@@tonn333 Or the Artists who lose loads of life and cash for 5-20 years before actually making it in the music business. Or small business owners who have to invest far more than they make in the beginning. So apparently if you're really good at your hobby and make the right choices it CAN make money. "Those who can, do. Those who can't, Teach."
7:06 so THAT's why , when i sprinkle water onto a hot pan, the droplets sometimes kind of "glide" on the surface as if the pan was water proof... TIL something new!
@@joshstanton267 I think that the really low end cards actually have quite a lot, ik that the 710 can double it's clocks on a passive cooler without hitting 70c
gamers and enthusiasts often forget that gpus exist for other reasons than getting 60 fps in 4k i used a GT 520, and then a GT 710 for a long time to push two monitors on a linux build, it was great
As a mainrenance engineer in heavy steel industry working with NO, you nailed it with the explaination about how NO works with metal or in your case, copper. Great to see using it as cooling your GPU.
My CPU waterblock was way over tightened for years. I only recently loosened it by about 1/2-3/4 of a turn. I got back my full PCI-E speeds, overclocks are stable up to about 5GHZ, and less problems in general. Guys, please for the love of all that is holy, if your heatsink/waterblock has springs on the screws, only tighten it enough to get the springs to be tensioned. Going till it bottoms out is a surefire way to break something.
With the way he mounts the cooler and constant 20c -> -120c -> 20c changes he will crack it. The question is just how long it will take. I am looking forward to that video. Finally my cracked r9 390x will have some company. (probably too much pressure on the waterblock mounting and a bent/damaged in shipping case that put pressure on the GPU over a year)
I mean these parts are like top fuel dragster engines in a way. They are run very hard only a few times then they die. But achieve awesome numbers in those few runs. Gotta pay to play as they say.
I think most of that hit the cloth on the card. Besides, he also had a lot of cloth protection on the motherboard to protect it from small spills like that.
I’m building my first PC soon. Just ordered all the parts, and I can’t wait to receive them. You gave me the courage to try, thank you for that. Love your content - peace out brother 🤙🇩🇰 For the curious: Tower: Fractal Design Meshify C White - TG Motherboard: ASRock B550 Phantom Gaming 4/ac AM4 CPU: AMD RYZEN 5 3600X 6-Core 3.8 GHz RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2x8GB) 3600 RAM SSD: Crucial P1 1TB 3D NAND NVMe PCIe Internal SSD Power supply: Corsair RMx (2018) 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply GPU: Saphire 5700 xt ‘’AMD Radeon’’
Those closeups on the pot around 10-12mins were really great! Got some proper insight on this stuff with the explanations and the visuals. Also the pot sounds as you keep pouring were weirdly satisfying.
@bruh meme you're missing the actual point, there is no such thing as cold, its simply less heat. Heat is energy, cold is the lack of that heat energy, absolute zero is the temperature at which nothing is moving and thus no heat is generated. We cannot generate cold, the same as we do not have negative energy, to go lower we simply take the excess away
That phase separator looks like it is just a sintered stainless steel muffler. Less than $16 from McMaster-Carr. After doing some looking that seems to be exactly what it is.
All of those TH-cam videos I’ve watched with guys in hazmat suits wielding thermoses with liquid nitrogen with tongs and gloves have now been shattered with a single wrist slap
Ln2 isn't that dangerous unless you are completely stupid. You and spill it and splash it on yourself with minimal ouchiness. Maintain contact with for a while then you are in trouble
The big problem he didn't mention doesn't really apply to the open workspace he has, but you have to remember that this liquid nitrogen is turning into regular nitrogen. And displacing the air that you have. in a fairly open studio like he has there this is not a problem. The air is mostly nitrogen anyway. If you were to take a small room and keep playing with your liquid nitrogen you can actually lower the oxygen level in the room. That's a more dangerous one than spilling it
I went to a science camp thing for 3 days when I was in elementary school. One guy running it showed us liquid nitrogen goofs like hammering nails into boards with bananas and stuff. At the end he asked us to make a line and he spilt a spoonful on the flat palm of our hand to show us the leidenfrost effect up close. It was pretty neat.
Question. I know nail polish can make a PCB waterproof. Could you try a cheap systems test (pretty much a sacrificial one) with a fully dipped pcb and liquid nitrogen cooling? Like install everything, cover it in nail polish, clean off the cpu for good conductance, then run it? I'd be very excited to see if it works.
Jay, I do not think you were wearing glasses when pouring in the LN2. You might want to consider. The LN2 freezes water vapour in the air so quickly that they are like tiny little needles. When you pour LN2 into something these little shards fly up into your eyes. You do not notice it but can cause long time harm!
I know Jay only does a video every 2-3 days for obvious reasons (He doesnt have a huge staff and provides quality over quantity) So Im pretty hyped to see if somehow he can muster up that kind of workload for the month! I believe in you Jay+Crew!
I used to work at Airgas filling liquid Nitrogen, Argon Oxygen Co2 and loading trucks with said liquid gasses. While filling a cryo of N2o (Nitrogen) the valve came apart and a fountain of liquid N2o hit the ceiling on the liquid dock. I got a full face of the liquid N2o. It was hot outside, I was sweaty, so it bounced off and nothing happened to me. Yes, I was supposed to wear safety (PPE) gear. Leather gloves, leather welding sleeves and a face shield. N2o is not as dangerous as you think but you should not be careless either. HAHA the 350psi release valve got you. Every liquid cryo has one, because even though a cryo has a vacuum pulled on the space between the two tanks it still vents off and without that valve you would build pressure until the two stainless steel tanks reach breaking point. This happened in Seattle and obliterated the cab of a Isuzu style flatbed truck. Fortunately for the two guys who found the scrap Oxygen cryo they got a flat tire and was in the process of changing it. It leveled the cab flush with the flatbed surface. blew one guy a hundred feet one direction and the other over the freeway, over the median, over the oncoming traffic lanes and onto the bank of oncoming traffic (8-10 lanes). The cryo landed in a woman's living room over one mile away. Turns out they filled it and it all vented out so they plugged the vent hole so it would not vent anymore. The guy who filled it was fined (and probably fired) a lot of money I don't remember how much. If someone had died he could go to prison for this, it is a criminal offense and it does not matter if you knew the vent was plugged. Before you fill something you must inspect it for this reason. That valve is on the stem or close to the filling port he should have seen it. It is 3/4 of and inch round and 2-3 inches long with red, yellow or orange tape telling the PSI rating of the release valve. If you walk by a cryo when it burps through that valve it will scare the living shit out of you. It don't matter how many times it happens you never get used to it.
Yo Jay, You should honestly do more videos like this! I know myself learns much more seeing you do everything. I really enjoyed this more relaxed video!
You would probably prefer a Quick Grip, over your c clamp. Get a 2 pack on Amazon, for under $20. That special cryo metal shtuff is sintered aluminum. It acts as a diffuser, to reduce splash.
I used to do a lot of extreme overclocking back in the early 2000's. To avoid condensation issues I would use lots of dielectric grease and neoprene all over the place 😁👍
Might be my favorite JayzTwoCents video. Love seeing the successes and the failures of a more casual format. It's like chilling in your buddies garage while the wrench on something.
I can relate why you would enjoy the whole process more then the actual result. I am just watching here and I am fascinated.Hoping I can do stuff like that in the future,its awesome
Dude... as crazy as this year has been, and how little time I've been around the internets, so I have no clue how long it's been that Nick has been back, if he's back for good, or just over a break from school or what, but it's so good to see him in your videos again.
Its easy, one can make a box of acrylic sheet with rubber gloves fitted and an inlet for slow stream of nitrogen gas to create positive pressure, we do this to avoid moisture to touch our chemical in lab
Thank you for this video Jay. I've been watching every one of your, and Steve's RIP series and especially the LN2 videos, and have been wondering about what exactly the glazing process does. Thank you for finally explaining it enough for me to understand
7:00 @Jayz Thank you, i am proud of people (even if i don't know them, or my opinion is worthless to them) every time they do something ""stupid"" but knowing exactly the physical laws behind that trick, and doing the trick without hurting them or others. So, aka thanks for your well educated being.
try this... back in the day I work on a number of government projects and for IBM... some of the chips would have wild swings in temps... we tried everything... I found if I used alcohol and dry ice, alcohol would become a superfluid that would give us a normal temp... once you have this setup right you will be amazed with the data
The technical term for frost is surface hoar, and as i'm sure no one is surprised to hear me say, petroleum lubricants do work quite well to keep hoars from showing up and causing problems
What if the room was equipped with a dehumidifier? If there was a decrease in moisture in the air in the environment, would there be moisture forming on and around the test rig?
The reason it wouldn’t necessarily short because of condensation is because condensation water is pretty much pure water - and pure water is nonconductive. What normally makes water conductive is impurities in water that make it an ionic solution. So unless you have ions dissolve into the condensed water directly from the PCB / other components, you wouldn’t have any problems.
Overclocking (especially at this level) is like drag racing. You want the car(d) to work as close to maximum performance for a very limited time, to get the numbers you want, and if it melts 10 feet after the finish line well... hopefully you laid down a perfect run. Doesn't have anything to do with going to the grocery store or playing fortnite but that's totally fine.
At 4:07 I think the water didn’t kill any components because it was condensation. Condensation typically has very few impurities in a clean environment and since pure water is not very conducive it didn’t kill anything.
21:54 do that with the lights off plus can you orientate the MB upright so the GPU comes out of the PCIE slot sideways, so the frozen materials will melt towards the heatsink
Fun Fact: Learned about the "leidenfrost" effect in an episode from Mythbusters, back in the day. It not only applies to LN2 but also to fluid metal, if you´re fast enough getting in and out. And while being at it, leidenfrost is german where I live so it´s quiet funny hear him say this all the time;D
You should try using a sheet of gold leaf instead of thermal paste. It’s soft enough to get into all the nooks and crannies but it won’t freeze and crack. Also if you put your motherboard and card in an enclosed plexiglass box and backfill it with some of that nitrogen to create a dry atmosphere you will eliminate the frost problem you’re having by eliminating humid air and replacing it with dry nitrogen. Just a thought good luck
"The Every Video of the Day of December" simply must be the name of this series.
already fucked up twice, classic jay
I kinda like "Video Every Day of December" because of the acronym. Vedod.
@@CssHDmonster he didn't fuck up though by saying 30 days because he released this video on the 2nd xD
every video*
Meme channel Here Go Sub th-cam.com/video/FHkiPOQTTQ8/w-d-xo.html
"If you don't do things properly" as hes duck taping a fan to the side.
tape made out of real ducks
isn’t it spelled duct?
Duck tape? hahaha you chimpanzee
Dunno about anywhere else, but here in the UK, Duck Tape is popular brand of duct tape.
@@therealpbristow same here in the U.S.
There is a german proverb: "The definition of hobby is to generate the least usefullness with the greatest effort."
That explains a -MineCraft- I mean MeinKraft server called SciCraft.
They even tried making an automated dirt farm before the mechanic was patched.
One economics professor told to me that everything that takes more money than you get from it is a hobby :,D
We have a similar one "A hobby is something that costs £300 and 4 weeks of time to make something you can go and buy now for £20" :D
The few master craftsmans of the world are all apparently just hobbyists.
@@tonn333 Or the Artists who lose loads of life and cash for 5-20 years before actually making it in the music business. Or small business owners who have to invest far more than they make in the beginning. So apparently if you're really good at your hobby and make the right choices it CAN make money. "Those who can, do. Those who can't, Teach."
7:06 so THAT's why , when i sprinkle water onto a hot pan, the droplets sometimes kind of "glide" on the surface as if the pan was water proof...
TIL something new!
Yes indeed. The temperature differential is so vast that the water droplets is cushioned on a pocket of gas.
"No one ever said overclocking a graphics card was necessary"
Clearly you've never used a GT 1030
How much headroom has a 1030 got?
@@joshstanton267 I think that the really low end cards actually have quite a lot, ik that the 710 can double it's clocks on a passive cooler without hitting 70c
@@jamesdavey8675 yeah 710's are amazing.
.
.
.
amazingly bad
gamers and enthusiasts often forget that gpus exist for other reasons than getting 60 fps in 4k
i used a GT 520, and then a GT 710 for a long time to push two monitors on a linux build, it was great
@Nicefisher yeh he's how ik that, just yesterday he put a 710 cooler on a 3200g
As a mainrenance engineer in heavy steel industry working with NO, you nailed it with the explaination about how NO works with metal or in your case, copper. Great to see using it as cooling your GPU.
“Don’t do what I do” ......bummer because I really wanted to LN2 my easily acquired kingpin 3090
Relatable
It's hard not to do these days
Yeah one might do that by accident if not paying attention
if you ever do, just buy some kneed eraser for the socket. "do things properly" lul
Your salt levels are higher than his Port Royal score.
"thanks to EVGA for..... basically sending these cards of to their death" LOL
me with my gt 730
*cries in poor*
When "-20C" is considered overheating
-20C on the probe means probably 60C in the GPU Die.
My CPU waterblock was way over tightened for years. I only recently loosened it by about 1/2-3/4 of a turn. I got back my full PCI-E speeds, overclocks are stable up to about 5GHZ, and less problems in general. Guys, please for the love of all that is holy, if your heatsink/waterblock has springs on the screws, only tighten it enough to get the springs to be tensioned. Going till it bottoms out is a surefire way to break something.
"I'm talking to the internet."
"Oh..."
Who's the camera guy, where's Phil?
@@jonjohnson2844 don't you know coconut monkey (Nick)? You must be pretty New.
@@Jordan-oi4kj he's Jay's friend, not some camera guy
@@Jordan-oi4kj Unfortunately, he lost his job during Covid, that's why he's back... Kudos to Jay for helping him out!
I am so addicted to the knowledge I receive here. No way I understand everything but just watching your interest level increases mine.
Imagine if he cracked the die with the clamp...
With the way he mounts the cooler and constant 20c -> -120c -> 20c changes he will crack it. The question is just how long it will take. I am looking forward to that video.
Finally my cracked r9 390x will have some company. (probably too much pressure on the waterblock mounting and a bent/damaged in shipping case that put pressure on the GPU over a year)
I mean these parts are like top fuel dragster engines in a way. They are run very hard only a few times then they die. But achieve awesome numbers in those few runs. Gotta pay to play as they say.
@@bentboybbz you ain’t kidding when you say pay
"There's good crack sounds and bad crack so- *SNAP* ....That...don't worry, that was a good crack! (shit...cut...phil, cut....NOW)"
Clearly shows you cracked your skull when your mummy dropped you
Old Title: “This is so unnecessary...”
Okay good 😂😂 I thought I was going crazy
He needs to update it again because now it is the 4th fastest.
@@TheArmyKnifeNut how are you checking who have the fastest gpu
@@raygt2790 The Port Royal benchmarks for single GPU tests. Jay is currently in second for two cards and fourth for single card.
14:58 You spilled a LOT of LN2 onto the board right there without noticing. Might have been what frozen the slot and PCIe pins.
took a sec but i saw it. ^
i searched for this comment aha
I noticed that too.
if that froze something it would not boot at all.
I think most of that hit the cloth on the card. Besides, he also had a lot of cloth protection on the motherboard to protect it from small spills like that.
It’s weird to see a sober Californian say the word “pot” so many times
YAY! More Coconut Monkey, those of us that have been here for a decade miss Nick!
Glad he's behind the camera again
Ditto!
I heard a coconut monkey and came to the comments.
I've never actually seen this process. It's actually super interesting and I love a bit of physics. A shame it's such an expensive hobby.
Jays mysteriously large supply of vaseline existed well before his "extreme overclocking" alibi :^)
I tried to alibi my KY with overclocking but it shorted my pcb
Probably because of his uses with it on his Cars.... No, I’m not talking about the Albanian one.
Should ask him if he has ever rubbed out a shiny.
Everyone has extra vaseline when no nut November ends
Haven't used Vaseline since the 80's, terrible cleanup.
Lol, loved when the cameraman started responding to your instructions and you had to remind him you're talking to the internet.
I like seeing this side of Jay, it seems a lot more professional. He actually seems like he knows what hes doing.
Jay: "you need this much paste".... also Jay: "this is too much paste "...... also Jay: "i am out of KPX"
don't know why you should use more . . . should make contact with chip and cooler right
I’m building my first PC soon. Just ordered all the parts, and I can’t wait to receive them. You gave me the courage to try, thank you for that. Love your content - peace out brother 🤙🇩🇰
For the curious:
Tower: Fractal Design Meshify C White - TG
Motherboard: ASRock B550 Phantom Gaming 4/ac AM4
CPU: AMD RYZEN 5 3600X 6-Core 3.8 GHz
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2x8GB) 3600 RAM
SSD: Crucial P1 1TB 3D NAND NVMe PCIe Internal SSD
Power supply: Corsair RMx (2018) 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply
GPU: Saphire 5700 xt ‘’AMD Radeon’’
@Ice Bear Thanks man! :)
Those closeups on the pot around 10-12mins were really great! Got some proper insight on this stuff with the explanations and the visuals. Also the pot sounds as you keep pouring were weirdly satisfying.
@9:15 spoken like a true engineer! You can't 'let the cold in" when someone leaves a door open.
@bruh meme you're missing the actual point, there is no such thing as cold, its simply less heat. Heat is energy, cold is the lack of that heat energy, absolute zero is the temperature at which nothing is moving and thus no heat is generated. We cannot generate cold, the same as we do not have negative energy, to go lower we simply take the excess away
That phase separator looks like it is just a sintered stainless steel muffler. Less than $16 from McMaster-Carr.
After doing some looking that seems to be exactly what it is.
I haven't seen Nick in a video since forever cool seeing him again!
Where's phil though? Didn't follow...
I thought he left the channel
twitter.com/coconutmnky/status/1009634858883166208?lang=en
@@TutorialClan he recently came back. Within the last few weeks
The Sound when the fire goes on is sooo satisfying
If this is what we're getting all month, I'm a happy boi.
Jay: "Don't at me, when your EOC'ing you use more thermal paste than normal". 20 minutes later "I think we used to much thermal paste". 🤣
All of those TH-cam videos I’ve watched with guys in hazmat suits wielding thermoses with liquid nitrogen with tongs and gloves have now been shattered with a single wrist slap
Ln2 isn't that dangerous unless you are completely stupid. You and spill it and splash it on yourself with minimal ouchiness. Maintain contact with for a while then you are in trouble
The big problem he didn't mention doesn't really apply to the open workspace he has, but you have to remember that this liquid nitrogen is turning into regular nitrogen. And displacing the air that you have.
in a fairly open studio like he has there this is not a problem. The air is mostly nitrogen anyway.
If you were to take a small room and keep playing with your liquid nitrogen you can actually lower the oxygen level in the room. That's a more dangerous one than spilling it
I went to a science camp thing for 3 days when I was in elementary school. One guy running it showed us liquid nitrogen goofs like hammering nails into boards with bananas and stuff. At the end he asked us to make a line and he spilt a spoonful on the flat palm of our hand to show us the leidenfrost effect up close. It was pretty neat.
Question. I know nail polish can make a PCB waterproof. Could you try a cheap systems test (pretty much a sacrificial one) with a fully dipped pcb and liquid nitrogen cooling? Like install everything, cover it in nail polish, clean off the cpu for good conductance, then run it?
I'd be very excited to see if it works.
"I'm addicted to it now"
And thus, behold the downfall of JayZ.
addicted to oc or vaseline???????
oh
Doesn’t help he wiped his nose saying that comment😂
@Furious_DC why do you comment this on a comment? did you mean to write thi comment so jay can see it?
@Furious_DC (After the hit) OMG DUDE I SEE IN LEIDENFROST
this video is mind blowing, I've only ever had a cursory look into ultra overclocking but getting something more in depth like this is nutz.
The process is very interesting. You had my attention all the way through the video to see what happened next.
This is awesome - seeing the whole process of setup, testing, tweaking... great video!
I have seen few people whose name is a better fit for their face
The Linus Dad Joke about Drops was probably your best yet
Jay, I do not think you were wearing glasses when pouring in the LN2. You might want to consider. The LN2 freezes water vapour in the air so quickly that they are like tiny little needles. When you pour LN2 into something these little shards fly up into your eyes. You do not notice it but can cause long time harm!
The tech population "Damn it I cant find a card!" Jay: On todays episode im gonna wreck a brand new card... lol
Might as well entertain us as we can't buy it
Not just any card, I believe that’s a KingPin 3090 which is like the most expensive and rare 3090 in the world.
@@smartgorilla I enjoy watching these because its something I probably will never do.
@@benwilson7869 All 3000 series card are the rarest in the world at this point lol
@@benwilson7869 it's amazing. Just wish Paul could do it too
imagine one day when liquid nitrogen cooling is standard, that will be a gracious day
Everyone: 31 Days of Tech-miss!
Jay: shut up.
3:19
Exactly. Every one can have their fun the way they like it (as long as no one else gets hurt or suffer from that fun).
I know Jay only does a video every 2-3 days for obvious reasons (He doesnt have a huge staff and provides quality over quantity) So Im pretty hyped to see if somehow he can muster up that kind of workload for the month! I believe in you Jay+Crew!
I used to work at Airgas filling liquid Nitrogen, Argon Oxygen Co2 and loading trucks with said liquid gasses. While filling a cryo of N2o (Nitrogen) the valve came apart and a fountain of liquid N2o hit the ceiling on the liquid dock. I got a full face of the liquid N2o. It was hot outside, I was sweaty, so it bounced off and nothing happened to me. Yes, I was supposed to wear safety (PPE) gear. Leather gloves, leather welding sleeves and a face shield. N2o is not as dangerous as you think but you should not be careless either.
HAHA the 350psi release valve got you. Every liquid cryo has one, because even though a cryo has a vacuum pulled on the space between the two tanks it still vents off and without that valve you would build pressure until the two stainless steel tanks reach breaking point.
This happened in Seattle and obliterated the cab of a Isuzu style flatbed truck. Fortunately for the two guys who found the scrap Oxygen cryo they got a flat tire and was in the process of changing it. It leveled the cab flush with the flatbed surface. blew one guy a hundred feet one direction and the other over the freeway, over the median, over the oncoming traffic lanes and onto the bank of oncoming traffic (8-10 lanes). The cryo landed in a woman's living room over one mile away.
Turns out they filled it and it all vented out so they plugged the vent hole so it would not vent anymore. The guy who filled it was fined (and probably fired) a lot of money I don't remember how much. If someone had died he could go to prison for this, it is a criminal offense and it does not matter if you knew the vent was plugged. Before you fill something you must inspect it for this reason. That valve is on the stem or close to the filling port he should have seen it. It is 3/4 of and inch round and 2-3 inches long with red, yellow or orange tape telling the PSI rating of the release valve. If you walk by a cryo when it burps through that valve it will scare the living shit out of you. It don't matter how many times it happens you never get used to it.
Looks like a setup he’s made to go back in time!
Don’t give him ideas!
Yo Jay, You should honestly do more videos like this! I know myself learns much more seeing you do everything. I really enjoyed this more relaxed video!
Yay, I wasn’t sure if you were doing this, I was literally just watching your other video to make sure I heard right
You would probably prefer a Quick Grip, over your c clamp. Get a 2 pack on Amazon, for under $20. That special cryo metal shtuff is sintered aluminum. It acts as a diffuser, to reduce splash.
"-120 c which isn't enough to be stable"
Jay 2020
I used to do a lot of extreme overclocking back in the early 2000's. To avoid condensation issues I would use lots of dielectric grease and neoprene all over the place 😁👍
You know you can just buy a can of conformal coating by 3M coat the whole board makes everything waterproof
Might be my favorite JayzTwoCents video. Love seeing the successes and the failures of a more casual format. It's like chilling in your buddies garage while the wrench on something.
"Why did you want to climb Mount Everest?" "Because it's there." - George Mallory
Welcome to humanity. We're pretty fucking cool like that. (And also very uncool like that, but I digress.)
Humans can't do shit
@3:21 Thanks for your Mister Rodgers moment Jay!
those poor caps on the back of the board, the way he treats them with that clamp is just awful
Yeah it’s completely unnecessary. If Vince can get a perfect mount with just his hands then so can he lol
I can relate why you would enjoy the whole process more then the actual result. I am just watching here and I am fascinated.Hoping I can do stuff like that in the future,its awesome
“Lightly used...”
Dude... as crazy as this year has been, and how little time I've been around the internets, so I have no clue how long it's been that Nick has been back, if he's back for good, or just over a break from school or what, but it's so good to see him in your videos again.
I love that you let Nic run this thing, that was cool, also its clear he loved it.
Rather than dealing with a lot of moisture mess, just do it in a glove box with positive pressure of nitrogen
Its easy, one can make a box of acrylic sheet with rubber gloves fitted and an inlet for slow stream of nitrogen gas to create positive pressure, we do this to avoid moisture to touch our chemical in lab
Thank you for this video Jay. I've been watching every one of your, and Steve's RIP series and especially the LN2 videos, and have been wondering about what exactly the glazing process does. Thank you for finally explaining it enough for me to understand
2020 in a nutshell
*OUT OF STOCK*
When he's not in the video (well, commenting from the off) you suddenly realize how much Phil brings to the show. :) Love the guy.
"I'm addicted to it." After saying that, I was wondering if he was addicted to making videos, or the thermal paste he just mentioned. xD
Thermal paste is addictive..
@@jasonoutman420 😂😂
I suspect it was actually the vaseline.
Nah, he's just addicted to Vaseline.
7:00
@Jayz
Thank you, i am proud of people (even if i don't know them, or my opinion is worthless to them) every time they do something ""stupid"" but knowing exactly the physical laws behind that trick, and doing the trick without hurting them or others.
So, aka thanks for your well educated being.
0:58 Jay sounds straight up like a dude addicted to something real hard.
He just wants to defeat the Tech Jesus
Legendary Stuff.... The best LN2 walk through I've seen.. Can't wait to see where this takes you.. Look out Mr.Kingpin...
best line " huge thanks to evga for basically sending these cards off to their death "
try this... back in the day I work on a number of government projects and for IBM... some of the chips would have wild swings in temps... we tried everything... I found if I used alcohol and dry ice, alcohol would become a superfluid that would give us a normal temp... once you have this setup right you will be amazed with the data
Don't do anything Jay did in the first 2 minutes of this video to your card, unless you want to cry.
Some poor techs at NVIDA. What is causing all these cards to get crushed?
The technical term for frost is surface hoar, and as i'm sure no one is surprised to hear me say, petroleum lubricants do work quite well to keep hoars from showing up and causing problems
Remember friends: Writing it down makes it science.
Do more stuff like this. Its realy nice to see the process
"so I can have a bath in LN2 and I'll be fine? neet,..."
5 minutes later
"I have no feet -.-"
You can take a bath. Just a really short one
You can take a bath in runny cow shit too, but it's not recommended!!!!!
What if the room was equipped with a dehumidifier? If there was a decrease in moisture in the air in the environment, would there be moisture forming on and around the test rig?
"just a metal perforated piece of stuff".... Look closely Jay xD
The reason it wouldn’t necessarily short because of condensation is because condensation water is pretty much pure water - and pure water is nonconductive. What normally makes water conductive is impurities in water that make it an ionic solution. So unless you have ions dissolve into the condensed water directly from the PCB / other components, you wouldn’t have any problems.
and I found out another use of Vaseline. is there anything vaseline can't do? let's continue to explore the limits of vaseline.
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
6:20 that explanation was definitely needed because I was wondering that
The person that brings you the happiest memories may, one day, become a memory.
I just realized how cursed this is-
That just happened to me.
The person that brings you the worst memories may, one day, become a bad memory
Very informative Jay on LN2 process!
This is the least hot(coolest) thing I've ever seen.
Groovy video home slice! I dig this style, please consider doing it more for the rest of the month.
Jay straight up pouring a whole glass worth of LN on his hand just for the poops and giggles is metal af
Yeah... No
Overclocking (especially at this level) is like drag racing. You want the car(d) to work as close to maximum performance for a very limited time, to get the numbers you want, and if it melts 10 feet after the finish line well... hopefully you laid down a perfect run. Doesn't have anything to do with going to the grocery store or playing fortnite but that's totally fine.
10:14 Man! At first I thought they intentionally edited it to "ASSACHUSETTS", it took me few seconds to notice there is a designed M before it. 😂😂😂
At 4:07 I think the water didn’t kill any components because it was condensation. Condensation typically has very few impurities in a clean environment and since pure water is not very conducive it didn’t kill anything.
Damn. I’ve never been this early before.
Hi Quinn
I love the fact Nic referenced Jason X. Low key one of my favorite B movies.
Last time I was this Early, there was no Human Malware.
Go to the corner
14:57 that ln2 you spilled out of the pot could explain the ice on the on the pcie slot and the frozen vaseline on the back of the gpu
Finally going after LTT with them daily vids..... only interesting!
Same logo too
@@Perroxiide rediculous though as there just creating ads for a product that doesn't exist
21:54 do that with the lights off
plus can you orientate the MB upright so the GPU comes out of the PCIE slot sideways, so the frozen materials will melt towards the heatsink
Phil's been absolutely awesome but it's nice to hear Nick again from behind the camera. Cool vid btw.
Fun Fact: Learned about the "leidenfrost" effect in an episode from Mythbusters, back in the day. It not only applies to LN2 but also to fluid metal, if you´re fast enough getting in and out. And while being at it, leidenfrost is german where I live so it´s quiet funny hear him say this all the time;D
I can tell how new he is to doing this and how excited he is to be tinkering with new tech. Much love Jay!
You should try using a sheet of gold leaf instead of thermal paste. It’s soft enough to get into all the nooks and crannies but it won’t freeze and crack. Also if you put your motherboard and card in an enclosed plexiglass box and backfill it with some of that nitrogen to create a dry atmosphere you will eliminate the frost problem you’re having by eliminating humid air and replacing it with dry nitrogen. Just a thought good luck
I really enjoy this Techmas videos series, learning so much things so fast. Thanks Jayz !
I'm just happy to see Nic in your videos again
This was super cool Jay. I had no idea this is how LN2 is done with GPUs. Very interesting and educational video.