclosure.
Hello LMG team, friendly physicist here to clarify something. The radiated heat output from the passive cooler isn't actually constant. Heat transfer becomes more efficient as the delta between the two temperatures of the "reservoirs" (in this case, the cooler, and the room/air). So as the cooler soaks up heat from the CPU and it's temperature rises, it actually becomes a more efficient heat transfer, and transfers more heat to the air more quickly (this is also due to the increased convection it will in turn cause).
Hope this helps, thanks! :)
6:10
He literally says it like “deez nuts”
Very epic
Thanks for watching and commenting
Feel free to directly send a text for immediate response WhatsApp/
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ill never get over how many first comments there are lol
bruh chunguw bruh funny original.mp5 video comment XD lol
About 20% of all comments say "First!" or "Get your before 1000 views medal!"
How are yall getting over 50 likes?
First
14 minute video with over 400 comments 13 minutes after it was posted.
Linus: "It's designed to be used on modern CPU's without any fan.'
Me: Looking straight at fan mounting clips on top of cooler....
Noctua states that it is a passive cooler. They include a fan mount so you can run a higher TDP cpu with the cooler if you want to.
@@DigitalJedi Now that makes sense. Thanks.
5:43 is precisely why I've continue to watch this channel for years on end.
For how seriously Linus can take himself sometimes, he is ALWAYS bringing the humility and self-deprecating humor. Love it
LTT: We have an XCarve and other CNC type machines.
Linus: But, But , Dremel Time...
It has the perfect cupholder heatspreader attached, damn that's a great idea xD, it can keep your coffee warm in the winter
Noctua: We found a way to deal with the hideous color of our fans.
Avid PC Enthusiast: How did you do it?
Noctua: Easy! We got rid of the fans all together.
lmao
Lmaoooo I love how Linus put his face directly in the path of the sparks when using the dremel. Would be so distracting to keep the line straight.
I clean that exact deskmat with a dyson vaccuum at least once a week and seeing this made me feel closer to linus than I ever have.
But what kind of case would be best with this cooler? I don't see how this cooler would be for workshop environments since without fans, the inside of the case would be way too hot and not be able to dissipate the heat. It it supposed to be for a purely negative pressure system that only blows out? Linus wasn't very clear about it at the end and this video's creation has way too many gaps to be for that application so there isn't a good example for how this cooler works in a high dust environment.
Imagine if his parents named him something like, Chad or Brent. We'd have starched popped collar polo cpu shirts. Chad tech tips vodka. Ctt banana hammocks. Ick
My image of the average Brent is the one from PFISpeed channel. The most wholesome guy I've even seen.
Biff. Biff Tech Tips. Or maybe Blaine.
@@TheCrazySquirell Brent's around here are a little on the douchey side. Straight pipe exhaust and laughing at people getting vaccines
@@ScottGrammer lol biff. You'd get wife beaters with btt made to look like BBQ stains, and camo cargo shorts with baby blue lettering on the leg
Imagine his name is Dickson and his short name is Dick. Dick Tech Tips, DTT
LOVE how you include the exploding price of aluminum in this review but not of the Winter 1
I'm running a ryzen 5600g, its undervolted using PBO, my previous cooler was a deepcool gamer storm lucifer v2 running passively, I just brought this NH-P1 along with a better PC case that has vents in the top (previously I just left one side off the case) before I swapped everything over I ran a test where I pegged all cores at 100% for 20 minutes and it got to 79 degrees, then I swapped over to the new case and installed the NH-P1 and ran the test again, after 20 minutes with all cores at 100% it was only at 64 degrees, so I left it running for longer, it eventually got to 66 degrees where it stayed for ages, after 40 minutes it was still at 66 degrees so I ran an iGPU benchmark while the CPU was still at 100%, the highest it got to was 69 degrees, then it dropped back down to 68 degrees, after about 6 or 7 minutes I stopped the iGPU test and the temps dropped down to 67 degrees, after 50 minutes the temps hadn't changed so I stopped the test.
I have to say I'm pretty impressed, its a big upgrade over the deepcool, 15 degrees cooler after the same time period is very impressive, and for the temps to still be only 67 degrees after 50 minutes of all cores running maxed out at 100% and the iGPU running anywhere between 50% to 100% for 6 or 7 minutes in a completely passive case is very good if you ask me, for reference the room was cool, probably around 20 degrees, and at idle the CPU jumps between 28 and 30 degrees.
I like how he keeps running the dremmel near the built system just to throw cringe at the PC builders and engineers in the audience. The RGB looked cool coming through the fins, would look reeeally cool with a TINY bit more
6:15 patiently awaiting its acknowledgment
6:10 a whole painstaking five seconds later!
You should make a (planned and organized) video where you guys try to overclock a modern CPU up to 10GHZ
5:30 ah yes, perfect safety with the grinding tool. Keep grinder rotation away from user, so that in the event the grinder comes loose, it will just fly away, instead of towards the user.
Gonna start calling him Minus when he shaves his beard
At this point just start an advertising company, it's gotten to the point where I'm always trying to predict when the segue will come in😭
How else should they get money
Don't like it don't watch it
@@fabioherrera4132 that is a stupid statement
@@fabioherrera4132 I mean it's like a game to me now
after reading the marketing "sales pitch" and the "yeah but, no but, it depends but, we have come up with our own version so that we have a far better control over what we sell you scale"
‘Fashionable’? You mean awesome, I have taken my build with that case through tsa 12 times and it perfectly fits in the overhead luggage rack of United planes.
1:40 ok this actually made me laugh this was very creative
Is it unconventional because it actually has a graphics card available?
Remember me when this reaches 1k likes
LMAOOOO
early gang
@@micsss_ No one gives a shit gang
4:56 The music is timed so well
You should try and market gaming PC building bundles with your awesome book on your store, or even with local computer resellers, with a focus on getting children into computers and computer gaming early!
If you show your wife, you just bought a ton of new parts to build a PC, she'll be very angry. If you tell her it's a DIY project for learning, and show her the book, she'll be proud of you for doing projects with your children to develop their learning and preparing them for work in the real world! The products will literally sell themeselves
Using a NON-reinforced cutting wheel with the Dremel? Brave man.
Watch out, we have a security nazi over here?
It would be interesting to see passively cooled AMD APU and gaming on it.
not really
WOW!
That heat sink is HUGE!
And that is awesome!
that disclaimer is beyond savage😂
I mean, I get it. Heck, long ago I ran an undervolted overclocked Northwood C on a passive heatsink. For ... reasons. So the option is always welcome.
BUT these days there are so many more innovative cases that I'm really surprised that there aren't more cases DESIGNED to operate as the heatsink. And when you do find one, it tends to be a teeny tiny little bugger. You'd think that by now there'd be a nifty silent gaming solution. If I had a million bucks, I'd design one myself. But I don't. So ... meh.
Some do exist. They've even showed some in the past, e.g. ruclips.net/video/35OyZzCvG0g/видео.html&ab_channel=LinusTechTips
Why they chose to DIY with a Dremel in this one is beyond me. That isn't how it's done. Many environments which demand passively cooled computing (which are dust heavy, which destroys electronics, in short order) will not have case holes without filtration, certainly cutting gaping holes into the cases, causes issues with keep dust out.
Just check out DIYPerks
This cooler with a fan added on would be good tho.
I don't think it would be any better than an NH-D15 - because of the lack of fins and spacing between them
I worked on a pair of Bridgeport CNCs milling graphite for spark-eroders. I'd have killed for a fanless system... No matter how hard you tried, that graphite dust got everywhere!
this cooler is perfect for a 0-failure computer, because it has 1 point of failure and no moving parts
computers who are expected to work at 100% uptime for critical operations with minimum maintenance, while not particularly requiring the strongest capabilities on the market
for example, in tanks
where you send it for potentially months for a field operation with barely any technicians. and it's critical for you to have some mapping and communication method
Elevated Systems SFF NH-P1 build was better and didn't need a Dremel.
I watch that one, he is the Linus for adults. Linus for laughing CJ for information...and sometimes laughing.
Imagine how good a fan-less heat sync can cool if you add fans!
Based on testing, not as great as their normal heat sinks.
Any decent case will come with a dust filter for the intake fan. The positive pressure prevents dust from entering the other openings. In a dusty environment, your setup would suck. I have the Define Mini C and the dust filters are more than 99% effective. I'm amazed that it has no dust in it after being 1 ft off the floor in a dusty room for 3 years. It has a dust filter on the bottom as well.
Wow that thing is sick. Add a little desk fan and you’re making full fps gaming temps
I like how the weight measurer has Linus' face on it
weight measurer sounds so fancy lol
Uhh, the weight watcher? Weight Scale? Weight Plate? Lol
Linus: Modern CPUs have a mechanism to stop them from thermal throttling
My Ryzen 5 3600 at 107 degrees C and still at 3.9 gigahertz
Get a good cooler and thermal paste bruhhhh
My brother's laptop with an i7 1185G7 will happily sit at max turbo and 104C. I'm honestly impressed. My 9th gen laptop doesn't throttle either, but it would at 94C. This one just takes 10 over that like nothing.
6:10
noctua switched to torque heads for DEEZ NUTS lmao🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂
we used the same method for our streaming-PC in the living room. Ryzen 5 2600 @stock and we got the biggest cooler that fits in the Sharkoon C10 case - passively cooled till 75°C, above the CPU-fan blows with min. RPM. works great and is super silent!
12:10 If dust is your main concern, you'd better off using high pressure fans (which Noctua does produce, mainly for water cooler radiators) as intake fans in your case, paired with high quality dust filters.
Even though that cooler is passive, it will require air to circulate around it, and if there's dust in such air, that dust is gonna circulate as well, and eventually end up in your equipment.
Imagine
Linus: it’s so fashionable
*drops the computer
Bruh
Linus already dropped many frames on this video
When the editors pulled the Linus stopped working prank i thought my laptop stopped working. LOL good job editors!
I actually made a Ryzen 3600 and RX 590 build in that PC Case, it was actually really easy to build in. I had to lock the clock speeds of the CPU, so it only runs at 3.7ghz but considering the size of the case, that pretty good
Dremel: Not always the worst tool for the job.
Linus i dont mean to burst your bubble, but your seagues are everything except creative
This brings a whole new meaning to thinking outside the box
Thanks for watching and commenting
Feel free to directly send a text for immediate response WhatsApp/
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I have this cooler in a Thermaltake Level 20 XT in combination with 4 140mm fans at the top which run at a low speed (not audible). These blow a large amount of air onto the cooler and into the case. The big advantage is that I no longer have a screaming CPU fan at max load and the entire system is completely silent. Linus should have carried out this test in a completely different way because this cooler works well in a large airflow.
But can we still mount a fan on it if we choose to?
Ye
Linus is that Tony Stark guy who can never stop bringing the weirdest stuffs to exist
You should check out Mr. Homeless I think you will like him with his crazy controller mods
@@djhokage1 Well he's more like Bruce Banner since he crafts on things that already had a theory/fictional existence.
But LTT's videos are pretty much most of the original and things that nobody asks for usually
Linus I think you underestimate how many people are low noise freaks. This is actually something I would buy. And people spend 100+$ all the time on closed loop cooling.
2:10 somebody hasn't heard of the infamous Scythe Orochi back in the days 😎
aluminum: $3 per kg
linus: expensive because it has aluminum, a whole 1kg of it
am i missing something?
Well usually its just 500g
Also did say needed all new tooling that’s really what would drive up costs along with r&d