Crazy how with that budget you could build a baller pc for 10k. Redecorate your house. Go on holiday. Then still have enough left over to get a nice car and start an investment fund 😂
The real money happens when you use it to start a business and spend it all in the process, then you can tell the tax man that you technically didn't make any income because it was all spent on your business. Jaspreet Singh method.
@@eddoug259 It would be a small start to a small investment, but you absolutely could, and take a sweet vacation and hook your house up as well. Say 20k each for the house and vacay, 10k for the PC, thats 50K left over for the car and investing. 40K gets you a really nice used Vette, with 10K left to throw away on junk bonds.
It was awesome when he said trying to get the piece of aluminium into the machine was a huge pain in the arse.. The best pronunciation of arse that I've ever heard from a non Irish/Scottish Lad. Love his accent
I love when they have someone with them that absolutely knows what they're doing, so Linus can sort of "let off" the pressure of making sure everything works and just focus on making the process entertaining. Tim from this video and Brian the electrician are perfect examples.
Again, an immense pleasure to have taken part in this project! But you had my heart skip a beat twice in this one 1) Linus drilling a hole in that beautifully surfaced face 2) Linus holding the wing and waiting for him to drop it... 😉🤣 Fabulous work once again by everyone involved!
What i love about machining tbe desk out of solid aluminum, is its essentially the ridiculous evolution of whitlling down an entire log to make a toothpick
good rule of thumb is that if you remove more material than you keep with a subtractive process, you should probably consider a different process. feel like this desk build should be an example used in engineering school about how not to do design.
@gianlucagandolfi3300 sometimes is is necesary to waste 95% alloy. ROG mothership laptop from ASUS is made similar to this desk. Bottom chasis was made from only 1 chunk of alluminum. It was necesary becouse 1 chunk was more stable and solid. Price was hight too.
@@Craft97pl It was necessary? They couldn't have TIG welded it with high-quality alloy metal, they needed to waste 95% of an entire aluminum block? TIG welding, the same process used to weld rocket nozzles isn't strong enough for a desk... riiiight okay there bud. Please stay away from anything involving engineering for all of our sakes.
These engineering videos by Alex, ty and Kyle are probably the reason some kids might choose engineering. That has to put a smile on their faces at the end of the day😊
@@todorow22spending a whole month on single project in solidworks is pretty much engineering (and maybe a little insanity but we all dip in it sometimes don't we?)
I love the duality of engineering when it came to the cpu block "was this thought of?" "We'll just run the pumps in reverse" "did we think of this?" "yes" "Are you sure?" "Nope"
i like how linus explains that there would be no way to fix it if it´s wrong but from here it seems like they could just have turned the block 180 degrees?
Tim definitely looses sleep over being worried Linus will break something he's been working on 😂 Tim seems like he takes alot of pride in what hes working on, love it!
i prefer to imagine Tim as the Maestro or Masterchef having to chaperone a 6 year old kid that is Linus and then rolling his eyeballs and "ugh this is how you do it, please!"
Its probably less chaotic than the last one Linus built for himself and just Alex to help. Yes, its good to acknowledge that Alex does experimental "Janky" stuff better, he is good for trying ultra weird things and CNC milling the metal. But they need someone who is serious and has a professional attitude (like Tim) to complete such a niche project, specially being surrounded by Linus and Alex.
Just wanted to say thanks for always having great subtitles. I've lost some of my hearing recently and I've never had to deal with CC before this but your channel has done a great job!
I haven't lost my hearing or anything, but I always watch with subtitles to understand things better and so I can keep the volume low for the people around them. I have to agree, this channel has great subtitles that are available from upload. I just think it's a shame that we can't contribute subtitles anymore. I've many times thought to myself, these auto generated subtitles suck, I should improve them so other people can understand the video better, only to realize that RUclips removed that feature a while ago.
@@fabiandrinksmilk6205 RUclips has been ruining a lot of things that make a channel truly a community, like dislikes (both on videos and comments), fan contributions like subtitles (and translations), comments after google+ was killed (you can't @ multiple people now and for a while couldn't do it at all), and even the botched comment moderation is both still allowing scams and removing proper comments. They instead have been going at it from a big business friendly angle (easy censorship and copyright claims) that facilitates scams and are pushing features that just generally deepen the parasocial relationships of viewers (video creator hearts, channel memberships, merch store integration, highlighting a creator's reply etc.).
@@Samyaak08 I work in a lab and commonly use some shnazzy vacuum pumps. Long story short there was a problem, a loud noise, and I lost most of my hearing.
I can't believe you machined that desk from massive blocks of aluminium stock. I would have thought it'd be sheet aluminium bolted or welded together. But, like you said, Karl wanted extravagant.
totally stupid. Reducing 500lbs of aluminum to 65. Should have gone all the way and manufactured a full die-cast mold, then just do a 1 unit batch of cast aluminum
@@scatdawg1 I was being sarcastic due to the cost, time, etc it would involve. I don't know about aluminum soldering you mention, AFAIK it's not that common
anyone who’s ever built a custom loop is probably thinking about the nightmare of maintaining this loop and all the possible points of failure! It’s an absolutely insane feat of engineering and planning, but also terrifying to think about running this system long term.
I doubt someone who buys something like this is all that bothered about that. EIther they hire someone to do it for them, or they just throw it out when the time comes.
@@stale2665 and it’s the latter part that’s sad to think about! Or even just seeing a system like this eventually devolve to sludge and grime from neglect, I just feel like custom loops for non-enthusiasts really don’t make sense to me unless there’s support in place to keep it running.
It's not that deep at all man. Ofc majority of people aren't going to be able to afford a $100,000 desk pc. I'm sorry you feel like you need to relate to every single piece of content you watch just to enjoy it.
@@chungushimself3712 What are you even talking about? Of course most people here can afford that. You're just the exception because you're poor. The reason we can't relate though is because using aluminium instead of solid gold is just lame. What do they think my annual salary is? Below 500k? Come on guys, I know you can do better than this!
I worked in the Military Aircraft Industry for a LOT of years, it is funny to see how excited these guys are getting over what for me was an every day sight. Programming NC machines to make this kind of component is very satisfying, especially when you run it for the first time and it it is perfect. Looking good guys. Oh yes, also shoutout to the Savage Industries split leg apron!
Lasercut, bent and welded aluminum was forbidden? You could later machine it and save days of machining and thousands of kilowatts. Also, savings on material would have been fenomenal.
I mean yeah but being ridiculous was kind of the point. When you save money on the $100000 PC, it's no longer a $100000 PC. They ran out of sensible ways to spend money so this is what they did.
I must say, despite all the outlash going on recently. This is a great video guys. This is the model I personally like. Linus and team are just naturally hilarious, in a good way. Great dynamic, kinda like a sitcom. And today I learned that 5052 aluminum is better for bends and 6061 aluminum is more structurally sound for an application like that desk. Funny, and I learned something that is useful. Thumbs up!
Another good thing to know that is that there are different types of stainless steel and most consumer products use the crappiest version which is barely rust resistant (No steel is perfectly rust resistant but the better versions aren't likely to rust in a noticeable way unless exposed to constant salt water or high temperatures and/or oxygen concentrations).
@@ilovehotdogs125790 To be honest it's been a while since I've looked at the numbers so I don't remember which ones are which. I remember my old shop used to work with both 300 series and 400 series but I can't remember which one rusted almost as fast as regular steal. The better ones (from a rust resistance standpoint) tend to have higher concentrations of aluminum and/or other rare (ish) earth metals. They do tend to be softer though which is part of the reason why high carbon steal (not stainless) is still used in critical infrastructure (the other reason being that it cost less even with the extra precautions needed to protect it from the elements).
11:11 "Ooh wow, that is exTREmely tight." - "Thank you!" Love that interaction. Here's a guy that _knows_ he didn't fuck up, and everything is according to plan.
surprised they didn't go with a 4 leg standing desk setup. not only would it handle more weight but it would also be much more stable at standing height.
It's cost and complexity. Two is easier then four for the cost and control of the height sensors, safety sensors and motors as if any of those fail the table "could" topple or dump it's contents. Trust me, one leg will crush anything human caught between it and it's movement, which is why they had to adjust the weight for the leg's to move constantly. Seen some legs built with plastic " parts" which is my one fear for if they stop working, it sucks.
I've built like 15 desks using similar legs. The controller has a gyroscope which detects tilt or unexpected movement. So holding it in your hand always causes this issue. Need to attach it to the desk or place it on the floor and not move it.
Interesting to know of that change. I dealt with those legs in the video for "medical tables" that supported heavy and expensive medical equipment for over 10 years (but that was 5ish years ago), and none had gyro's. The ones I dealt with had built in limit switches for top and bottom "mechanical limit stops" and a external safety switch on the bottom of the table to prevent crushing anyone's seated legs when lowering. Was the exact same calibration steps the video shows. The "controller monitors current to each leg motor to determine "tilt" issues if one leg motor is working harder then the other. It's why the table would stop raising also in the video when they were calibrating the legs. The above average weight was drawing too much current and triggered a "stop command" incase it was crushing someone's hand. Note it will still hurt/do damage to soft human parts, DO NOT underestimate the power those legs have. I still have a pair of the 1st gen from a discarded table which I use for my own PC desk.
As a cnc operator/programmer, I can greatly appreciate this video. I've run most or all of these machines throughout the years and seen some cool shit made. Currently I make parts for 747s, jets, and other airplanes.
@@AlphaShadowSphere the first time I read your comment I started questioning how can a wife cost money, and then how much one would cost (lol) if you ever win the lottery and get something like 1M it's best to put the money in a stable fund that gives you like 2% per year and just enjoy the yearly free 20k
At work I usually try to bring a little chaos to things similar to Linus in this episode, but watching this video helped me to realize just how much fear I probably instill in my coworkers. I'm not going to stop though.
Not gonna lie, this design is very similar to the one I built about 7 years ago, very similar shape. Personally I think this is the most ergonomic design a PC desk can have, lots of leg room and enough room for the rads. Good job you guys.
@@ALCRAN2010 I'm referring to the rads on the sides, components spread in the middle. Basically sides larger, mid thinner for the leg room, nice and symmetrical.
@@ALCRAN2010 actually I should have it posted it in the forums, probably archived. It didn't pick up steam on the forums, but I had some articles written about it too.
9:15 rofl 🎉 I spent about 1 1/2 hours setting up a standing desk for a client and had the exact same issue! There is an accelerometer in the control unit and the control unit is not attached to the desk. When it detects that there is no movement of the control unit when you’re pushing the button, it activates a safety mechanism. As soon as you put the control unit on the desk and it moves in sync with the desk the issue is resolved. This is a sort of crash avoidance, safety mechanism, but it did take me about 45 minutes of sweating in front of a client to figure this out so extremely entertaining to see you guys reverse engineering the same problem I did! Isn’t the manual great?
Hey linus/crew, How can it be you guy's didn't do a video on the framework 16" pre order opening yet? All spec's got released and we viewers got to know the opinion of the expert's ofcourse :) Love the videos btw, keep it up! :)
There is an easier way. You buy a desk with a drawer and a PC at the cost of $2000 both, then put the PC on the desk and $98000 cash, in the desk's drawer.
The problem with that plan is that 2000$ is not enough for a computer without a monitor, desk and everything else. Just for the box i spent 3000€ and i don't even have 4090 in it.
I love that Tim gets to be in front of the camera again after talking about the specifics of how he pours water onto his fancy coffee filters. makes me very happy
I feel like welding plates together then machining down would've been worthwhile for this. Doesn't seem like there was much to gain from machining from billet. Wire arc 3d printing would've been cool too if you could've found a company that can do it
As an industrial designer I find this desk design to be painfully cringe. Granted, I didn't read the brief, so ludicrous expense may have in-fact been a requirement.
This is a work of pure engineering expertise and whilst no person SHOULD spend $100k On a Computer/Desk or well really anything for that matter.. It was bloody well worth it.
Had the privilege of meeting Tim at LTX. Helped me liquid metal my Steam Deck, and even returned my lost SD card to me after. Tim's a really cool guy, and I'm glad he got the spotlight in this video.
I feel like I can empathize with the engineer who keeps being so happy that everything is fitting exactly as he planned while linus barely notices lol I feel like I'm watching my entire life be played out in a short video
I faced the exact same issue with my Flexispot desk, the desk would go few cm up and then come back down. The issue was the sensor is build into the height adjusting remote and it needs to be mounted before doing any testing/height adjusting.
This may be the new Humble Build not because it's humble... it isn't. But because it humbles everyone else anywhere, any when. Also... Alex's hat is perfect!
I know I’m a little late but I live near the Seattle area and I worked machine shops for a few years and these machines are cool but I’ve worked wayyy more complicated parts however they were for Boeing planes and laser surgery companies not a pc desk lol. I really wish I could have made a custom pc desk during my machining days! So cool to see the work behind everything keep up the good content!
You don't need to be a pro to spot the lack of though and optimization this design has. This wouldn't pass any market demands, only exist cause you can turn a profit on the video and that guy makes too much money playing stupid games
Although it's a little late ... Months late, would have liked to see it in a mock up gaming suite. Would have shown off the awesomeness. Only needed a couple minutes of it working, camera shot. For those of us who will never own such a work of art.
at 10:14 Tim says Titan tube referring to Astera Titan Tubes that are 4'. But it's actually a Helios Tube which are 2'. Slight error there which completely invalidates the rest of the video.
I prefer to media blast aluminum to give a more even surface. Fresh milled is a style choice though. Also I don't know if you clear anodized the aluminum after machining. Aluminum does oxidize a lot.
When you hit cycle start on the haas I could hear the beep, the tool change and watched it rapid to the block. As soon as it touched the music starting playing and it sounded like the machine crashed for a second. My heart skipped a beat.
Fantastic use of material on the piece with 4 rectangualr holes, reducing hundreds of pounds of aluminum onto a piece which is thin enough to have been made with bent aluminum-sheet...
I love that when Jake doesn't have very much script he just kinda stands there like the apprentice who hasn't been taught anything yet so he just watches
I'm glad Karl did do a video on it, I still remember that Hacksmith made one of those backpack lighter lightsabers for Mr. Beast to have and he never released that video.
Those exposed bolts and nuts though are such an eyesore. I hope for $100k there will be some cosmetic shielding to cover up those things before the final product.
These blocks of raw aluminum are cute. Ones I used to work on at a CNC shop would weigh 50 tons or more and require an overhead crane, sometimes two of them in tandem. We did rough and semi-finishing for large size plastic molds, most often auto-manufacturers.
Love how Alex and Tim are treating linus like a kid lmao. Love the dynamic they have
Thats awesome !! 😄
They’re not wrong
Undermining!
You have to, he drops everything
translate 🙂
ฉันจะสมัครรับข้อมูลใครก็ตามที่สมัครรับข้อมูลฉันและชอบความคิดเห็นนี้.
Crazy how with that budget you could build a baller pc for 10k. Redecorate your house. Go on holiday. Then still have enough left over to get a nice car and start an investment fund 😂
The real money happens when you use it to start a business and spend it all in the process, then you can tell the tax man that you technically didn't make any income because it was all spent on your business. Jaspreet Singh method.
Clearly, the true money is the friends we made along the way!!1!
I'm pretty sure you couldn't do that much with 100k, at least not where live.
There is nowhere on earth where you couldn't do all that with 100k dollars @@awynsa
@@eddoug259 why not? You said anywhere do the math you could easily do this.
@@eddoug259 It would be a small start to a small investment, but you absolutely could, and take a sweet vacation and hook your house up as well. Say 20k each for the house and vacay, 10k for the PC, thats 50K left over for the car and investing. 40K gets you a really nice used Vette, with 10K left to throw away on junk bonds.
Alex was definitely the right choice for the intro on this one. It's fun seeing him geek out over machining equipment.
i was getting reporter vibes for sure... Would love to see more of this stuff
He was like a kid opening presents on Christmas when I let him press the green button 😜
@@sscadcam That is the kind of genuine joy we all love. The world needs more of that kind of happiness.
It was awesome when he said trying to get the piece of aluminium into the machine was a huge pain in the arse.. The best pronunciation of arse that I've ever heard from a non Irish/Scottish Lad. Love his accent
I love when they have someone with them that absolutely knows what they're doing, so Linus can sort of "let off" the pressure of making sure everything works and just focus on making the process entertaining. Tim from this video and Brian the electrician are perfect examples.
I like this dynamic too, the expert helps keep it somewhat informational and Linus balances it with the extra entertainment.
Again, an immense pleasure to have taken part in this project! But you had my heart skip a beat twice in this one 1) Linus drilling a hole in that beautifully surfaced face 2) Linus holding the wing and waiting for him to drop it... 😉🤣
Fabulous work once again by everyone involved!
Was just seeing your video with NYC cnc and i was like thats the same machines i saw . and then thats the same guy😅. dope work tho.
Every LTT video where Linus is near stupidly expensive things makes our hearts flutter with anxiety.
I'll always love the mild chaos Alex brings
these 4 are the four horsemen of chaos.
The king of jank
He really has no fuckin' idea. always a chore to watch.
"I'm using our other cordless heat gun" *holds up blowtorch*
That man is a national treasure.
@@TheSupaCoopaGaming that's the part that made me type my comment. I was laughing so hard from it
Linus: "We don't technically have the money from him yet, you guys know that right?"
Tim: "I'm not in accounting"
Spoken like a true engineer lol
I actually laughed out loud at this. Hahaha.
Engineers are paid to make the product, not find the funding for it.
Fax bruv
As a Software Engineer, I can approve. Always funny to see how different Sales, Marketing, Accounting and R&D/Engineering think in general.
@@ShotGunner5609same.
I've totally been there.
I can't count the number of times that I've said something similar.
"You're stressing me out, Tim"
"That's okay"
Love his energy
What i love about machining tbe desk out of solid aluminum, is its essentially the ridiculous evolution of whitlling down an entire log to make a toothpick
good rule of thumb is that if you remove more material than you keep with a subtractive process, you should probably consider a different process. feel like this desk build should be an example used in engineering school about how not to do design.
But then it would only be a $50,000 PC desk.
Such a waste of money, energy, material... Terrible design, no words.
@gianlucagandolfi3300 sometimes is is necesary to waste 95% alloy. ROG mothership laptop from ASUS is made similar to this desk. Bottom chasis was made from only 1 chunk of alluminum. It was necesary becouse 1 chunk was more stable and solid. Price was hight too.
@@Craft97pl It was necessary? They couldn't have TIG welded it with high-quality alloy metal, they needed to waste 95% of an entire aluminum block? TIG welding, the same process used to weld rocket nozzles isn't strong enough for a desk... riiiight okay there bud.
Please stay away from anything involving engineering for all of our sakes.
as someone who worked in an machine shop for a couple years, I love seeing all that bright shiny aluminum!
I love the idea of a desk that costs more than a tesla
Car PC? 🤔
what?@@sockems79
are people still buying those?
@@nixoncodeno
At least it works.
Unlike a tesla
Thanks guys been waiting on a guide, gonna attempt to build this next week.
These engineering videos by Alex, ty and Kyle are probably the reason some kids might choose engineering. That has to put a smile on their faces at the end of the day😊
not really
Being an engineer is very different from what you see in these video IRL. They will likely be disappointed if this is why they go into engineering.
The desk would have been cut in plates and bolted for instance or if you really wanted one piece to weld together the plates then machined you mean?
Calling Alex an engineer causes me physical pain
@@todorow22spending a whole month on single project in solidworks is pretty much engineering (and maybe a little insanity but we all dip in it sometimes don't we?)
Tim's positivity and tranquility is relatable and wholesome. He definitely brings Linus down to reality both on and off screen 😂
I love the duality of engineering when it came to the cpu block
"was this thought of?"
"We'll just run the pumps in reverse"
"did we think of this?"
"yes"
"Are you sure?"
"Nope"
i like how linus explains that there would be no way to fix it if it´s wrong but from here it seems like they could just have turned the block 180 degrees?
Tim definitely looses sleep over being worried Linus will break something he's been working on 😂 Tim seems like he takes alot of pride in what hes working on, love it!
"I just try to instill goodness in the people I work with" Tim seems like such a chill guy, more of him onscreen please!
i prefer to imagine Tim as the Maestro or Masterchef having to chaperone a 6 year old kid that is Linus and then rolling his eyeballs and "ugh this is how you do it, please!"
Its probably less chaotic than the last one Linus built for himself and just Alex to help. Yes, its good to acknowledge that Alex does experimental "Janky" stuff better, he is good for trying ultra weird things and CNC milling the metal. But they need someone who is serious and has a professional attitude (like Tim) to complete such a niche project, specially being surrounded by Linus and Alex.
Just wanted to say thanks for always having great subtitles. I've lost some of my hearing recently and I've never had to deal with CC before this but your channel has done a great job!
Wow not to be rude but how did you lose your hearing
I haven't lost my hearing or anything, but I always watch with subtitles to understand things better and so I can keep the volume low for the people around them. I have to agree, this channel has great subtitles that are available from upload. I just think it's a shame that we can't contribute subtitles anymore. I've many times thought to myself, these auto generated subtitles suck, I should improve them so other people can understand the video better, only to realize that RUclips removed that feature a while ago.
@@Samyaak08Probably age or loud noises
@@fabiandrinksmilk6205 RUclips has been ruining a lot of things that make a channel truly a community, like dislikes (both on videos and comments), fan contributions like subtitles (and translations), comments after google+ was killed (you can't @ multiple people now and for a while couldn't do it at all), and even the botched comment moderation is both still allowing scams and removing proper comments.
They instead have been going at it from a big business friendly angle (easy censorship and copyright claims) that facilitates scams and are pushing features that just generally deepen the parasocial relationships of viewers (video creator hearts, channel memberships, merch store integration, highlighting a creator's reply etc.).
@@Samyaak08 I work in a lab and commonly use some shnazzy vacuum pumps. Long story short there was a problem, a loud noise, and I lost most of my hearing.
Alex it was a pleasure meeting you at LTX. Thank you for helping to make the expo amazing!
The look on Tim's face at 7:11 😂 He was so done
Love to see Alex and Tim so happy with the big mills
Big mill(f)s😏
@@imokaytrustmeBSS That's what I first read lol. I had to read it again to see what it actually says.
NEVER seen Alex THIS enthusiastic talking about anything as their new Toys.
I can't believe you machined that desk from massive blocks of aluminium stock. I would have thought it'd be sheet aluminium bolted or welded together. But, like you said, Karl wanted extravagant.
totally stupid. Reducing 500lbs of aluminum to 65. Should have gone all the way and manufactured a full die-cast mold, then just do a 1 unit batch of cast aluminum
@geort45 cast is still overkill...
Should of been fabricated from plate welded together and then passed thru the mill. Would look Exactly the same
cute sona
@@scatdawg1 I was being sarcastic due to the cost, time, etc it would involve. I don't know about aluminum soldering you mention, AFAIK it's not that common
@@geort45 Aluminium welding is done all the time, its harder but can be done a lot cheaper than milling out a whole block
As a mech eng student soo happy to hear terms i know thrown around. another great video guys👍
Gonna rewatch the first one(showcase) after this.
7:07 Linus' back and groin was never the same after that day. 😂
anyone who’s ever built a custom loop is probably thinking about the nightmare of maintaining this loop and all the possible points of failure! It’s an absolutely insane feat of engineering and planning, but also terrifying to think about running this system long term.
I doubt someone who buys something like this is all that bothered about that. EIther they hire someone to do it for them, or they just throw it out when the time comes.
@@stale2665 and it’s the latter part that’s sad to think about! Or even just seeing a system like this eventually devolve to sludge and grime from neglect, I just feel like custom loops for non-enthusiasts really don’t make sense to me unless there’s support in place to keep it running.
Will be redone in under a year so...
Most relatable tutorial ever. I'm sure we can all build a $100,000 desk pc.
It's not that deep at all man. Ofc majority of people aren't going to be able to afford a $100,000 desk pc. I'm sorry you feel like you need to relate to every single piece of content you watch just to enjoy it.
@@chungushimself3712 Welcome to the internet, where sometimes people make jokes
@@chungushimself3712you must be fun at parties.
@@chungushimself3712 damn that went way above your head
@@chungushimself3712 What are you even talking about? Of course most people here can afford that. You're just the exception because you're poor. The reason we can't relate though is because using aluminium instead of solid gold is just lame. What do they think my annual salary is? Below 500k? Come on guys, I know you can do better than this!
I worked in the Military Aircraft Industry for a LOT of years, it is funny to see how excited these guys are getting over what for me was an every day sight. Programming NC machines to make this kind of component is very satisfying, especially when you run it for the first time and it it is perfect.
Looking good guys.
Oh yes, also shoutout to the Savage Industries split leg apron!
"Are you doing that by eye, youre stressing me out" the old eyecrometer never fails.
11:10 "Wow that is extremely tight." "Thank you." Ah yes, a true engineer's response.
Lasercut, bent and welded aluminum was forbidden? You could later machine it and save days of machining and thousands of kilowatts. Also, savings on material would have been fenomenal.
no common sense was used lol
I mean yeah but being ridiculous was kind of the point. When you save money on the $100000 PC, it's no longer a $100000 PC. They ran out of sensible ways to spend money so this is what they did.
*phenomenal just so you know, but yeah agreed
@@IAmTheBugInsideYou thanks! Not a daily english speaking person. Got rusty.
@@janisvaskevics93 Yeah I thought it might have been a language thing no worries :)
I must say, despite all the outlash going on recently. This is a great video guys. This is the model I personally like. Linus and team are just naturally hilarious, in a good way. Great dynamic, kinda like a sitcom. And today I learned that 5052 aluminum is better for bends and 6061 aluminum is more structurally sound for an application like that desk. Funny, and I learned something that is useful. Thumbs up!
Another good thing to know that is that there are different types of stainless steel and most consumer products use the crappiest version which is barely rust resistant (No steel is perfectly rust resistant but the better versions aren't likely to rust in a noticeable way unless exposed to constant salt water or high temperatures and/or oxygen concentrations).
@@grn1 is 416r a good stainless steel? What type are you referring to as crappy?
@@ilovehotdogs125790 To be honest it's been a while since I've looked at the numbers so I don't remember which ones are which. I remember my old shop used to work with both 300 series and 400 series but I can't remember which one rusted almost as fast as regular steal. The better ones (from a rust resistance standpoint) tend to have higher concentrations of aluminum and/or other rare (ish) earth metals. They do tend to be softer though which is part of the reason why high carbon steal (not stainless) is still used in critical infrastructure (the other reason being that it cost less even with the extra precautions needed to protect it from the elements).
@@grn1 ah ok, good to know!
9:33 Now that's CAD.
Cardboard Aided Design
11:11 "Ooh wow, that is exTREmely tight." - "Thank you!" Love that interaction. Here's a guy that _knows_ he didn't fuck up, and everything is according to plan.
surprised they didn't go with a 4 leg standing desk setup. not only would it handle more weight but it would also be much more stable at standing height.
It's cost and complexity. Two is easier then four for the cost and control of the height sensors, safety sensors and motors as if any of those fail the table "could" topple or dump it's contents.
Trust me, one leg will crush anything human caught between it and it's movement, which is why they had to adjust the weight for the leg's to move constantly. Seen some legs built with plastic " parts" which is my one fear for if they stop working, it sucks.
They ran out of money. An extra two legs would have cost another $100,000.
Title: Building a $100k PC.
Reality: Building a $6k PC with $20k of peripherals and an $74k desk.
Bruh 💀
translate 🙂
ฉันจะสมัครรับข้อมูลใครก็ตามที่สมัครรับข้อมูลฉันและชอบความคิดเห็นนี้.
And a desk made in a really dumb way to take the maximum amount of money possible.
Tim is absolutely *the COOLEST*
Tim is a *gold mine*
Tim epitomizes the perfect Engineer.
This, DIY Perks, and Basically Homeless all uploading the most insane builds in the same 48 hours.
I havent seen Linus to have that spark in his eyes for a long time. You can tell he absolutely loves this project. :)
I've built like 15 desks using similar legs. The controller has a gyroscope which detects tilt or unexpected movement. So holding it in your hand always causes this issue. Need to attach it to the desk or place it on the floor and not move it.
Interesting to know of that change.
I dealt with those legs in the video for "medical tables" that supported heavy and expensive medical equipment for over 10 years (but that was 5ish years ago), and none had gyro's.
The ones I dealt with had built in limit switches for top and bottom "mechanical limit stops" and a external safety switch on the bottom of the table to prevent crushing anyone's seated legs when lowering. Was the exact same calibration steps the video shows.
The "controller monitors current to each leg motor to determine "tilt" issues if one leg motor is working harder then the other. It's why the table would stop raising also in the video when they were calibrating the legs. The above average weight was drawing too much current and triggered a "stop command" incase it was crushing someone's hand. Note it will still hurt/do damage to soft human parts, DO NOT underestimate the power those legs have. I still have a pair of the 1st gen from a discarded table which I use for my own PC desk.
24:08 😁 MINECRAFT MINECRAFT MINECRAFT! 😂
Wooo
This PC turned out even cooler than we could've ever imagined!
As a cnc operator/programmer, I can greatly appreciate this video.
I've run most or all of these machines throughout the years and seen some cool shit made.
Currently I make parts for 747s, jets, and other airplanes.
DMG Mori!
Haas!
Serious machinetoolery.
😎😎
i hope the new ceo gets comfy enough to just walk in and say no whenever linus is about to lift something
I love how he gives us a guide as if we have that kind of money for a car, let alone a pc
We literally walk to get groceries lol
This thing costs more than my wife and I's two cars. I guess I know what I'd spend money on now if I won the lottery
@@3nertia Isn't having a grocery store nearby with walkable streets already a luxury for many people?
@@fabiandrinksmilk6205 Who said the grocery store was nearby or that our streets were walkable? 😅
@@AlphaShadowSphere the first time I read your comment I started questioning how can a wife cost money, and then how much one would cost (lol)
if you ever win the lottery and get something like 1M it's best to put the money in a stable fund that gives you like 2% per year and just enjoy the yearly free 20k
10:21 thanks jesus! just what I needed.
He was sent a cooler from the afterlife
Always love the excitement of a machinist loving the trade
2:42 This was exactly what I was thinking about up until this point in the video, thank you so much for satiating my racing brain's curiosity!
At work I usually try to bring a little chaos to things similar to Linus in this episode, but watching this video helped me to realize just how much fear I probably instill in my coworkers.
I'm not going to stop though.
*[ coworkers sweat intensifies ]*
Not gonna lie, this design is very similar to the one I built about 7 years ago, very similar shape. Personally I think this is the most ergonomic design a PC desk can have, lots of leg room and enough room for the rads. Good job you guys.
Rectangle?
@@ALCRAN2010 I'm referring to the rads on the sides, components spread in the middle. Basically sides larger, mid thinner for the leg room, nice and symmetrical.
@@ALCRAN2010 actually I should have it posted it in the forums, probably archived. It didn't pick up steam on the forums, but I had some articles written about it too.
Minecraft youtubers buying $100k PC is when you know the biggest recession is still to come
frfr
Well, in 20 years, it will be in a scrab pile on storage wars😂
@@zack9912000who said youre going to live that long to witness that
9:15 rofl 🎉 I spent about 1 1/2 hours setting up a standing desk for a client and had the exact same issue! There is an accelerometer in the control unit and the control unit is not attached to the desk. When it detects that there is no movement of the control unit when you’re pushing the button, it activates a safety mechanism. As soon as you put the control unit on the desk and it moves in sync with the desk the issue is resolved. This is a sort of crash avoidance, safety mechanism, but it did take me about 45 minutes of sweating in front of a client to figure this out so extremely entertaining to see you guys reverse engineering the same problem I did! Isn’t the manual great?
1:10 Somewhat cute to see one excited about a CNC going through ALU like butter ^^
Hey linus/crew, How can it be you guy's didn't do a video on the framework 16" pre order opening yet? All spec's got released and we viewers got to know the opinion of the expert's ofcourse :)
Love the videos btw, keep it up! :)
Not yesterdays WAN show but iirc last week (or week prior at v latest) Linus talked about it!
2:41 wouldn't it be cheaper to order a custom casted piece rather than buy 5k$ brick and shave off most of it?
12:55 "are you just trying to make the workplace less hostile and toxic?" - that did not age well...
21:38 they PERFECTLY synced together lowering there heads below the table
Nice detail
Love watching build videos like this!
There is an easier way. You buy a desk with a drawer and a PC at the cost of $2000 both, then put the PC on the desk and $98000 cash, in the desk's drawer.
get the desk off of craigslist for an even better deal
Ah yes thank you. I'm stealing that idea!
The problem with that plan is that 2000$ is not enough for a computer without a monitor, desk and everything else. Just for the box i spent 3000€ and i don't even have 4090 in it.
the 4090 alone costs $2000
I love that Tim gets to be in front of the camera again after talking about the specifics of how he pours water onto his fancy coffee filters. makes me very happy
I feel like welding plates together then machining down would've been worthwhile for this. Doesn't seem like there was much to gain from machining from billet. Wire arc 3d printing would've been cool too if you could've found a company that can do it
Yeah, that machining was extremely wasteful. The millings going to recycling isn't quite good enough.
As an industrial designer I find this desk design to be painfully cringe. Granted, I didn't read the brief, so ludicrous expense may have in-fact been a requirement.
I remember seeing Tim in that coffee making video. Got REALLY into making coffee and just realized he's been working on this all this time lmao
I was always against the tie fighter monitors until I tried it. My god is it peak productivity (when you have PowerToys FancyZones).
11:15 that's what he said
This is a work of pure engineering expertise and whilst no person SHOULD spend $100k On a Computer/Desk or well really anything for that matter..
It was bloody well worth it.
no
wrong, this is the worst designed thing ive ever seen
Had the privilege of meeting Tim at LTX. Helped me liquid metal my Steam Deck, and even returned my lost SD card to me after. Tim's a really cool guy, and I'm glad he got the spotlight in this video.
I’m glad you had fun at LTX, I did too (: it was a good weekend for Steam Deck mods!
I’ve been waiting for this one! Amish does such good work.
Thank you!!
@@sscadcam Any time. You, Grimsmo, and Saunders are some of the main influences in getting my shop to where it is today.
I'll always love the mild chaos Alex brings. This PC turned out even cooler than we could've ever imagined!.
I feel like I can empathize with the engineer who keeps being so happy that everything is fitting exactly as he planned while linus barely notices lol
I feel like I'm watching my entire life be played out in a short video
It was so cathartic. The entire day went way better than I had expected.
I really love Tim.
Would really like to see him more.
If this desk doesn’t make it to a museum in 30-50 years or so, I’ll be very upset.
I always enjoy seeing people get excited over machined material.
I faced the exact same issue with my Flexispot desk, the desk would go few cm up and then come back down. The issue was the sensor is build into the height adjusting remote and it needs to be mounted before doing any testing/height adjusting.
The bald guy looks like American Andrew Tate
Fr
3:02 since when did LTT hire andrew tate.
Would’ve been interesting to see them keep the chips and try to make ingots or something!
They did say they all get recycled
@@randombrit13 yeah I know, but the possibilities!
This may be the new Humble Build
not because it's humble... it isn't.
But because it humbles everyone else anywhere, any when.
Also... Alex's hat is perfect!
I know I’m a little late but I live near the Seattle area and I worked machine shops for a few years and these machines are cool but I’ve worked wayyy more complicated parts however they were for Boeing planes and laser surgery companies not a pc desk lol. I really wish I could have made a custom pc desk during my machining days! So cool to see the work behind everything keep up the good content!
As a machinist, i really appreciate this kind of content. Sad im leaving the trade behind now that i just got a degree in computer science :(
You don't need to be a pro to spot the lack of though and optimization this design has. This wouldn't pass any market demands, only exist cause you can turn a profit on the video and that guy makes too much money playing stupid games
LTT always bringing together different nerd communities...I am a Tech and Machining nerd...this was a very satisfying video!
Although it's a little late ... Months late, would have liked to see it in a mock up gaming suite. Would have shown off the awesomeness. Only needed a couple minutes of it working, camera shot. For those of us who will never own such a work of art.
Tim is giving some serious Dan energy here and I'm all for it
at 10:14 Tim says Titan tube referring to Astera Titan Tubes that are 4'. But it's actually a Helios Tube which are 2'. Slight error there which completely invalidates the rest of the video.
I prefer to media blast aluminum to give a more even surface. Fresh milled is a style choice though.
Also I don't know if you clear anodized the aluminum after machining. Aluminum does oxidize a lot.
When you hit cycle start on the haas I could hear the beep, the tool change and watched it rapid to the block. As soon as it touched the music starting playing and it sounded like the machine crashed for a second. My heart skipped a beat.
i can't be the only person who finds it ironic he built a 100k PC for MINECRAFT.
A game that I can run flawlessly on my broken toaster.
i enjoy watching LTT teaching us what tech do what and go detail and making it easier to understand
Fantastic use of material on the piece with 4 rectangualr holes, reducing hundreds of pounds of aluminum onto a piece which is thin enough to have been made with bent aluminum-sheet...
I love that when Jake doesn't have very much script he just kinda stands there like the apprentice who hasn't been taught anything yet so he just watches
Those EK reservoir combo are crazy and look so good.
I'm glad Karl did do a video on it, I still remember that Hacksmith made one of those backpack lighter lightsabers for Mr. Beast to have and he never released that video.
Man, 12:56 hits different now 👀 I sincerely hope LTT can work their way through this crisis
David is a treat on camera matches yalls energy so well
"Your stressing me out Tim!" "That's ok😁"
Those exposed bolts and nuts though are such an eyesore. I hope for $100k there will be some cosmetic shielding to cover up those things before the final product.
I like this "BTS" of a video already released. Seems like production is allowed to be more chill then.
Just a note that you have a chapter for 19:60 in the description, which is not a real time stamp. Love the video!
These blocks of raw aluminum are cute.
Ones I used to work on at a CNC shop would weigh 50 tons or more and require an overhead crane, sometimes two of them in tandem. We did rough and semi-finishing for large size plastic molds, most often auto-manufacturers.