Комментарии •

  • @Kaos2244220011
    @Kaos2244220011 Год назад +51

    Hell yeah, you're being too hard on yourself my guy, when you manage your expectations, you'll manage to have more fun too!

  • @TheRageface13
    @TheRageface13 Год назад +38

    Don't be so hard on yourself my dude. You managed to make something workable from goodwill cups! That's a fucking achievement in itself!

  • @grantd8629
    @grantd8629 Год назад +31

    Amazing video yet again :) and here I am again to make a lengthy list of suggestions, mostly corrections to the first advice I gave lmao
    1. Helium trick works way better with a much more accurate gauge and at lower pressures than your current gauge can read, my bad :/
    2. Viton is much better than silicone BUT not flat gaskets, o-rings are much more preferable since they have minimal contact and don’t trap gases as easily
    3. Cycle purging, or pre purging your chamber, don’t know why I didn’t think of that one earlier *facepalm* but anyways use a dry gas of any kind to help remove volatiles and water vapor
    4. On the note of water vapor, it’s the high/ultrahigh vacuum’s biggest nemesis since it likes to “cling” to stuff, having a way to bake out your system would be beneficial, in true cranktowncity fashion you could probably manage this just by taking a blowtorch to it as long as you don’t get the gaskets too hot lmao
    5. And of course what you mentioned and I somehow completely missed earlier, the roughing pump, that definitely would’ve been the biggest improvement and probably the easiest one since 2 stage pumps and decent pump oil are pretty cheap *facepalm x2*
    Anyways love your content man keep it up :D

    • @cranktowncity
      @cranktowncity Год назад +6

      Hell yeah man, thanks for all the advice. I still got my eyes on your channel waiting for that sputtering machine (If you ever get time off work haha)

    • @btkjay9598
      @btkjay9598 Год назад +1

      Something i havent totally understand is how improving the roughing pump would help to to achive higher vacuum unleast you are talking about shortening the time to achive uhv since the diffusion pump is suppose to be the main pump that bring the chamber to uhv after the roughing pump is already ineffective

    • @thomasspielauer2915
      @thomasspielauer2915 Год назад

      @@btkjay9598 Even though the main pump is achieving the UHV there is always some leakage back through the pump (they only are capable of building up a pressure gradient even if not in laminar flow region). This leakage is significantly lower when reducing the pressure at the backing pump (and also pump speed is increased massively of course).
      By the way viton gaskets: Beware that they get brittle after being hot or very cold (when using them on top of commercial ODPs they're usually single use only).
      Baking chambers usually works for UHV systems up to around at most 200 Celsius especially when having some windows in there. This won't remove any hydrocarbons thus the best way when one wants to achieve very low vacuum is cleaning first everything that's visible, then cleaning in some soapy sollution, then doing a ultrasonic bath in distilled / deionized water - after that rinsing with distilled / deionized water again and then dryblowing using nitrogen or argon (never evaporating since that will leave residue). From that moment on only handling with clean gloves - then heating up somewhat above 100 Celsius for a few hours while running the vacuum pump will work (we reach around 10^-12 mbar with that approach by bringing down the chamber first using a membrane+turbopump, then shutting off and using ion getter pumps & in the beginning also titanium sublimation pumps). When one gets in some hydrocarbons one usually has to clean again from scratch (or heat above 400 celsius which is what some manufacturers do before delivery of the parts but that's usually not possible inside of an experiment), when getting in silicone oil or nastier stuff one has to clean in the ultrasonic bath for sure ... have seen Vacuum chambers where baking has not been done using external heating bands but using halogene lamps inside the chamber, that also worked pretty well
      (Water vapor should be gone very fast - the next problem that one can counter using baking and that takes way more time is then diffusion of Hydrogen out of the stainless steel surfaces of a typical vacuum chamber. This takes ages especially since pumping Hydrogen is harder than pumping other gasses (which is also the cause why one usually sometimes uses periodically gas balast on the backing pump to reduce hydrogen accumulation in between the backing and main pump to reduce diffusion - but all of that stuff only gets interesting when reaching lower pressure regions for sure - would not care while being above the 10^-7 mbar range / reaching the 10^-8 mbar except for the water vapor that gets interesting at around roughly 10^-4 mbar for sure ...)

    • @klausbrinck2137
      @klausbrinck2137 7 месяцев назад

      A better roughing pump yould suck too much of the working-oil-steam. Additional cooled buffles would be needed on the upwards section of the tube, that connects the 2 pumps (or you end up with to little working-oil). Those buffles would re-turn the working-oil-stream back (to where it should stay), but also pushing the gases (that you actually wanted to evacuate) back into the difffusion-pump too, so, an unwanted effect. There´s a point of diminishing returns in this whole scenario, as you can guess. What do people do in industrial installations? Do they use the best roughing-pumps available? OR are there other aspects, that promise more success for now? (for example, an even better working oil, while avoiding welding altogether). A young YTer from Europe mentioned an oil-trader from Germany (just 60€ for 250ml), and the "AppliedScience"-guy noticed, that he used too low-grade flexible tubes for the project´s demands (air would diffuse through the hose-walls)... 33µPa is extremely good, even if 20 is even better, but who REALLY needs such a low vacuum after all ? (let alone 0,1µPa... ;-)

  • @HomeDistiller
    @HomeDistiller Год назад +52

    I changed the oil in my cheap roughing pump (it was literally the cheapest dual stage but high capacity pump I could find on eBay) to a good brand oil and it improved it's pumping A LOT, well worth the small outlay, plus stripping the pump and making sure it's all fitted correctly and clean helped too.. But not as much as the good oil. Plus your gauge will be right at it's lower limit and starting to miss read, ie you could be much lower than your gauge is saying.

    • @peterspencer6442
      @peterspencer6442 Год назад +3

      Great advice!
      I also find that running air through the backing pump for 5-10 minutes every now and again, or after an oil change, also helps flush out the oil; I think even cheap pumps have a special "gas ballast" valve on them to help do this.

    • @1islam1
      @1islam1 Год назад

      @@peterspencer6442 ⚠️ God has said in the Quran:
      🔴 { O mankind, worship your Lord, who created you and those before you, that you may become righteous - ( 2:21 )}
      📖Quran

    • @embededfabrication4482
      @embededfabrication4482 Год назад

      running a pump without a good trap can ruin it in a day

  • @nobodynoone2500
    @nobodynoone2500 Год назад +8

    The fails are as educational as anything else. Don't burn out, burn one down.

  • @alex4alexn
    @alex4alexn Год назад +3

    also thank you to the guy who sent the diffusion pump, but you are the man!

  • @UltimateMaking
    @UltimateMaking Год назад +10

    We learn so much with your achivements and your mistakes man it's awesome, there is no channel like yours around here and you're an inspiration to all of us

  • @EthanBolli
    @EthanBolli Год назад +25

    Yo, that's way damn good. I've been looking into vacuum pumps from a hobyist standpoint ,and you've been consistently making it look feasible. I aughta give my local goodwill a peruse.

  • @cberge8
    @cberge8 Год назад +3

    That's an amazing large format ultrasonic cleaner!

  • @mikehorrocks2909
    @mikehorrocks2909 Год назад +5

    Dude, that DIY ultrasonic cleaner was perfect! 👌 I couldn’t stop laughing when I saw how well it worked!🤣🤣🤣

  • @peterspencer6442
    @peterspencer6442 Год назад +2

    This is fantastic, you fabricated a working diffusion pump! Your vacuum reading could easily be the gauge being close to it's limit! I'd be willing to put some money on the pressure being lower than you think.
    If you can pick up a Penning gauge (a.k.a) Cold Cathode gauge, those are great: Some of the old style ones are robust, you can clean some of them with wet and dry paper when you need to (I found Edwards ones to be easy to fix unless the metal inside has worn away, others can be but have tiny parts inside). Another one is ion gauges (hot cathode/alpert bayard) but they are pricey and used ones can give weird readings if the were abused and they are easy to kill (or so I am.. *ahem* told).
    I'm so glad you shared this! It's inspirational!
    PS Burn out sucks and it also shows you care, take care of yourself!

  • @gutrali
    @gutrali Год назад +1

    Another tip for you. I had to go back in your videos and find the diffusion pump you first tried to make. This was the only way I found out WHY you are building one of these. I had to go a little further to find out how it works. I thought I understood the world pretty well but there was still a TON here that I had to research to learn. I think you would benefit a little bit if you mentioned your other video , linked to parts in it, and/or mentioned your main purpose for doing the work seen in this video. It helps connect the puzzle pieces which means more ppl will end up doing so -- and your channel would likely benefit. At the same time, THANK YOU for not doing the "subscribe and like" BS that everyone else does

  • @H34...
    @H34... Год назад +4

    Not about perfectly fleshed out beautiful projects? Thats a functional and respectable vacuum pump made in a garage out of junk from an op shop, pretty fuckin beautiful mate.

  • @cxob2134
    @cxob2134 Год назад +14

    The imperfect projects are way better than the spotless stuff most maker channels post.
    Good stuff!

  • @gordoncouger9648
    @gordoncouger9648 Год назад

    We learn from mistakes, not watching someone do it right. Fifty-five microns with thrift store stainless steel, mail order silver solder, and Harbor Freight vacuum pump ain't too shabby by any standards. I like watching someone on RUclips who isn't afraid to get grease on their hands. All these videos made by folks with soft hands and clean, manicured nails make me wonder where they learned to work.

  • @Cerberus606
    @Cerberus606 Год назад +2

    Finally I have been dying to see the next episode of this build!

  • @ProlificInvention
    @ProlificInvention Год назад +5

    Hell yes, excellent video man. Good to see you.

  • @tvathome562
    @tvathome562 Год назад +8

    Respect,
    really appreciate it when someone shares their mistakes, it kinda bonds us all as fallible humans.
    Learning by failing is long, but you learn more that way, it's a richer journey.
    Plus the do it movies, the hero always fails at least once, so you know its got to be true :)

  • @Tristoo
    @Tristoo Год назад +4

    well if the principle was working, there isn't much reason the whole thing shouldn't be working to the numbers you expected. my best guesses are 1. the gaskets are outgassing (again, any kind of rubber or plastic will to some degree, and that's some pretty big surface area) 2. the oil you're using could also be outgassing, people will often "cook" it by just leaving the pump on for a long time until all the components of the oil that can outgas do, or 3. it is the roughing pump, maybe it's own oil or some gasket or something else outgassing to the point where it overpowers the diffusion pump.
    I'm betting on option 1, so maybe try using some soft metals as gaskets, and weld a lip on the pipe joints to bite into those gaskets. Like the copper ones, sam zeloof has a pretty good video on them but I have no doubt you can do it without all the fancy clamps and stuff. After that I'd try cooking the oil for a few days, and if that doesn't work just wipe everything down extremely well with acetone, make sure there's no finger juice on anything, and then if everything in the chamber is immaculate you'll know it's the roughing pump.

  • @adrianhenle
    @adrianhenle Год назад +4

    Nice work, man. Keep fucking up and learning! We're all here for it.

  • @binkuspinkus8400
    @binkuspinkus8400 Год назад +7

    hell yeah dude, you’re one of very few people halfway-competently doing cool punk engineering shit that isn’t useless plastic garbage. If I had the space for a shop right now, I can only hope I’d have half your energy and ingenuity.

  • @scottpeterson5241
    @scottpeterson5241 Год назад +7

    You are worthy! Honestly really impressive build out of goodwill coffee cups brazed together and a harbor freight vacuum pump. The proof is in the pudding, or in this case the worthy video 👍

  • @darmichar73
    @darmichar73 Год назад +3

    I honestly have no idea what the hell you are doing here, but I love watching you do it. Keep up the good work man.

  • @JohnDoe-yv3vq
    @JohnDoe-yv3vq Год назад +4

    You can't say it's unworthy... You put a ton of effort into it, you are cool man. Hav ya daenger and never let ya ass be sad. :)

  • @steffankaizer
    @steffankaizer Год назад

    what a champ. we can all aspire to be like him, a man of determination, adhd, ingenuity and risk of burnout. minus the burnout of course

  • @henriryonankoski
    @henriryonankoski Год назад +2

    Yes great content, I love your shit. Keep it coming, don't hold yourself. This is the most entertaining and educating makerstuff in yt.

  • @williamvanniekerk5608
    @williamvanniekerk5608 Год назад +7

    Im subbed to hundreds of channels if not a thousand+
    Its good to see there are still some authentic creators out there, youve got such a unique personality and it made this video so fun to watch, keep it up man
    A easye 10 out of 10 in my book
    😌👏🏻🙌🏻✌🏻💯

  • @sintaxera
    @sintaxera Год назад +3

    Wooo! Best channel on the tubes

  • @robwgeorge
    @robwgeorge Год назад +3

    That's the new merch text..."Fucking up and learning!"

  • @philpage9942
    @philpage9942 Год назад +2

    Well done, you've got my respect for what your doing.
    Also, to pick up on 'HomeDistiller' below - you could probably benefit on a quality vacuum gauge - or at least get it checked against a quality gauge.

  • @Robonza
    @Robonza Год назад +2

    I bought a gas torch from Aliexpress for 30 bucks that connects to my barbeque tank. Its works well and never runs out.

  • @gizelle-s
    @gizelle-s Год назад +3

    A lot of RUclipsrs go through the same kind of burnout and perfectionism. There's a podcast that is run by a bunch of science youtubers called Safety Third where they talk about it a lot. So you are not alone.

  • @EricDalgetty
    @EricDalgetty Год назад +3

    Dude that is awesome! That it held 270mtorr that long is a testament to your welding skills. I'd love to see you try a sorption pump, there's a lot fewer parts

  • @FinlayShellard
    @FinlayShellard Год назад +4

    Amazing video man, like always it never has to work perfectly, as its all about the journey, saying that I feel like some toast.

  • @samykamkar
    @samykamkar Год назад +1

    #teamcranktown

  • @waldovanderwesthuizen4557
    @waldovanderwesthuizen4557 Год назад +9

    Dude, I totally love your videos and your philosophy on making videos is spot on.
    I am also keenly following your progress on the diffusion pump, great project.

  • @bruceboggemes9724
    @bruceboggemes9724 Год назад +1

    your Goodwill is better than my Goodwill. True story.

  • @Nobody-Nowhere
    @Nobody-Nowhere Год назад +3

    helium out, and no helium voice jokes? the restrain.

  • @seabeepirate
    @seabeepirate 7 месяцев назад

    Watching this video again I thought, if moving fast and breaking things is good enough for SpaceX it’s good enough for Crank Town City. Cool project.

  • @jdwolk7807
    @jdwolk7807 Год назад +1

    I’m 100% in it for the eff ups and the “good ‘nuffs”. Gives me hope as a maker. Keep on keepin on and thanks for putting up the video 👍

  • @gannas42
    @gannas42 Год назад +3

    I was just wondering last night what your next video would be. Timely delivery! Very cool stuff, man. Sorry to hear you are dealing with burnout. You aren't alone.

  • @tenet-rotas
    @tenet-rotas Год назад +2

    Im always so fucking impressed with your videos man... The stuff you build out of essentially scrap and the amount of work you are willing to put in is just crazy! Don't be so harsh on yourself - you're awesome!

  • @capnvariance
    @capnvariance 3 месяца назад

    you are about 18 months ahead of me, and still informative, and funny. I like it

  • @kimberlyjacobsen4148
    @kimberlyjacobsen4148 Год назад +3

    Thanks for posting your previous perceived failures for us to enjoy.
    Your freaking awesome. Never forget! your failure make us all better !

  • @happosade
    @happosade Год назад +4

    That ultra/infrasonic cleaner, well done 👏
    Loving your videos!

  • @empressofmadness
    @empressofmadness Год назад +2

    hell yeah brother! respect for reworkin it

  • @d.jensen5153
    @d.jensen5153 8 месяцев назад

    Your diffusion pump videos are great on several levels. Years ago I bought a small used CENCO diffusion pump - but I talked myself out of giving it a try. After seeing the momentous efforts you've gone thru to make your own, I feel guilty, lazy, and maybe even idiotic. I pulled it out of storage today and am committed to heating it up. For all I know it will work better than I need it to work - 0.01 mm Hg is all I need.

  • @pyro_y0
    @pyro_y0 Год назад +3

    "What's the opposite of concentric? Procentric...?" 😂

  • @badmacdonald
    @badmacdonald Год назад +2

    i like the channel because you do what you can with what you have. you make interesting stuff. it makes it an entertaining channel.

  • @davidbi9765
    @davidbi9765 Год назад +3

    You could also try a titanium sublimation pump as these are incredibly simple but only to be used in combination with a good roughing pump

  • @ardouisur
    @ardouisur Год назад

    I have built a working fusor (that does detectable fusion) so know the dedication and expense involved.
    The creativity, effort and work you put into this project is massively impressive. I'd be very interested to see what this can do with a suitable two stage rouging pump, but you are already close to bottoming out the gauge, you ideally want a deep vacuum gauge. Be awesome to see a fusor build to, with the kit and skills you have you could build a really nice custom chamber.

  • @daveayerstdavies
    @daveayerstdavies Год назад

    For pressures below 10 microns you really need to use a hot filament ionisation vacuum gauge. The good news is that the gauge sensor is really simple and an improvised gauge is easy to make from stuff you already probably have lying around.

  • @bjarnevarme9830
    @bjarnevarme9830 Год назад +4

    Cody’s lab made a vacuum pump out of circulating mercury, looks very simple in the design.

    • @ninefingerdeathgrip
      @ninefingerdeathgrip Год назад +1

      Sprengel pump. Problem is that in many parts of the world that for a private person mercury is practically impossible to buy, at least without special permit and those are hard to get due to it's toxicity and environmentally harmful effects.

  • @user-hw9ui8pu9s
    @user-hw9ui8pu9s 9 месяцев назад

    It’s good that I have such a pump made at a company in Kazan, otherwise I saw how difficult it is to manufacture and adjust. There is VM -1 oil and a two-stage forevacuum Czechoslovakian.

  • @StormSilvawalker
    @StormSilvawalker Год назад +1

    A couple years ago I built one of these too and it's up on my yt channel. I used exhaust parts instead of other stainless and used jb weld in place of brazing since I read somewhere it could perform well at high vacuum. My experiment failed but it's nice to be able to compare and contrast the different approaches you tried and now I want to try it again! You've earned a subscriber cause your projects are awesome!

  • @jefffrasca4054
    @jefffrasca4054 Год назад +4

    Dude. This video was awesome and definitely why I hit the subscribe button months ago. I learned a ton. Thank you for posting it. Definitely worthy.

  • @hemerythrin
    @hemerythrin Год назад

    Coming from your lowering the bar video... This was great! I'm glad you decided to post it

  • @matthewsnyder4211
    @matthewsnyder4211 Год назад

    I just watched this entire video without knowing what a diffusion pump is. Kept my interest the whole time, Google here I come!

  • @KieranShort
    @KieranShort Год назад +1

    I love your videos. Proper entertainment. The look of your Mrs in the store was reminiscent of mine on many such occasions! Hilarious

  • @unconnectedatgmail
    @unconnectedatgmail Год назад

    When we need to frankencobble ourselves through the semiconductor revolution (after the apocalypse), I know where to go! Excellent video, thanks for sharing :)

  • @ChrisBigBad
    @ChrisBigBad Год назад +2

    Looks more like an infra-sonic cleaner. Love it !

  • @gabrielhacecosas
    @gabrielhacecosas Год назад +3

    Impressive, you'll get the emptiest vacuum. I'm looking forward to seeing it.
    The other day I saw a video of a popular science channel from South America that had made a pump similar to this one and he said it was even good for making vacuum valves, so I guess it would be good. I'll see if I can find the video and send it to you.

  • @seabeepirate
    @seabeepirate Год назад +2

    I love seeing stuff made out of trash. Maybe it wasn’t trash before you cut it up but it definitely got a new life doing something other than sitting on a shelf at goodwill. It was pretty cool to see this thing work, even if it didn’t perform as well as you hoped! There’s at least as much knowledge available in failures as there is in successes so don’t be afraid to post videos of unfinished projects because they’re also useful and you’re good at making them entertaining.
    P.S. Any interest in Stirling engines? They’ve always been fascinating to me.

  • @aegis3d
    @aegis3d Год назад +1

    Missed your videos dude! Love the screwing around and see how far you can get attitude.

  • @hgbugalou
    @hgbugalou Год назад

    I like any of your projects, they don't all have to be mind bending.

  • @alex4alexn
    @alex4alexn Год назад +1

    cant wait until you are at 100k subs, keep it up brother

  • @klausnielsen1537
    @klausnielsen1537 Год назад +2

    Great video return! I loved it. You might not realise this, but what carries your channel is not the quality of results you get. But how your personality shines through to me when you show the honest struggle to get the $#1*@$$ thing to work.
    Love your gung ho style and presentation.

  • @gutrali
    @gutrali Год назад

    Love your interaction with your subscribers. Please keep doing that. It naturally becomes harder as your subs increase -- which is part of the reason it is not common and so refreshing to see. Since BBS discussion forums, ive always believed in the Power of numbers. aka the Hive mind

  • @TeslaFactory
    @TeslaFactory Год назад +5

    Absolutely amazing! I envy your metalworking skills and setup! You're achieving really great things, bro 😍

  • @weirdsciencetv4999
    @weirdsciencetv4999 Год назад

    How did I not find this gem of a man sooner? Subscribed!

  • @jordanbennett6461
    @jordanbennett6461 Год назад

    55 microns is amazing! So glad you uploaded

  • @ryanrose8856
    @ryanrose8856 10 месяцев назад

    Dude, you videos are the best! I look forward to your next installment!

  • @Pest789
    @Pest789 Год назад +4

    I'd buy that for a dinger

  • @sparc5
    @sparc5 Год назад

    I'm hooked on seeing how this turns out. You got a new sub.

  • @billallen6109
    @billallen6109 Год назад

    I love the style of your videos. They're a lot of fun to watch. Keep it up

  • @JamesWoodOfficial
    @JamesWoodOfficial Год назад

    I'm glad you posted this👍🏻

  • @nefariousyawn
    @nefariousyawn Год назад

    I'm really glad you made this video. You wrapped it up well at the end. Thanks!

  • @joels7605
    @joels7605 Год назад

    This channel is gold.

  • @gustavfranklin
    @gustavfranklin Год назад +1

    WORTHY, man!

  • @julias-shed
    @julias-shed Год назад +3

    Great work keep going we love it 😀

  • @nickfish4193
    @nickfish4193 Год назад

    Love it, man. This video is definitely worthy. I always look forward to your videos, so thanks for making them!

  • @edgarmaraguacare4296
    @edgarmaraguacare4296 Год назад

    que bueno ver este contenido por aca, esta genial tu trabajo

  • @t1mmy13
    @t1mmy13 Год назад

    I agree it's a good video and I'm glad you haven't scrapped it

  • @JeremyRoberts007
    @JeremyRoberts007 Год назад +2

    Let's go!

  • @memejeff
    @memejeff Год назад

    That is a good enough vaccuum for a lot of devices. You could probably do sputtering with that vaccuum. I think this video was super cool and I could definitely see real uses for it.

  • @theoldknowledge6778
    @theoldknowledge6778 Год назад +1

    It was a good video man! I love it

  • @zebdeming
    @zebdeming Год назад

    I'm glad you posted the video, everyone gets burnt out after a while, I'm in the middle of about a year without much progress on any of my projects, it happens. I'm heading out to the shop right now, thanks again for sharing all your "failures", they are more inspiring than you probably know!

  • @reinholdu9909
    @reinholdu9909 Год назад +2

    Don't burn out on us here bro. - YOU can do ANYTHING...(except maybe washin' your hands ;-) !THANKS! I'll be here waiting for your stuff

  • @QuanrumPresence
    @QuanrumPresence Год назад

    This is so amazing and inspiring man! Keep at it, please take more suggestions from experts in the comments sections. And by that virtue more folks will comment and help you out! Win-win

  • @PauloDutra
    @PauloDutra Год назад +2

    Cool that's Amazing! 🔥

  • @hiddencow3272
    @hiddencow3272 Год назад

    I really enjoy the shitty memes makes the vid more jovial

  • @johnross3752
    @johnross3752 Год назад +2

    Love the wobble 10 Points

  • @fb___4255
    @fb___4255 Год назад +2

    Great video as usual man! I hope your business is thriving. Hopefully we'll see another video soon, I also thought that you could try making a powdered metal 3D printer as a project. Keep it going!

  • @willjackson6407
    @willjackson6407 10 дней назад

    It is a worthy video bro I enjoyed it a lot 😊thanks for sharing

  • @DMonZ1988
    @DMonZ1988 Год назад +1

    super worthy video dude!

  • @johnm4962
    @johnm4962 Год назад

    Great videos !

  • @briswolf
    @briswolf Год назад

    worth every dinger

  • @StraightLineCycles
    @StraightLineCycles Год назад +1

    Yup

  • @kob8082
    @kob8082 Год назад +1

    11:19 you could probably use a thermal epoxy to hold it in place and for heat transfer

  • @randomname4726
    @randomname4726 Год назад

    Epic job.