The Crazy Future of CPU Cooling

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  • Опубликовано: 29 янв 2025

Комментарии • 929

  • @mryeester
    @mryeester  Год назад +359

    is it chilly in here or is it just me? 🥶also, i finally got around to linking the components in my main PC build - check out the description if you're interested what I'm rocking!

  • @mistaBorg
    @mistaBorg Год назад +2414

    i have a feeling that a laser cooler would be "slightly" more expensive than the cpu it will be used on

    • @DragonDenGaming
      @DragonDenGaming Год назад +198

      *dies in poor*

    • @M1szS
      @M1szS Год назад +113

      and use more power

    • @jasonchiu272
      @jasonchiu272 Год назад

      ​@@DragonDenGaming _To unlock the perk 𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐞𝐫 𝐜𝐨𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐠 in the game Real Life™, you must be level 1000 or higher_

    • @sql64
      @sql64 Год назад +192

      ​@@M1szSand need cooling

    • @benjaminmaher8896
      @benjaminmaher8896 Год назад +23

      Just slightly

  • @steveschweitzer4181
    @steveschweitzer4181 Год назад +159

    Having been deployed above the artic circle with laptops the real issue is not the cpu but the screens, plastic cases, storage etc becoming brittle and cracking in the extreme cold.

  • @Silver-go5ch
    @Silver-go5ch 10 месяцев назад +13

    I don't really get it, heat vibrations are random so it should be impossible to lower their momentum with a laser, i would argue that pointing a laser should increase the net momentum of the particles
    Edit: I just read about it, it's actually super clever, so when they point a laser beam at the atoms, if the frequency is enough to excite the atom from it's ground state, it'll absorb the photon and it's momentum in the direction of the photon(direction of the laser will increase), but atoms vibrate randomly in all directions so normally this would cancel out, as expected. What we actually want is a way to somehow make the photos coming towards the direction of the laser absorb the photon, so that it gets slower, and we want the molecules moving away from the laser to be unaffected so that they don't gain momentum, we achieve this by taking Doppler effect into account, because of Doppler effect, the molecules moving in the direction of the laser will observe a slightly higher frequency, so the frequency of the actual beam can be set to be just slightly lower than the energy band gap, the particles moving away don't get excited because they observe a lower frequency and the molecules moving towards the laser get slower because of the increase due to Doppler effect

  • @SirajFlorida
    @SirajFlorida Год назад +542

    If a CPU was cooled to the point that it was effectively becoming a super conductor wouldn't that change the properties of the transistors, making them more conductive as well. It seems reasonable that they would then not be synchronized with the clock and then would function basically at all.

    • @ValentinHhn
      @ValentinHhn Год назад +57

      Silikon becomes superconductive at 0.35K as a quick Google search suggested. In Comparison, Liquid Helium sits at 4.2K, while Laser Cooling could get you down to 0.35K. As far as I know does laser cooling not provide the Power to cool bigger structures, so a micro chip should not be possible to cool down with that...

    • @HUGEHARDTHICKANDVEINY
      @HUGEHARDTHICKANDVEINY Год назад +5

      I'm wondering if superconductive transistors would be able to turn off. What would that graph look like which shows what the voltage across the transistor is based on gate voltage? They aren't simply on or off.

    • @ArmiaKhairy
      @ArmiaKhairy 10 месяцев назад +14

      The CPU may not work well below -70C as the metals in the die will shrink too much, which will noticeably change its conductivity, the silicon transistors itself will require more energy as the valence gap is higher in the semiconductor atoms.
      Note: I spitting bullshit that may be correct.

    • @brawldude2656
      @brawldude2656 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@ArmiaKhairyIve seen videos where they run cpu at -100 and lower

    • @amooingdog3297
      @amooingdog3297 3 месяца назад

      what if you just ran it so it doesnt get that cold

  • @aomanexus4861
    @aomanexus4861 Год назад +84

    I look forward to seeing more of these! They’re fun and feel like something I would do at my workshop

    • @echelonrank3927
      @echelonrank3927 Год назад +1

      i once accidentally put water on a PC board like the guy is doing in the video.
      HA HA what fun, the cpu died within seconds.

  • @Santa-Claus-
    @Santa-Claus- 10 месяцев назад +68

    Material Scientist engineering student here.
    Now i didnt do any background research on this just to make my comment however, from what i am aware of: getting your CPU to that low of a temeprature to enable it being near a superconductor temperatures would actually stop it from functioning properly.
    The semiconductor junctions inside your cpu would approach something called freeze-out (or ionization). In essense you stop the semiconductor junctions from being capable of moving carriers shorting the ICs. At 0K (not that youll get there) you wont have conduction.
    Edit: (no comments yet just adding some more info) rememeber this is semiconductors not metal materials and if you want to look this up quickly you can refer to "Inverse Temperature v. Carrier Concentration"

    • @Gamer_fox6091
      @Gamer_fox6091 8 месяцев назад +3

      is this all smart : yes
      did I read it : no

    • @MPandini
      @MPandini 3 месяца назад

      ​@Gamer_fox6091 I aint reading all dat 🗿

    • @yxtomix
      @yxtomix 3 месяца назад

      u monkey 🦧🗿​@@MPandini

    • @yashbansod5628
      @yashbansod5628 3 месяца назад +4

      Came to say a dumbed down version of this 👆 Semiconductors should not operate at those temperatures otherwise people would be using those cryogenic refrigerators in data centers 💀

  • @victorcheung2217
    @victorcheung2217 10 месяцев назад +705

    Just put your pc in the fridge.

    • @pralayaryan
      @pralayaryan 9 месяцев назад +66

      would break the fridge, then u will have u buy new fridge every few days

    • @bakaneko6639
      @bakaneko6639 9 месяцев назад +63

      Too rich to care

    • @Fikoj
      @Fikoj 9 месяцев назад +14

      We bouta commit tech heresy with this one🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥

    • @Carl_Johnsson
      @Carl_Johnsson 8 месяцев назад +49

      Moisture 💀💀💀

    • @Datkidfromwalmart
      @Datkidfromwalmart 8 месяцев назад

      @@bakaneko6639 Oh, so you're saying you're rich? Well, let me break it down for you, Moneybags. Your wealth can't buy you any taste, class, or a sense of humor. But hey, at least you can drown your sorrows in expensive champagne while the rest of us enjoy a good laugh.

  • @TheOn3Parker
    @TheOn3Parker Год назад +223

    This man deserves all the awards for how high quality and awesome his informative videos are. Keep it up :]

    • @hoomansarrafan9843
      @hoomansarrafan9843 Год назад +3

      bro! the play button is in the background for a reason 😁😁

    • @technischesgaming
      @technischesgaming Год назад

      The quality isn't bad, but I know a lot of RUclipsrs with better quality.

    • @echelonrank3927
      @echelonrank3927 Год назад

      @@technischesgaming he is talking about quality of videos, u answering about the quality of content

    • @technischesgaming
      @technischesgaming Год назад

      @@echelonrank3927 Were is the difference?

    • @echelonrank3927
      @echelonrank3927 Год назад +1

      @@technischesgaming somewhere between the awesome quality of filming and editing, and the average quality of technical info

  • @KSAPCreator
    @KSAPCreator Год назад +374

    imagine a cooling system that uses paper

    • @TechTonic420
      @TechTonic420 Год назад +33

      Dude, that's insane! Just imagine how cost effective that would be.
      Or maybe, just maybe even a fan less cooling and thermal throttling, imagine how efficient it would be in terms of power drawing.
      The future is now dude

    • @antifinance
      @antifinance Год назад +30

      Yo, imagine a cooling system that uses a liquid system. That would be sick.

    • @nlolltube
      @nlolltube Год назад +7

      ​@@antifinancethere is

    • @TechTonic420
      @TechTonic420 Год назад +16

      @@antifinance holy shit! That thing exists!!!!! And it can be bought for under 1000$!!!!! Holy fuck, now that's straight up from the future dudes

    • @XX_101edits
      @XX_101edits Год назад +9

      Imagine an entirely paper pc- the only one I can afford 😂

  • @utubekullanicisi
    @utubekullanicisi Год назад +53

    Another limitation to current cooling technology that I'd like to have seen explored in this video in PCs is the heat transfer efficiency of the materials and whole system between the actual transistors of the processor and your cooling material, be it water, liquid helium or something else. You would probably be able to get quite a bit more thermal efficiency out of your dry ice cooling if the heat spreader (IHS) on top of your CPU was a better material. And even if we remove the IHS and directly cool the die, the transistors are well below the material covering the whole die. To solve this, foundries like TSMC is coming up with solutions like etching micro channels in the die itself for water to reach closer to the transistors to cool them more efficiently.

  • @whatthefunction9140
    @whatthefunction9140 Год назад +112

    You couldn't find some liquid nitrogen??? What am I paying you for?

    • @redacted_vrvr
      @redacted_vrvr Год назад +5

      😂

    • @Master_2024
      @Master_2024 10 месяцев назад

      Lol

    • @agent-mo96
      @agent-mo96 8 месяцев назад

      needed for the cars

    • @Mememeteorite
      @Mememeteorite 6 месяцев назад +2

      Just submerge the cpu into the liquid nitrogen as they are not conductive so it's not a problem

    • @whatthefunction9140
      @whatthefunction9140 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Mememeteorite this guy gets it

  • @guitaristkuro8898
    @guitaristkuro8898 Год назад +95

    I think the fully submerged cooling system in fluid is just funny but also definitely how most server rooms will be cooled over fans.

    • @ValentinHhn
      @ValentinHhn Год назад +3

      Thats what some Quantum Computers use. It won't be used for conventional silicon Computers, since it is so bad in Terms of Energy efficiency! Else they would use that already! In Addition to that is liquid Helium damn expensive, so you would probably Just use liquid nitrogen which is a bit cheaper but still inefficient. Btw that is the only reason why MRI Scans are so god damn expensive.

    • @juanmanuelc6644
      @juanmanuelc6644 Год назад +1

      That's how they cool transformers

    • @guitaristkuro8898
      @guitaristkuro8898 Год назад

      @@ValentinHhn Oh I’m not referring to stuff that crazy. I wish I remembered the name but I believe IBM was working on it and showcased it at a tech con few years ago. It’s purpose built to cool servers and such.

    • @curties
      @curties Год назад +1

      @@guitaristkuro8898 yes there is a solution for submerged server cooling but its just cheaper to run the regular AC units for the server room. you dont want to clean server modules every couple months just because the solution might get conductive (bits of pieces falling of the hardware mixing with the solution).

    • @keerthan7558
      @keerthan7558 Год назад

      DIY PERKS did create that set up once , u can watch his video if you are interested in trying it out.

  • @robhildebrand9914
    @robhildebrand9914 Год назад +8

    The water can only conduct electricity when there’s electrolytes in it, such as salt or magnesium or calcium or potassium, water itself is not conducive to

  • @zerokun2655
    @zerokun2655 Год назад +36

    5:00 actually the risk is the water will pick up dirt/dust and other particles and then conduct electricity. If you could have everything without any dust or other similar things the water would basically be distilled water, and therefore not conduct electricity (then, overtime the water might dilute things like paint or erode a couple of metal particles from the motherboard/heatsinks and will eventually short xD but it takes a loooong time haha)

    • @mrsquiggles1379
      @mrsquiggles1379 Год назад +2

      Was looking for this comment lmao

    • @algiz8337
      @algiz8337 Год назад +1

      *me applying flex seal to the motherboard

  • @creeplickitaOFFICIAL
    @creeplickitaOFFICIAL 8 месяцев назад +3

    9:45 this feels like going underwater with a pc case wich is entirely closed, since it doesnt need cool air from the outside...

  • @PCBWay
    @PCBWay Год назад +5

    We just love your content sooooo much!!🥳🥳

    • @Shadowshark-official
      @Shadowshark-official 9 месяцев назад +1

      Sick I didn’t know PCBway had a channel

    • @PCBWay
      @PCBWay 9 месяцев назад

      @@Shadowshark-official Wanna cry

  • @lostboyj_name818
    @lostboyj_name818 2 месяца назад +1

    I love how u showed what a qubit is, it's simple but efficient to understand!

  • @MrArthurdivino
    @MrArthurdivino Год назад +3

    This video was just great, love it and the sound track as well.

  • @Automobile7777
    @Automobile7777 Год назад +13

    Someone should make a pc that uses crazy over-the-top parts similar to what this guy did for the cooling system in this video but for every piece of hardware

    • @KingHalbatorix
      @KingHalbatorix Год назад +1

      overclockers do this all the time, it's not practical for day-to-day use

    • @tristanbackup2536
      @tristanbackup2536 Год назад

      Just imagining how efficient the system is doing that. 😂

  • @tramcrazy
    @tramcrazy Год назад +4

    Please do more long form videos! They are so interesting and I learnt a lot!

  • @Shankzs-c5e
    @Shankzs-c5e 3 месяца назад +10

    Just bring your PC in Antarctica and play some games

  • @JessicaFEREM
    @JessicaFEREM Год назад +15

    the AC thing may be a decent option, you would be able to pipe it into the CPU cooler in a case easily and then you pipe the hot air outside.
    just make sure to get a 2 pipe one.
    I guess it could be used to cool your pc first and then cool your room.
    though you can do what I do, turn on the whole home AC and then put your pc next to it so it gets cold air

    • @omegaprime516
      @omegaprime516 Год назад +3

      Electricity costs make it an issue. Heating and cooling require a lot of watts. If you have a 500 watt PC with everything running, an ac cooling that computer may be equivalent to running a 1500-2000 watt system. Not to mention that 2000 watts is mighty close to your wall outlet plugs power limit, so the ac would have to be on a different breaker than your PC so you don't trip anything.
      No rides for free in life I'm afraid.

    • @peterlovegood3361
      @peterlovegood3361 Год назад +1

      @@omegaprime516 I mean, there's countries where light bill isn't an issue, I have a 750w computer running with an AC on that very same room, what would really be the difference?

  • @michaelskorka2697
    @michaelskorka2697 Год назад +2

    i love your work, i did not know you did videos, keep it up man

  • @joistiller7195
    @joistiller7195 Год назад +3

    I love the detail at 0:10 where the temperature stops at -273 degree celcius as it's the rounded absolute zero temperature

    • @limonboi7253
      @limonboi7253 Год назад +1

      I hate physics and chemistry but i love that we know these kind of "easter eggs"

  • @fever081
    @fever081 3 месяца назад +1

    9:29 no resistance means electrical reflections, basically bounces between PC components and individual transistors, introducing huge unwanted noise and system instability, especially at the frequencies used by modern computers. So 0 resistance is a hugely undesired effect

  • @nextgen3ric
    @nextgen3ric Год назад +10

    I didnt really put it together before this video, but essentially laser cooling is adjacent to tractor beams from science fiction, isn't it?

    • @PiotrBarcz
      @PiotrBarcz День назад

      Nope, tractor beams likely just use insanely dense gravity projection. The only way I can think of that working would be being able to compress enough matter into one space to create a gravitational field and then somehow project said field but there's no way to do that.

  • @TheTall
    @TheTall Год назад

    First time I see a video from you that not a short. So happy :)

  • @pctechadam1188
    @pctechadam1188 Год назад +16

    I'm sure someone else has already mentioned this, but cooling material down to superconducting states does allow flow of electricity through non-conductive materials, which would mean the electrical gates in your processor would not function properly and allow flow of electricity to areas you may not want it to.

  • @corneraction6765
    @corneraction6765 8 месяцев назад +1

    Fun fact: dry ice sublimates instead of melting which gives that vapor. Basically going from solid to gas because of its triple point.
    Also another fun fact is that, pure water is not conductive to electricity. Its when contaminants get into it which makes it conductive. Silica gel is good at absorbing moisture.

  • @Xlementery
    @Xlementery Год назад +14

    My old 2009 laptop was over heating so I needed to close it every 30 minutes and freezed it for 15 minutes and contunied.
    Also it had 2x4 Gb ddr3 1666mhz ram
    intel i5 3210m
    nvidia gt635
    500 gb 5400rpm slow as hell hdd
    17 inch 60hz 900p screen
    lenovo g780

    • @deafomega
      @deafomega Год назад +1

      open that up and reapply thermal paste lol

    • @peterwoods8299
      @peterwoods8299 Год назад +1

      Hey op the i5 3210m came out in 2012... I think you mean 3210m

    • @Xlementery
      @Xlementery Год назад +1

      I changed it thanks @peterwoods8299

  • @Virtue2721
    @Virtue2721 6 месяцев назад +1

    I really would have liked to see the effects on the PC being stress tested at these ultra low temps.

  • @buchanpeter
    @buchanpeter Год назад +3

    Another wild idea for cooling metal is the John Searl effect.
    Magnets spinning round non magnetic neodymium cools it down to below freezing.

    • @richardsmith9615
      @richardsmith9615 Год назад +1

      I have never heard of that before! Very cool, is that what they use in the lab experiments to approach absolute zero?

    • @buchanpeter
      @buchanpeter Год назад +1

      @@richardsmith9615 Its kinda complicated. It was tech that was invented many decades ago. It was one of those free energy generators. John Searl invented it using industrial tech working at a power plant. I can't remember everything about it. But things went pear shaped. The project was abandonded. He kept one device running in his home for 30 years or something getting free electric. He was told to turn it off by the government though.
      Ppl have tried to replicate the technology and have failed. There was a Russian guy that was close to replicating it. He managed to get the metal in the middle cold enough to see frost form at the top.
      Its all on youtube.
      The way it works is that the magnetic field gets so strong that it pulls the electrons right out of the metal and it gets colder. Need high RPM's though to do it.

    • @richardsmith9615
      @richardsmith9615 Год назад

      @@buchanpeter I appreciate the explanation, my friend. I'll have to look it up in detail. Thanks

    • @brandon9172
      @brandon9172 Год назад

      fake

    • @richardsmith9615
      @richardsmith9615 Год назад

      @@brandon9172 I looked it up, it's not fake, it's possible that its efficacy is exaggerated, but the principle is not fake.

  • @andrebenoit404
    @andrebenoit404 Год назад +1

    Boy am I so glad that the temperature standard for PC's is celcius.

  • @test-rj2vl
    @test-rj2vl Год назад +12

    Laser cooling is an interesting idea. Makes me wonder if one day I can cool my house with lasers instead of air conditioner?

    • @satsumagt5284
      @satsumagt5284 Год назад

      Don’t look at it

    • @_TechZen
      @_TechZen Год назад +1

      Just imagine they are pushing your molecules and you cant move..
      PLEASE dont take this seriously I am just joking

    • @echelonrank3927
      @echelonrank3927 Год назад +1

      every techbro wants to cool his tech with lasers, but i want to cool my house with a shark.
      ppl be like, his house is so cool theres even a shark in there🤩

    • @1tgb4yb25ub5ub
      @1tgb4yb25ub5ub Год назад

      ​@Katlyst_ wait i can float *stary eyes and joy*
      *sees read more* ? whats this
      *sadness*

    • @omegaprime516
      @omegaprime516 Год назад

      Your house would start off unbelievably bright and progressively get darker (until house lighting took over) until the house is cooled to the programmed temp; As it converts infrared heat to light energy by exciting the molecules to a higher energy state.
      Just like battletech light emitting heatsinks the clans developed. It would work on that same principle. So if your ok (and your neighbors) with excessive light pollution (inside your house) for those moments before being cooled to the target temp, than your golden.
      If you don't mind the experience of being inside a light bulb, than you would probably hate what it could do with your body. If the lasers can interact and phase change air, it can and will affect your body. So you probably couldn't be inside your own home when it's on due to phase change in the body and possible melanoma skin cancer (as so e light emissions would surely be in the uv range).
      It probably wouldn't be safe to be in the area with it operating without a shit and eye protection (like welding goggles).

  • @z1kesss
    @z1kesss Год назад +1

    you have earned a sub bro, learned a lot in this video too

  • @apex7843
    @apex7843 Год назад +4

    Another great way to avoid that is silica gel the thing you get when you buy new shoes it absorbs water meaning it could absorb the water from the condensation

    • @Un1234l
      @Un1234l 11 месяцев назад

      Dessicants don't work that well in an open environment I'm assuming

  • @SaidThoughts
    @SaidThoughts Год назад +1

    2 large bags of ice, air flow pulling the coolness away. I can only imagine the condensation puddles. Not something I'd suggest repeating for viewers. You could leak water into the electronics, but still a fun experiment none the less.

  • @DipsanDhimalNepali
    @DipsanDhimalNepali 6 месяцев назад +7

    0:54 His Face

  • @mohannedYousif-sy7nc
    @mohannedYousif-sy7nc Год назад

    Honestly I like the smile on you face and the passion you put in your videos thank you rasta

  • @shivamvishwakarma9520
    @shivamvishwakarma9520 Год назад +3

    One Question .. Increasing Hard disk Motor Speed .. Can Increase Hard Disk Performance ..?

    • @techgame_ita
      @techgame_ita Год назад +1

      Yes, more rpm means faster hardisk,the max we built was 7200rpm that can read and write at a speed of 6gb/s

    • @hatsumi_rou_
      @hatsumi_rou_ Год назад +1

      ​@@techgame_itawe have 15k rpm hard drive

    • @techgame_ita
      @techgame_ita Год назад +1

      @@hatsumi_rou_ yeah but these are only for SAS system or for server systems
      I never saw someone buying one one for their pc because these hdd aren't better than an ssd and are more expensive

    • @hatsumi_rou_
      @hatsumi_rou_ Год назад +1

      @@techgame_ita well I guess I'm lucky because I have a Cheetah

  • @HK22A
    @HK22A Год назад +1

    I just updated my bios and accidently got turn off. Now i have a black screen anyone have a solution?

  • @Nutch.
    @Nutch. Год назад +4

    The condensation on the heat sink probably would not cause a short circuit. Since the water had condensed out of the air, it would be quite pure, meaning there would be nothing dissolved into it to carry charges. The reason you would want to avoid getting condensation on any electrical components is because it can oxidize electrical contacts, which can prevent current from flowing.

    • @Flesh_Wizard
      @Flesh_Wizard Год назад +2

      What about stuff on the heat sink getting in the ice itself and then in the CPU

  • @Techno-Universal
    @Techno-Universal Год назад +2

    Imagine that laser cooling system being used for a superconducting zero friction joint on train wheels with AC frictionless motors being used. That sort of system could theoretically make it possible for a train on iron rails to travel at supersonic speeds.

    • @omegaprime516
      @omegaprime516 Год назад +2

      We have magnalev and magnarails which can do that like your laser train idea. Problem with both is the amount of power you need to get those speeds, it increases exponentially.

  • @amb_13
    @amb_13 11 месяцев назад +15

    The future of electricity bills

    • @SlimFitBilim
      @SlimFitBilim 7 месяцев назад

      Lazer ısıtıyor nasıl soğutacak 🤣

  • @rch5395
    @rch5395 Год назад

    Finally after many weeks a video instead of a short.

  • @dclips8478
    @dclips8478 Год назад +3

    Imagine buying a cpu cooler in a few years and instead of getting a copper brick and thermal paste syringe
    they deliver a laser and a pot of vasiline. That would be awesome :D

  • @scubasleeve3497
    @scubasleeve3497 Месяц назад +1

    If I ever build a house from scratch I will make a small closet behind my office wall and my PC will be placed in that closet with an A/C unit like this (or maybe just run a central AC duct into the closet). I'll just have an I/O panel on the office wall for my peripherals. I wonder how carbon/graphite pads would work at those low temperatures. It seems like they would not be affected adversely at all, but what do I know?

  • @sektormk6484
    @sektormk6484 Год назад +3

    You should make more of this long videos

  • @SirDoooche
    @SirDoooche Год назад

    In the intro, i love that you cut it exactly at 273, Absolute zero. Fantastic

  • @silverhawk732.
    @silverhawk732. Год назад +5

    Imagine he is ur science teacher

    • @it_thunderxrt
      @it_thunderxrt Год назад

      Every graduate will become an expert 😅

  • @EverythingSim
    @EverythingSim Год назад

    Yeester you’re the man. I love these experiments!

  • @JordanN404
    @JordanN404 Год назад +9

    Lol people commenting great video before even finishing it…

    • @Emenemx
      @Emenemx Год назад

      Not gonna lie, I did 🫤

  • @selorius28
    @selorius28 Год назад

    water condensation can be directed by modifying the radiator, where there is no water, high-temperature silicone is used, and where heat exchange is to take place and where water condensation is to occur, the radiator is silicone-free

  • @ChaosCraft0000
    @ChaosCraft0000 8 месяцев назад +3

    Bro Nothing can be Colder than -273,15 Degrees Celsius

    • @CG21110
      @CG21110 7 месяцев назад +2

      What about -273,16

    • @ChaosCraft0000
      @ChaosCraft0000 7 месяцев назад

      @@CG21110 nope

    • @Duodecilion_
      @Duodecilion_ 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@CG21110 ever heard of absolute zero the coldest point possible

    • @a_asp829
      @a_asp829 4 месяца назад

      ​@@CG21110heat are measured with atom rapid movement more heat moves more but when coldest it stop and nothing can be lower than *stop*

  • @petterlarsson7257
    @petterlarsson7257 Год назад +1

    HOLY SHIT WHY ARE YOU TOUCHING THE DRY ICE WITH BARE HANDS

  • @jleiros
    @jleiros 11 месяцев назад +3

    3:10 That CPU is certainly NOT hitting -60/70 with a small block of dry ice laying on the heatsink.. Stopped watching right here

  • @CraftedLeah4545
    @CraftedLeah4545 Месяц назад

    I have one of those A/C portable units in my room, it’s literally the best thing I could’ve asked for (I live in Arizona, daily temperatures in the summer reach 110F)
    It’s a window cooler, put the output outside a window, it pushes out hot air and filters in the cold air

  • @Pixamporter
    @Pixamporter Год назад +3

    pls buy a new mic

  • @marcusmt4746
    @marcusmt4746 Год назад

    The next step forward in cooling is the classic cooling system of a refrigerator inside a PC case.
    A sealed system of copper tubes has a quiet compressor and one common radiator blown by large, quiet fans.

  • @tkthelms1273
    @tkthelms1273 Год назад +1

    Id like yo point out that straight water H2O is entirely non conductive. The reason it is conductive is the metallic impurities inside the water, for example, Iron, copper, zinc and calcium can be present in regular drinking water. Condensation normally contains these impurities still due to general localised cooling includes metallic gasses that can get dissolved into the water as it condensates.

  • @quint3ssent1a
    @quint3ssent1a Год назад +1

    Best cooling setup would be a bath of liquid acetone cooled by chunks of dry ice. That iced cocktail (shaken, not stirred) rapidly cools down anything it's bolted to. Just keep the acetone from evaporating and toss a new block of dry ice every now and then.

  • @Marlow-er1lu
    @Marlow-er1lu Год назад +1

    So what if flex spray to waterproof your PC and use dry ice to cool

  • @easygraphicslk5227
    @easygraphicslk5227 Год назад +1

    we need a gaming video with that dry ice cooling system

  • @NoMouse_Gang
    @NoMouse_Gang 2 месяца назад +1

    3:37 wut dis song

  • @MaskRobloxOfficial
    @MaskRobloxOfficial Год назад +2

    Okay with that all said and done, theres one question that still remains. Will the laser cooler be able to cool the 13900ks without thermal throttling the cpu while overclocked? Truly an immovable object meets omnipotent force moment.

  • @gabix4501
    @gabix4501 Месяц назад

    So for those who don't understand, before doing anything, your components heat can't go velow 7C° or it will be damaged

  • @maritoguionyo
    @maritoguionyo 11 месяцев назад +2

    4:25 isn't it technically distilled

  • @thilo_117
    @thilo_117 Год назад

    nice to see something like this, this was always my dream, but i failed the study - tickels me from time to time

  • @kasen_472
    @kasen_472 11 месяцев назад

    The audio on this video and execution made me think i was watching a reallllllllyyyyy long youtube short XD

  • @MananSaini-y2o
    @MananSaini-y2o 3 месяца назад

    i have that slim and simple kind of pc and whenevrs it over heats it lay it down vertically and take a plate with a bit of water and full of ice cubes and put it on the cabinet for first time i was really suprised because the temps went down and my 5-8fps was boosted 🎉😊

  • @BrotherAzrael
    @BrotherAzrael Год назад

    The electrodes inside the processor froze turning into the legendary material Frozen Lightning. Well done! You can now upgrade your Leviathan Axe with thunderous power by socketing this CPU.

  • @jmjneary
    @jmjneary Месяц назад +1

    I hope you had a benchmark running. Haven't seen one yet but it's easy to cool a cpu at idle which is what it seems you are doing at the point of the video I am watching

  • @abdelali9279
    @abdelali9279 Год назад

    PCs are about to look like between a Star Wars space battle and an 80's glam metal concert.

  • @dandenton2438
    @dandenton2438 Год назад

    Your content is awesome, bro. keep it up .

  • @danielarobbins
    @danielarobbins Год назад

    You have a great voice man! Love the videos

  • @Reds_Guy
    @Reds_Guy Год назад +1

    That a future use little pack processor and just change random time to make a new -0 temp 0_o

  • @AKU666
    @AKU666 Год назад

    Also there's interesting tech. called nanorectenna. Basically it's consume infrared light and turn it to electricity. But it's still work-in-progress.

  • @ShengfengFei
    @ShengfengFei 6 месяцев назад +1

    What happens when you touch dry ice to a cpu while it is under a stress test?

  • @wahab_mughal006
    @wahab_mughal006 Год назад +1

    Imagine living your life with Intel Core 2 Duo E7600 With 4GB of RAM and 180 GB of HHD
    WITH AN AWESOME 60 Degree Celsius Temperature
    and yea That is my PCs Specs.......

  • @Starfieldismylife
    @Starfieldismylife Год назад +1

    Id love a future in which we don't have to worry about coolong anymore

  • @BrentLeVasseur
    @BrentLeVasseur Год назад +1

    Regular water is a conductor due to its mineral content (like salts). However, distilled water (with no minerals) is one of the best dialectic materials around. In fact in Nikola Tesla’s day, they typically made large capacitors using nothing but jars of distilled water as the dialectic barrier with a metal cathode and anode.

  • @alphatalks7759
    @alphatalks7759 Месяц назад

    THE TEMPERATURE DID SOUND GOOD WITHOUT STRESS ON IT

  • @Yoschi9788
    @Yoschi9788 9 месяцев назад

    very epic and entertaining but that mic tho, other than that this is very nice i love it 😊

  • @Metals21
    @Metals21 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is a pipe dream, but in the long forseable future we will see computers integrated into HVAC systems in some form. Can utilize the heat output in winter and A/C to cool PC in summer.

  • @ethandoessomestuff...8949
    @ethandoessomestuff...8949 11 месяцев назад

    Dont worry, with the dry ice it's essentially just distilled water pulled directly from the air. Distilled water acts as an insulator. As long as your system is clean you wont get any conductors mixed into the water.

  • @DubbuhJay
    @DubbuhJay 9 месяцев назад

    Great video! Slight nitpick though; dry ice sublimates, as it goes directly from solid to gas. Evaporation is when a liquid becomes a vapor

  • @prometeusz8552
    @prometeusz8552 Год назад +2

    Whats the name of the song at 3:10?

  • @Laughing_Dragon
    @Laughing_Dragon Год назад

    all I get from this in the end, is in the future, freeze rays might exist through laser cooling...
    and I can already hear the Mr.Freeze puns happening.

  • @sggsquadpresents
    @sggsquadpresents Год назад

    mryesster: no heat = endgame cooling
    Me: Not yet, cooling the lasers and cooling the laser coolers etc

  • @chingu1980
    @chingu1980 Год назад

    Fun fact, if you set the portable a unit to heat rather than cool, you get cold air out the back and don't need the duct tape an elbow grease...

  • @swahkennison7116
    @swahkennison7116 Месяц назад

    You can also protect from condensation with modeling clay and the craft moldable eraser stuff.

  • @craigmccune6066
    @craigmccune6066 7 месяцев назад

    problem with porable A/C units is that they are generaly not A/Cs, they are swamp coolers. if heat is not comeing out in any way, and/or it requires refills, it is prob a swamp cooler.

  • @ralsnax3
    @ralsnax3 11 месяцев назад

    this guy teaching science lessons while recording

  • @TOOL_TECHNICAL
    @TOOL_TECHNICAL Год назад

    This is interesting considering most people immediately consider particle beams and lasers to be used for melting and heating only.

  • @cpt.Atomic
    @cpt.Atomic Год назад

    love your videos man

  • @srivathsansudarsanan3372
    @srivathsansudarsanan3372 Год назад +2

    No quantum computing is not the future of home pc. I am a researcher at quantum computing. It has vastly different purpose. Generally we use computers for repeated tasks meanwhile quantum computing is used more for high number crunching. We use matrix and qft to do the number crunching with qubits. The advantage of qubits is that it has 3 different stages that corresponds to magnetic spin of the fermions inside the atom. Only very few atoms can be suspended in space with laser cooling and it requires an enormous amount of time and resources to even do that. Also there is further cooling after laser cooling. After stopping the atoms and flushing the atoms at the higher temp away, you will switch off the lasers causing the atoms to expand once again causing the atoms to fall to an even lower energy level.

  • @coolkelynroxx4585
    @coolkelynroxx4585 24 дня назад

    To actually have superconduction, you actually require superconducting materials; such as ytterium barium copper oxide. Silicon itself cannot superconduct and you actually need the silicon to be a semiconductor for normal electronics. Just saying this for anyone who doesn't know

  • @musab1795
    @musab1795 3 месяца назад

    cpu is so cold that now we need to heat it 🥶

  • @MotoboyKen
    @MotoboyKen Год назад

    Amazing explanation uncle yeester 👍