Ooooohhhh an alcahol evaporative cooling setup would be interesting to see. Get some rubbing alcohol in a spray bottle and spray it on the surface of the CPU! If you’ve got a 3D printer, you could make a collar to go around the CPU so that you don’t get any over spray and it could just mount to the same air cooler holes. (If you wanted me to design the collar for you I’d be happy to do so)
Instead of changing the cup for a new one you should have added more ice Due to a property of materials called latent heat, when a material is changing its phase its temperature will remain constant It means that if you mantain a mixture of water and ice its temperature will always remain at 0°C I'm sure that if you swapped between cups of this solution you could have gotten way better results
I was about to suggest same. Also surface area of an ice cube that touches the cup is small, but with water and ice cube, heat will transfer much better between the cube and water and between water and the cup. Maybe even better, modify a heatpipe cooler to enter through a cup, seal it with a glue gun, it would have the heatpipes in the ice cold water and would getter heat transfer in my opinion.
While he would get a way better result, your statement is lacking as there is something called heat conductivity and convection speed. Water that is on contact with the heated surface needs time to move or conduct the heat to other parts of the liquid. So you should also add a stirring system to effectively cool your system.
@@nilsfrahm1323 Yeah he should have added cold water. The metal part initially only exchanges heat with small contact patch on the ice cube + itself. And largely the ice cube "touches" air which doesn't exchange as much heat with the metal cup.
You may try this same thing with other kind of metals like aluminum, copper and even with heatsink (idk how to do). I think the problem here is with heat conductivity of metal used. Ice is below zero, it must have cooled.
If you have ever seen someone hold a 1/8th inch copper pipe in there hand and just hold it against an ice cube, it cuts the the cube like butter just with the heat transfer from your hand. Point is better heat transfer would be good but it would probably melt the ice cube in about 30 seconds lol
salt changes the freezing point of water. the ice will be the same temperature as the air in the freezer whether or not there is salt in it. what's most likely is that the water would never freeze in the first place
An idea I once had is a "slush cooler". Basically, it works like a water cooler, except it's hooked up to a slushy machine. The slushified-water fluid is pumped down to the CPU, where it naturally will melt, then the melted slushy fluid is pumped back up to the slushy machine where it is re-cooled.
The cooling got better as the ice melted because of poor thermal coupling of a loose ice cube, that is improved by the water that bridges the gap as it melts. Filling the pot with water and freezing it would improve that. You could also try to use paraffin (candles), as it has a higher melting point, so maybe it would cool less but last longer.
by that do you mean ,,uh.. convection? heat tranfer from one hot objedt to one cold object? ya yer right, the ice has to touch the medium, or its just heating water... and the cube is melting at a rate cooling stops transfering heat, and just boils off.... cooking is a good example... heats low but pan is hot, tons of ice,,, no dif, the pan is being heated faster then the water can cool it :-\.. oop oop what we call, a half ass thermal runaway. :-)
The measuring cups really should have been sanded to at least a grit of 3000. If that were done, the liquid water would probly be able to sustain a decent temperature without switching cups.
Dude I had a Dell XPS studio with one of those in 2008 and the thing sounded like a friggin jet turbine every time I started GTA IV. And, yeah 90 C was common on that processor with the demanding games of the era. In the CPUs defence, I'd never even heard of liquid cooling back then. Coolers were typically smaller then, too. But, hey, multithreading and ddr3 blew my mind at the time. It was such a jump from my previous 32 bit Windows XP system.
the compressed air was better than the air duster bc its an aerosol, so the gas decompressing (condensing) also cools down the cpu. You can test this by spraying some on your hand, it'll be cold.
Well I wanted to say that I actaully tried on Phone this ice cooling its stayed below 40 while its 53 normallly and I tried on Battery I dunno but i cool it, It gave me 30% battery boost again i did it again gave 22% Boost I dont know But Maybe If battery stays cool it automatically charges ? I was actually charging it before a min and then switch mobile and then cooled it, thats how i did it
There wasn't nearly enough pressure between the cup and CPU for the thermal paste to be effective. In fact it might have even had some insulating properties (edit: in comparison to metal-on-metal) due to less contact surface.
Can you flip the motherboard, and apply the ice from bottom? That way water will drip to ground, keeping the motherboard dry without using a cup in between
@@Rubennatorr nope, then it won’t work at all. There’s wood in between then, a bad conductor of heat. He meant CPU facing down and ice in contact with it.
Try to put the Ice in the melted water. The ice block does not completely cover the surface of the cup. I'd like to see that rerun with only new ice in the melted water, I think this'll help even more:)
5:53 It's different for some boards. For example on an OptiPlex mobo it'll just alert you that the corresponding fans are not found, and you can press F1 to continue.
I had ran a i5 3470 without a cooler for a week before realizing that it was missing its cooler. Decided to test it with integrated graphics on games like OG ghost recon and rainbow six 3 and it never went above 80 degrees celcius. A testament to "old" Intel.
@@crisnmaryfam7344 not really nobody uses that method, first you need to add more surface where the heat can be transferred like a piece of metal that connects to the CPU the it can become more effective
Hello! Ice is actually quite more effective. I use it o the bottom of my laptop all the time. My laptop can get quite toasty,and throttles down,but as soon as I rub 1-2 ice cubes all ove te metal bottom it goes back to its maximum potential. I think the biggest mistake you did was to just let the ice sit there. A more effective solution would be to put a small metal plate ontop of the cpu and then rub it as it melts much quicker that way. The biggest problem with ice is that it cant flow tho. Perhaps near freezing temperature water cooling would be the best of conventional and non conventional Collin worlds
I did all these experiments back when i was 12years old more or less, i did Dryice and LN2 by 15yo on P4 Prescott and Pentium D's, amd Athlon etc...so yes, this is the content i found and still find interesting and captivating! Subscribed.
This looks fascinating but as a layman I’m horrified by the idea of putting frozen WATER on my CPU horrifies me because WATER and electronics is not a good idea. That’s super cool though how the ice melts instantly. That’s so cool! It’s such efficient heat transfer.
Try using acetone. It has a boiling point of 56 degrees celsius. By turning the top part of your cpu into a basin, you could literally boil off acetone at 56. That means that the excess heat would be turn into energy to boil off the acetone and prevent the cpu from reaching above 56 celsius.
Ya wanna know how I know the IHS transfers heat good? I did a dry display test on an Iwill board with an athlong 1600+ a cpu from 2001 that uses less than half the power an i3 from 2012 uses, and within 2 seconds legitimately 2 seconds it started smoking and burnt itself to death, these things maxxed out at like 68 degrees tops with there itty bitty tiny coolers back in the day, thats how well the IHS works you can actually dry test a pentium 3 a cpu from the same year but unlike the athlon actually has an ihs and will work fine-ish it'll throttle almost immediately but thats infinitely better than burning to death in 2 seconds
I used to do something like this on my old crappy laptop. I would place a round lunchbox cooler under where the cpu was as the thermal paste on the cpu was all dried up.
Thermal paste alternative: Toothpaste!
He already did that
Yes
Spoiler alert
Already done
Aww man, already done? Damn.
This guy’s not a problem solver, he’s a maker
Problem maker?
jamaica
a maker solver?😭😭
I think an inventor would sound better
pfft, guys got nothing on us... LIQUID NITROGEN baby lol who said 7 giga hurts wasnt impossible? kish our caboosh :-)
Next video: can a real rat replace your mouse?
And answer - yes!
No 😮
No.
someone would find a way. Anyway, why is youtube recommending this to all of us again?
no , you need a real MOUSE not a real rat
im hungry cook egg
Use a combination of all the coldest thermal paste alternatives to make the ultimate one
As well shampoo
it's a cool idea I wish the man himself sees it.
thats cool and all, but why do you have that as your profile picture?? (even though it's canonically accurate)
@@Harlow. everyone has weird pfp here including you dude
@@momu5600 eh true
now microwave a cpu for 5 seconds
Ooooohhhh an alcahol evaporative cooling setup would be interesting to see. Get some rubbing alcohol in a spray bottle and spray it on the surface of the CPU! If you’ve got a 3D printer, you could make a collar to go around the CPU so that you don’t get any over spray and it could just mount to the same air cooler holes. (If you wanted me to design the collar for you I’d be happy to do so)
It's pretty much same thing as a heat pipe
@@timserious7678 it functions on the same principal as a heatpipe, but it’s about it’s only similarity to a heatpipe
Dry ice next time ?
Instead of changing the cup for a new one you should have added more ice
Due to a property of materials called latent heat, when a material is changing its phase its temperature will remain constant
It means that if you mantain a mixture of water and ice its temperature will always remain at 0°C
I'm sure that if you swapped between cups of this solution you could have gotten way better results
I was about to suggest same. Also surface area of an ice cube that touches the cup is small, but with water and ice cube, heat will transfer much better between the cube and water and between water and the cup.
Maybe even better, modify a heatpipe cooler to enter through a cup, seal it with a glue gun, it would have the heatpipes in the ice cold water and would getter heat transfer in my opinion.
Yeah except it would have flooded the motherboard...
While he would get a way better result, your statement is lacking as there is something called heat conductivity and convection speed.
Water that is on contact with the heated surface needs time to move or conduct the heat to other parts of the liquid.
So you should also add a stirring system to effectively cool your system.
@@nilsfrahm1323 Yeah he should have added cold water. The metal part initially only exchanges heat with small contact patch on the ice cube + itself.
And largely the ice cube "touches" air which doesn't exchange as much heat with the metal cup.
A
I guess this guy just really hates thermal paste...
You may try this same thing with other kind of metals like aluminum, copper and even with heatsink (idk how to do). I think the problem here is with heat conductivity of metal used. Ice is below zero, it must have cooled.
Yeah, use a thin and small copper cup, pour water in it till the brim and freeze it. Then apply fresh thermal paste and just use that frozen cup.
But cpu is much hotter
I usually use wet tissues on my laptop cpu
If you have ever seen someone hold a 1/8th inch copper pipe in there hand and just hold it against an ice cube, it cuts the the cube like butter just with the heat transfer from your hand. Point is better heat transfer would be good but it would probably melt the ice cube in about 30 seconds lol
And more mounting pressure on the CPU.
Well you should've tried ice with salt cuz salt drops the temperature of ice to about -15°C. Go try this test it could be great!
doesnt ice smelt with ice?
@@IHATETH-camSNEWUSERNAMESTUFF Yes it does , but I mean it would be a nice experiment do test.
@@IHATETH-camSNEWUSERNAMESTUFF ice smelts with ice???
salt changes the freezing point of water. the ice will be the same temperature as the air in the freezer whether or not there is salt in it. what's most likely is that the water would never freeze in the first place
An idea I once had is a "slush cooler". Basically, it works like a water cooler, except it's hooked up to a slushy machine. The slushified-water fluid is pumped down to the CPU, where it naturally will melt, then the melted slushy fluid is pumped back up to the slushy machine where it is re-cooled.
This sucks and I love it. Someone get on this right now.
I'm really liking these longer videos you're doing
Same
Same
same
Same
2:21 bsod jumpscare
Please use liquid nitrogen to cool cpu
And that folks is s what you use to overclock a cpu
e8400
@@amazidiot 👍
@@amazidiot or Gpu for that matter.
@@crisnmaryfam7344 i think he have all the stuff to performance this experiment
Next : liquid nitrogen
you could retry the ice cube experiment with distilled water ice cubes, those shouldn't be conductive
The cooling got better as the ice melted because of poor thermal coupling of a loose ice cube, that is improved by the water that bridges the gap as it melts. Filling the pot with water and freezing it would improve that. You could also try to use paraffin (candles), as it has a higher melting point, so maybe it would cool less but last longer.
by that do you mean ,,uh.. convection? heat tranfer from one hot objedt to one cold object?
ya yer right, the ice has to touch the medium, or its just heating water... and the cube is melting at a rate cooling stops transfering heat, and just boils off.... cooking is a good example... heats low but pan is hot, tons of ice,,, no dif, the pan is being heated faster then the water can cool it :-\..
oop oop what we call, a half ass thermal runaway. :-)
The measuring cups really should have been sanded to at least a grit of 3000. If that were done, the liquid water would probly be able to sustain a decent temperature without switching cups.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Its incredible how cool old CPUs were
and less powerful...
Say that to my old i7 920 what reached a good 90c while playing valorant
pentium 4 extreme edition entered the chat
Dude I had a Dell XPS studio with one of those in 2008 and the thing sounded like a friggin jet turbine every time I started GTA IV. And, yeah 90 C was common on that processor with the demanding games of the era. In the CPUs defence, I'd never even heard of liquid cooling back then. Coolers were typically smaller then, too. But, hey, multithreading and ddr3 blew my mind at the time. It was such a jump from my previous 32 bit Windows XP system.
the compressed air was better than the air duster bc its an aerosol, so the gas decompressing (condensing) also cools down the cpu. You can test this by spraying some on your hand, it'll be cold.
6:00 *Cooking a Ice Cubes!*
Maybe you could try dry ice for the cooling?
watch linus then they already made a video about it a month ago
3:28 what kinda guy puts ice in their soup lol
me
*playing games with friends* "Hold on guys, need to replace the ice for my CPU cooler real quick."
3:05 for SOME reason, oh I don't know maybe because your motherboard is literally on a wood desk without a case, and one ram stick xD
You should freeze mineral oil and see if it works as thermal paste
Video starts at 6:07
Well I wanted to say that I actaully tried on Phone this ice cooling its stayed below 40 while its 53 normallly and I tried on Battery I dunno but i cool it, It gave me 30% battery boost again i did it again gave 22% Boost I dont know But Maybe If battery stays cool it automatically charges ? I was actually charging it before a min and then switch mobile and then cooled it, thats how i did it
Battery's start to die at low enough temperatures
Please dont comment again
@@Lapraniteon ?
@@Lapraniteon ?
There wasn't nearly enough pressure between the cup and CPU for the thermal paste to be effective. In fact it might have even had some insulating properties (edit: in comparison to metal-on-metal) due to less contact surface.
Can you flip the motherboard, and apply the ice from bottom?
That way water will drip to ground, keeping the motherboard dry without using a cup in between
Then you’ll need something like a spring constantly pushing the ice upwards. Also the condensation formed on the motherboard can kill it too.
@@jivewig I think he means that if you put it on de otherside of the motherboard
@@Rubennatorr nope, then it won’t work at all. There’s wood in between then, a bad conductor of heat. He meant CPU facing down and ice in contact with it.
@@jivewig But he said bottom
@@Rubennatorr first flip the motherboard, then apply ice from bottom
1:31 bro that keyboard.
It’s a ergonomic keyboard
It would be epic if you water cooled the CPU with engine coolant lol, love these vids man!
Anti-Freeze
video starts at 05:36
Try to put the Ice in the melted water. The ice block does not completely cover the surface of the cup. I'd like to see that rerun with only new ice in the melted water, I think this'll help even more:)
4:33 next can you use mayo
Add salt to ice to melt it without increasing its temperature. That would distribute heat more efficient.
I don’t think that’s how it works…
In a 9 minute video, video doesnt start until minute 6
5:53 It's different for some boards. For example on an OptiPlex mobo it'll just alert you that the corresponding fans are not found, and you can press F1 to continue.
Yeah, in Asus mobos there is option to ignore cpu fan
You should mix gasoline and styrofoam together and use it as a thermal paste, it's a 10/10
I agree
when applying a new paste, make sure you clean the cpu well, otherwise it won't work as much as it should
I had ran a i5 3470 without a cooler for a week before realizing that it was missing its cooler. Decided to test it with integrated graphics on games like OG ghost recon and rainbow six 3 and it never went above 80 degrees celcius. A testament to "old" Intel.
It was most likely thermal throttling itself.
💡 What if a continuously running compressor blows air onto the CPU instead of that can of compressed air? 🤔
What if..... A continually spinning fan were to move air across it?!? We may have come up with a new type of Cpu cooler!.........wait..... No... Nope.
@@crisnmaryfam7344 not really nobody uses that method, first you need to add more surface where the heat can be transferred like a piece of metal that connects to the CPU the it can become more effective
Sub added, fun watch. Thank You
Thermal paste ideas:
-Make a PC PbJ sandwhich
-Make a PC Smore
-Peanut butter
-Another CPU
"another CPU"
thats what i said!
So wouldn't this be... Water cooling?
I'll see myself out
Hello! Ice is actually quite more effective. I use it o the bottom of my laptop all the time. My laptop can get quite toasty,and throttles down,but as soon as I rub 1-2 ice cubes all ove te metal bottom it goes back to its maximum potential. I think the biggest mistake you did was to just let the ice sit there. A more effective solution would be to put a small metal plate ontop of the cpu and then rub it as it melts much quicker that way. The biggest problem with ice is that it cant flow tho. Perhaps near freezing temperature water cooling would be the best of conventional and non conventional Collin worlds
By sponsoring your videos you are destroying your channel from the inside out you may not realize it until it’s too late
I did all these experiments back when i was 12years old more or less, i did Dryice and LN2 by 15yo on P4 Prescott and Pentium D's, amd Athlon etc...so yes, this is the content i found and still find interesting and captivating!
Subscribed.
This looks fascinating but as a layman I’m horrified by the idea of putting frozen WATER on my CPU horrifies me because WATER and electronics is not a good idea. That’s super cool though how the ice melts instantly. That’s so cool! It’s such efficient heat transfer.
I'd love to see a CPU cooler by an evaporator condenser (HVAC) system.
Like this?
th-cam.com/video/oaTOHmuN2M0/w-d-xo.html
Or re-purpose a portable ice maker into a cpu cooler somehow? It's something I have wanted to try.
I have that exact cpu in my old desktop, even for as old as it is, its impressive how well it ran modern day games on average hardware.
Did you use stainless steel? The least thermally conductive metal?
Try using acetone. It has a boiling point of 56 degrees celsius. By turning the top part of your cpu into a basin, you could literally boil off acetone at 56. That means that the excess heat would be turn into energy to boil off the acetone and prevent the cpu from reaching above 56 celsius.
Ah yes, chemical poisoning
Laptop users: 90C° is not hot, its freezing. 🥶
What if you remove a disk from a hard drive and install it into a pc ?
Bro a harddrive without a disk is like a cpu without cores 🤣
Blowing that bowl of water with the compressed air next to the mobo really triggered my anxiety.
people dont know what kind of content they are missing! It was so informative. want more like this :)
2:16 i can tell this is Tyler1
i realy like your concepts there crazy like linuses but also nicely demonstrated and in a very cool format
There's no way noone is talking about how he said he puts ice in his soup
Someone teach this guy about mounting pressure.
Also… How insanely ocverclocked can a 5600X get in terms of performance vs a 5900X?
Everyone Post your Futuristic Solution Cooling Methods below :
Alternative ice! DRY ICE BROOO
Ya wanna know how I know the IHS transfers heat good? I did a dry display test on an Iwill board with an athlong 1600+ a cpu from 2001 that uses less than half the power an i3 from 2012 uses, and within 2 seconds legitimately 2 seconds it started smoking and burnt itself to death, these things maxxed out at like 68 degrees tops with there itty bitty tiny coolers back in the day, thats how well the IHS works you can actually dry test a pentium 3 a cpu from the same year but unlike the athlon actually has an ihs and will work fine-ish it'll throttle almost immediately but thats infinitely better than burning to death in 2 seconds
me: help my pc is hot! school nurse: *ICE!!!*
Thermal paste alternative ideas:
Yogurt, oatmeal, banana paste, ice cream, or Vaseline!
dry ice???
Isn’t this just water cooling the pc in the middle of winter? Just… slower?
Interesting video but in the end you should've summed up the degrees you got with each cooling method.
Is it possible to "water/ice" cool the cpu by attaching something which can keep freezing the ice/water without damaging the cpu?
Use normal cooling fan, turn it off and run it with compresed air.
Future pcs will have integrated ice cube makers being stored in a copper heatsink to cool your pc!
You could make a take a pvc with a diameter less the the width of the cpu. Glue it on so it can touch the cpu
Try tooth paste as thermal paste
how about toothpaste
can it cool down the cpu instead of thermal paste
Hmmmm...... Wondering if dry ice could do that.
Thermal paste alternative - human child (spërm
ODDLYYY SATISSSSFYYINGGGGGGG
You re stealing your ideas from a smaller youtuber
3:23 “what happens when we use frozen water to cool our CPU?” holy shit is that what an ice cube is?
Thermal paste alternative: peripherals
water cooling but off brand:
Ah after ice melts now you can a make tea.
That's amazing. It's as if it wouldn't melt and water wouldn't short-circuit everything.
You should try liquid nitrogen
use a peltier module to cool the cpu pls
thermal paste alternative: hot wax
Grate a cpu, and use that as thermal paste
Use liquid helium as a thermal paste
only liquid cooler I can afford
This video gave me closure for my i5 3450 which runs around 75°-80° glad to know that it can be over 90° and still function
I used to do something like this on my old crappy laptop. I would place a round lunchbox cooler under where the cpu was as the thermal paste on the cpu was all dried up.
Use human poop as thermal paste.
you won 1000 dollars!!!!!!
Yogurt. You should use yogurt
Use gel to cool cpu day#1