These kinds of videos are what keep me coming. Love the wacky experiments, and I can't wait to see the Lovelace and/or RDNA 3 overclocking battle if that ends up happening :)
When i look at the Top, where all the successful people are.. i see NO mexicans 😪it makes me sad. I review weed products on my TH-cam channel for a living.. trying to make it out the hood yoo
9:39 YES!!!! Loving this kind of stuff. It's all the things you make up in your mind when you're sitting at your desk or in your shed, basement, whatever, had a drink, and start "thinking"
I love all of your videos but like you said, i enjoy the more wacky ones like these too. Sometimes you have those "i wonder what would happen if i did this" kind of thoughts but would never spend the time strapping a box to an AC unit and doing this king of thing lmfao. Well, we have Jay here to do our experiments for us :D
I was just looking at it when they moved. Aha! Shiny mobo? I have something similar happening. I have a mirror in my case, cut to fit under my 3080 because that's where the rgb is when normally mounted. And we don't want to waste that rgb. It's at a 45 degree from the back of the card to the "floor" of the case. Hides the wiring at the bottom of the mobo and looks like another card mounted vertically under the horizontal one.
Could we have a Ryzen 5800X undervolting video guide please Jay :) I tried CTR 2.0 for many weeks and found it just made my PC unstable. I hear that it is not too hard to set an all core undervolt through BIOS and Ryzen Master but would love to see someone with your experience breaking it down for us step by step. Thanks for all the great videos
Hey Jay! I love your videos! I was hoping that maybe you could do a GPU overclocking guide? I know there's a bunch out there and I know there's lots of written guides too but I'd love to see a video from you about that, where you talk about more than just core and memory clock speeds and also talk about voltages and when you should maybe undervolt your GPU. Just asking cuz why not
There really isn't much risk we take when overclocking. There are protections built into modern components that will prevent you from completely bricking something like a CPU. The only thing you will lose when messing around like Jay is in this video is time.
@pdX5M _ I'm still learning Jay's video tutorials help a lot on my second build at the minute fer content creation the humour in Jay's videos also helps keep us sane 😊
@@G0UDG we're all still learning at all times. I've only really built one PC but it's gone through a few changes in two different cases so I guess I've built two as well. This video did inspire me to go in and tweak my current overclock on my 10850k though. Jay always provides good entertainment.
These are definitely my favorite videos, I love the jankyness and half-assery involved in these projects. It's a nice contrast to the super detailed water cooling and case mod projects.
mini split - $1500 all parts. Then you need about $600-900 to have an electrician install the 'whip' and shut off. Then another $800 for the install (vacuum lines etc.) So. . . OK it's not like it's cheap but. . . it's totally doable. And what you do with that mini split in your office is your own business, so who cares if it just happens to duct directly into a PC case before cooling the room? Seems legit.
Man, i'm a older guy that just started the pc gaming thing. I leave my pc in a unheated shop. I was so wondering how to keep it cool in the summer. And you solved it man. I have one of those stand up A/C's. Just thanks... thats brilliant
Along these lines, have you thought about discussing powering a desktop computer with 208 or 240 V and the extra efficiency that can bring? (I.e. quantifying it.) ... not really for European viewers but instead for those of us in North America ... especially as power consumption gets over 1 KW, this might actually improve safety and consume a little less power.
This was fun to watch, I'm just wondering what you do about condensation? I know you wouldn't run that forever that way, but after a few hours of that, what do you do to dry everything out?
Jay, back in 2017 I started watching your videos to learn how to build a PC. 6 years later I have built 7 more. Friends and family. Anyone that knows me comes to me for any PC issues. All my knowledge is thanks to you Papa Jay!
Love these types of videos! Especially the whole "what if" kind of testing about it just to see, just because. It's what makes overclocking so fun, the spirit of making it work, even if you have to macguyver up some crazy jank looking thing to make it happen. Keep the videos coming Jay!!
11:10 If you want the room to not turn into an oven, make sure that window unit is still in a window. They make more heat than they remove, that's why they sit halfway out the window, the hot part is outside.
9:40 Jay just described me right there. I like your regular content, I watch them pretty regularly, and I enjoy doing so. However, the type of content that ALWAYS brings me back to the channel is stupid stuff like this. These kinds of videos just never ever get old. And then there's the interaction between you three as a cherry on top :D
I love all experiments! There's no bad idea. Its all for fun and we learn things we never could without these experiments. Great job Jay and the crew!!!
Jay can u test gpu temps by removing stuff like the RGB strip on the Asus strix card they seem like blocking the airflow to much but we cant know without u testing it I dont have the ability to take that rgb strip from a 3090 cuz I dont have a 3090 so I cant test it.
Idea for a water cooling experiment I'd like to see, because I've considered doing this myself. Get a mini fridge, possibly with a separate freezer compartment. Drill two holes through it for, and install hose fittings. Place a big radiator inside the fridge and set the fridge to right around/above freezing. Fans with maglev bearings should be fine with the cold temps. Start the PC, crank up the settings, and game hard.
back in high school, my computer was located right under a wall-mounted AC unit... I once built a long cardboard tube to funnel cold air from the AC's vent, through the back of the PC case, and directly onto the CPU HSF. This was an AMD K6-2 (yeah, I'm old), which had a reputation for running hot, this definitely helped! And not janky at all :D
This is your lane. Great video. You give just enough depth to keep the watcher interested, without going so far as to alienate those who don't have the breadth of knowledge that you do. You're an excellent teacher. And if you had put out some sort of certification course I'd take it. Studying for the A+ currently, and I WISH you were an instructor.
Just a small point. Hot air rises, and cold air falls. We didn't really see the full scope of your taping, but if you had not sealed the bottom of the cardboard box to the case or the base of the AC, so the cold air can leak out the bottom gaps, you are probably losing cooling efficiency.
This is for the people who don't know: AC units effectively eliminate moisture from the air, so condensation inside your rig should be close to zero so long as you isolate the flow directly from the blower and not from the surrounding air (i.e. don't have other fans pulling air into the case from the room).
YAY!!! Please do these vids more often...genuinely enjoy all of your work but your crazy ass brain + crazy ass computer hardware = entertainment for hours
The A/C cooling OC vids are kinda fun to watch cause while they are about as unconventional as the LN2 vids they're just slightly more practical (albeit jank and almost never worth actually doing) But I feel it's more down to earth and relatable more than the LN2 vids.
16:44 This silly shit is why i love watching this videos while i work. Jay just being happier about making a whole in a cardboard box than fixing any heavy water cooler piping hahah Awesome!
I absolutely love your videos Jay, I can't get enough of them, especially the ones with your witty repartee. Keep up the great work! I am sad as I only have 2 years tops left, and I am so worried about my son, I'm trying to build him something (A Computer) for when I am gone so he has something nice to remember me other than me that is. So I wanted to ask if you have any decent PC hardware I could get a deal on. But no worries it is just a thought. Let me know.
These types of videos are super less serious and more goofy than regular videos. I like the main videos but making something wacky and doing something fun with it is a lot more fun to watch
This video is great because even though it wasn’t designed to it taught me the difference in sync all cores vs individual clock speed and it’s all in my bios so I can do some tweaking myself. Also love all the voltage information as I just built my first custom loop and voltage vs heat is something I’d love to know more about.
Just want to say it’s crazy to see how far you’ve come since you started TH-cam full time. I remember when you posted a video contemplating if you should quit your job to do TH-cam full time. Worked out in the end. Keep up the great content.
Jay, I hold these videos so close to my heart. It reminds me of when I used to build all sorts of stuff with cardboard boxes as a kid. I had toys, even a PS1 and PC, but no, I built my dog a cardboard mall strip. Hahaha. Love these random videos!
I'm really impressed that you were able to get over 30k with such manageable temperatures. High 70s low 80s is a really nice place to be considering it's one of the most stressful commonly used tests you can put your cpu through and 12th gen is notoriously extremely hot
Extreme Hot vs. Cold + Moisture = Condensation. Condensation + Electrical Components = Fried. Does anyone want some burnt, soggy, electrified fried toast? You have to make sure that no moisture can reach the electrical components. Awesome video, Jay. 😃
12 year old me making cooling tunnels in my P1 system out of tape and note cards and an extra fan to increase the cooling efficiency of my crappy horizontal case to squeeze like 10mhz on top of the 133 it had LOVES this stuff. There isn't enough jank in modern set ups. like, classy jank like this.
I love these janky experiment videos. One that I want to do is to get a water chiller, and connect it to a custom loop system. Though by this point we're running a subambient, but you can always just set the chiller to dew point or slightly higher to avoid condensation problems. Slightly annoyingly, I live in humid Florida, where dew points tend to be quite high, limiting how low one can set the setpoint without condensation mitigation.
Hey, I'm a part of that subset! Awesome! Mostly it's because I'm legitimately curious what happens if seemingly dumb stuff is done, but also because I feel like Jay has more fun. Which he admitted to. If I could offer an experiment idea I'd like to see if it's possible to get a reservoir so big it helps temps either by leveling out temps during short gaming sessions (thinking a gallon here) or by being so big they dissipate heat by themselves (probably a bucket) Maybe if you go far enough you don't even need a rad?
One issue... with the AC unit... you have much higher moisture condensing on the rad, and that is being sent through the PC. Maybe work with an AC technician to build a cooling solution that integrates the AC? or where the Rad is outside the case, and not exhausting the heat it removed into the air that is then used to cool the PC. Maybe instead of having a rad to radiate the heat to air, have a liquid-liquid exchanger, which then sends the heat out of the room?
Anyone can discuss hardware with the same benchmark numbers over and over again. But these wild janky builds are why I'm subscribed. Hilarious and awesome.
These are the best type of videos, just having fun and pushing that hardware to its limit, I would of liked to try this on the fx8350 and push voltage until something popped.
@ 10:20 "This beautiful piece of artwork", my first thought was it was some sort of techno-replica homage of the Human Centipede rofl Great vid Jay! :D
Can confirm I'm here for this content. Or, any content where you don't take yourself too serious. It makes you human and it's exactly how I would try to do this!
Temps get in the mid 90's during the summer, so I take off the side panel and have my room ac blow directly into my pc. no cardboard or tape, but my 5800x and 1080ti enjoy the cool air. Another fun video to watch.
Hey guys, you can set in the bios to turn on the computer when there is power to the mobo so you can turn it on just using the power supply switch. It’s there for power outages but it would work when the system resets or freezes to slightly reduce the jankiness
Simple science; Where hot meets cold, condensation will form. I've seen this a few times, the case will rust quickly. Putting the entire PC (case and all) in the cold enclosure will prevent this. This enclosure needs to be built out of something that will not rust, like Plexiglas. Because the cold air coming from the AC is extremely dry, no condensation will form inside the enclosure. And with this cold air flow-through system, the AC doesn't have to deal with the heat directly (as a PC inside a frig would). * Most people make cooling mistakes on their build due to their poor understanding of thermal dynamics. Reasonably fresh air needs to brush by all of the high energy components (CPU chipset GPU memory & drives). The problem I see most often is, due to the lack of fresh air circulating past the outside of the case, there is no reasonably fresh air available. We talk about the Thermal density of the CPU cooler; the same principle applies to the supply of fresh air. There needs to be some mechanism in the room that moves air, and the PC needs to be within this flow.
Alder Lake scales well with lower temps. I gained 200MHz in prime95 AVX2 stable clocks by reducing the coolant temperature from 30C (reasonable custom water loop) to around 2-3C with my chiller. This also allows for using higher vcore without hitting 100C. Max stable prime95 AVX2 vs coolant temp for reference: 30C coolant - 5.1GHz / 96C load / 1.245v die sense 20C coolant - 5.2GHz / 96C load / 1.296v die sense 10C coolant - 5.2GHz / 75C load / 1.243v die sense 2C coolant - 5.3GHz / 81C load / 1.318v die sense Running an AC directly through a PC case is a decent idea, but the downside is that you won't be able to run a 24/7 stable overclock if it depends on the AC running. Anytime the AC cycles off, your temps are going to increase back to a more typical value. The absolute best solution would be a water chiller with the hot side heat exchanger venting outside.
These kinds of videos are what keep me coming. Love the wacky experiments, and I can't wait to see the Lovelace and/or RDNA 3 overclocking battle if that ends up happening :)
It’s all the stuff we would love to do if we had the time and money to do it. We can live vicariously through jay!
Ln2 cpu experiment. Product idea micro ac units for pc radiators. If only I could get paid for my ideas
Facts the rant videos really get me down but these types are by far my favorite. That and his ln2 overclocking ones
When i look at the Top, where all the successful people are.. i see NO mexicans 😪it makes me sad. I review weed products on my TH-cam channel for a living.. trying to make it out the hood yoo
Coming hard, baby
9:39 YES!!!! Loving this kind of stuff. It's all the things you make up in your mind when you're sitting at your desk or in your shed, basement, whatever, had a drink, and start "thinking"
I love all of your videos but like you said, i enjoy the more wacky ones like these too. Sometimes you have those "i wonder what would happen if i did this" kind of thoughts but would never spend the time strapping a box to an AC unit and doing this king of thing lmfao. Well, we have Jay here to do our experiments for us :D
Agreed. Overengineering for the sake of overengineering and "what will happen if" videos are always fun!
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never thought i'd see you on here lol. Man i watched your pranks right back in the day
hell yeah baby !
one toasty room after that
I’m embarrassed at how long I was staring at the back exhaust wondering how they got two fans next to each other just to find out it’s a reflection
Had a head tilt myself there for a second too.
I was just looking at it when they moved. Aha! Shiny mobo? I have something similar happening.
I have a mirror in my case, cut to fit under my 3080 because that's where the rgb is when normally mounted. And we don't want to waste that rgb. It's at a 45 degree from the back of the card to the "floor" of the case. Hides the wiring at the bottom of the mobo and looks like another card mounted vertically under the horizontal one.
Fewer pharmaceuticals, more pocket protecting.
to be fair it is a very convincing reflection.
Was any “cabbage” involved? Although it is really convincing lol.
Phil's 🤦 just had me 🤣.
Also note to self: Keep Jay away from box cutters. 😬
Yaay, stupid experiments one of my favourite kind of videos. What could go wrong?
condensation
Love it! I miss the RTFM show!!!!! Love the interaction between the three of you guys
Yeah. What happened to that? No explanation, just stopped. I assume personal life, which is fine and understandable, but I miss it, too.
@@dangerwr I forgot where, but they said that it just didn't get enough views for to be worth the time it took to make the RTFM show.
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@@iahonz That's fair. I still miss it.
Could we have a Ryzen 5800X undervolting video guide please Jay :) I tried CTR 2.0 for many weeks and found it just made my PC unstable. I hear that it is not too hard to set an all core undervolt through BIOS and Ryzen Master but would love to see someone with your experience breaking it down for us step by step. Thanks for all the great videos
Hey Jay! I love your videos! I was hoping that maybe you could do a GPU overclocking guide? I know there's a bunch out there and I know there's lots of written guides too but I'd love to see a video from you about that, where you talk about more than just core and memory clock speeds and also talk about voltages and when you should maybe undervolt your GPU. Just asking cuz why not
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Love how yer never afraid to experiment and test components to the max Jay so we don't have to take too much risk
There really isn't much risk we take when overclocking. There are protections built into modern components that will prevent you from completely bricking something like a CPU. The only thing you will lose when messing around like Jay is in this video is time.
@pdX5M _ I'm still learning Jay's video tutorials help a lot on my second build at the minute fer content creation the humour in Jay's videos also helps keep us sane 😊
@@G0UDG we're all still learning at all times. I've only really built one PC but it's gone through a few changes in two different cases so I guess I've built two as well. This video did inspire me to go in and tweak my current overclock on my 10850k though. Jay always provides good entertainment.
@@bigcj7359 certainly does a Chara
I'm definitely part of the audience that love these video more than anything else, those vids are why i'm sub. I love those jank experiment so much!!!
@♜ Pinned by Jayz TwoCents bro what are you doing? lmao
These are definitely my favorite videos, I love the jankyness and half-assery involved in these projects. It's a nice contrast to the super detailed water cooling and case mod projects.
Having used AMD cores in the 2000s, thermal throttling at 80 degrees is would've seemed pretty laughable back than.
*laughs in 8370 and 9590*
The last time I really paid attention to CPU temp was in the Pentium 4 days. At that point, if I had seen a CPU reading 80C, I would've 😳😱🔥
The FX8350 was certainly way too hot
You are correct Jay, we the audience do in fact love videos like these! Thank you for your awesome support to the community and for what you do.
I'm definitely in that small group of people that love these videos. These video spark such inspiration for me to try and mess my computer more
0:52 I always prefer active sentences over passive sentences. 🤣
i love this kind of content, Jay & team! thanks for the lols here - absolute madmen. Looking forward to seeing more content like this for sure!
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These are the videos that make my mornings of TH-cam before work while eating breakfast, enjoyable.
This is the type of stuff I love from you Jay.
1:09 YO this case comes with some crazy holes!
Thanks Steve :D
mini split - $1500 all parts. Then you need about $600-900 to have an electrician install the 'whip' and shut off. Then another $800 for the install (vacuum lines etc.)
So. . . OK it's not like it's cheap but. . . it's totally doable. And what you do with that mini split in your office is your own business, so who cares if it just happens to duct directly into a PC case before cooling the room? Seems legit.
Love these type of videos! It shows the pains and hilarious, weird moments of overclocking.
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Man, i'm a older guy that just started the pc gaming thing. I leave my pc in a unheated shop. I was so wondering how to keep it cool in the summer. And you solved it man. I have one of those stand up A/C's. Just thanks... thats brilliant
You know its good video, when Phil comes in for a laugh when editing, because of something going on to draw him away.
Along these lines, have you thought about discussing powering a desktop computer with 208 or 240 V and the extra efficiency that can bring? (I.e. quantifying it.) ... not really for European viewers but instead for those of us in North America ... especially as power consumption gets over 1 KW, this might actually improve safety and consume a little less power.
Pure entertainment and quite informative. Thank you Jay.
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16:52 This is why I watch this channel. Jay's personality cracks me up!
21:15
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This was fun to watch, I'm just wondering what you do about condensation? I know you wouldn't run that forever that way, but after a few hours of that, what do you do to dry everything out?
Jay, back in 2017 I started watching your videos to learn how to build a PC. 6 years later I have built 7 more. Friends and family. Anyone that knows me comes to me for any PC issues. All my knowledge is thanks to you Papa Jay!
This is absolutely beautiful i love it and really wanna see more of this
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Love these types of videos! Especially the whole "what if" kind of testing about it just to see, just because. It's what makes overclocking so fun, the spirit of making it work, even if you have to macguyver up some crazy jank looking thing to make it happen.
Keep the videos coming Jay!!
love all of the contents on this channel!
11:10 If you want the room to not turn into an oven, make sure that window unit is still in a window. They make more heat than they remove, that's why they sit halfway out the window, the hot part is outside.
That's not why lol
Ah let’s cook some eggs with intel on a Monday I’m here for it!
Whacky and arguing with Coconut is what we are here for! :-)
Love how Phil came out to check upon the arguing couple. :-)
Would love to see yo make a chillbox instead, maybe even one that can fit a whole built PC
@♜ Pinned by Jayz TwoCents No lmao
9:40 Jay just described me right there. I like your regular content, I watch them pretty regularly, and I enjoy doing so. However, the type of content that ALWAYS brings me back to the channel is stupid stuff like this. These kinds of videos just never ever get old. And then there's the interaction between you three as a cherry on top :D
Happy Pi Day!
To you as well.
I love all experiments! There's no bad idea. Its all for fun and we learn things we never could without these experiments. Great job Jay and the crew!!!
Jay can u test gpu temps by removing stuff like the RGB strip on the Asus strix card they seem like blocking the airflow to much but we cant know without u testing it I dont have the ability to take that rgb strip from a 3090 cuz I dont have a 3090 so I cant test it.
RGB LED STRİP of the graphic card
Idea for a water cooling experiment I'd like to see, because I've considered doing this myself. Get a mini fridge, possibly with a separate freezer compartment. Drill two holes through it for, and install hose fittings. Place a big radiator inside the fridge and set the fridge to right around/above freezing. Fans with maglev bearings should be fine with the cold temps. Start the PC, crank up the settings, and game hard.
Passing out standing up but you know damn well I'm watching this before I crash.
Are ya the type of fan that likes the video before ya watch the entire video? Yeah, me too! Early like gang rise up!
back in high school, my computer was located right under a wall-mounted AC unit... I once built a long cardboard tube to funnel cold air from the AC's vent, through the back of the PC case, and directly onto the CPU HSF. This was an AMD K6-2 (yeah, I'm old), which had a reputation for running hot, this definitely helped! And not janky at all :D
You asked a while back what I wanted to see on this channel and I replied with science and stuff. THIS IS WHAT I MEANT THANK YOU!!!
One is caught up playing the impassioned protagonist in one’s Subjective Narrative of Self -🎈
You had me at stupid. Let’s go.
this sounds completely random and completely awesome
7:40 "I honestly think of myself as a cardboard smith"
LMFAO
I love these kinds of videos. It takes me back to watching Leo and Patrick on the Screen Savers doing weird and whacky computer mods. MORE PLEASE!
Jankiness for all! Definitely my favorite kinds of videos
This is your lane. Great video. You give just enough depth to keep the watcher interested, without going so far as to alienate those who don't have the breadth of knowledge that you do. You're an excellent teacher. And if you had put out some sort of certification course I'd take it. Studying for the A+ currently, and I WISH you were an instructor.
That nzxt cooler defaults to slowest pump rpm, you should probably fix that when doing tests like this
These experiential science videos have always been my favorite videos!
I absolutely love these kind of clips more then the newest build that 99% can't even aford.
Also maybe a clip about internal ducting?
Yep, I'm that subset that loves these types of videos. They always crack me up. Love em.
Just a small point. Hot air rises, and cold air falls. We didn't really see the full scope of your taping, but if you had not sealed the bottom of the cardboard box to the case or the base of the AC, so the cold air can leak out the bottom gaps, you are probably losing cooling efficiency.
This is for the people who don't know: AC units effectively eliminate moisture from the air, so condensation inside your rig should be close to zero so long as you isolate the flow directly from the blower and not from the surrounding air (i.e. don't have other fans pulling air into the case from the room).
That moment with the power button is peak Jay! And peak Jay is what keeps me coming back for more!
YAY!!! Please do these vids more often...genuinely enjoy all of your work but your crazy ass brain + crazy ass computer hardware = entertainment for hours
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JankyzTwoCents is actually my fave. I love these.
The A/C cooling OC vids are kinda fun to watch cause while they are about as unconventional as the LN2 vids they're just slightly more practical (albeit jank and almost never worth actually doing)
But I feel it's more down to earth and relatable more than the LN2 vids.
Yes Jay, I love these Jenky videos. I even show my wife just to make her laugh.
16:44 This silly shit is why i love watching this videos while i work. Jay just being happier about making a whole in a cardboard box than fixing any heavy water cooler piping hahah Awesome!
You matched the 32 core Threadripper! But the TR uses 20W less power, even in the 64 core version which demolishes this :P
I absolutely love your videos Jay, I can't get enough of them, especially the ones with your witty repartee. Keep up the great work! I am sad as I only have 2 years tops left, and I am so worried about my son, I'm trying to build him something (A Computer) for when I am gone so he has something nice to remember me other than me that is. So I wanted to ask if you have any decent PC hardware I could get a deal on. But no worries it is just a thought. Let me know.
This is the unique stuff that really makes your videos stand out. I really enjoy the "wacky" stuff.
These types of videos are super less serious and more goofy than regular videos. I like the main videos but making something wacky and doing something fun with it is a lot more fun to watch
This video is great because even though it wasn’t designed to it taught me the difference in sync all cores vs individual clock speed and it’s all in my bios so I can do some tweaking myself. Also love all the voltage information as I just built my first custom loop and voltage vs heat is something I’d love to know more about.
Just want to say it’s crazy to see how far you’ve come since you started TH-cam full time. I remember when you posted a video contemplating if you should quit your job to do TH-cam full time. Worked out in the end. Keep up the great content.
Jay, I hold these videos so close to my heart. It reminds me of when I used to build all sorts of stuff with cardboard boxes as a kid. I had toys, even a PS1 and PC, but no, I built my dog a cardboard mall strip. Hahaha. Love these random videos!
I'm really impressed that you were able to get over 30k with such manageable temperatures. High 70s low 80s is a really nice place to be considering it's one of the most stressful commonly used tests you can put your cpu through and 12th gen is notoriously extremely hot
Extreme Hot vs. Cold + Moisture = Condensation.
Condensation + Electrical Components = Fried.
Does anyone want some burnt, soggy, electrified fried toast?
You have to make sure that no moisture can reach the electrical components.
Awesome video, Jay. 😃
Nah warm air hitting a cold surface below the airs dew point, will condense, cold air hitting warm metal no problem.
Done for Science ?
Im making a note here huge success
Jay I got a portable unit that goes directly into my computer. Love it, keeps the computer nice and cool while keeping my room nice and cool too!
He should do a video testing the differences between window units vs standalone ac units like the one he used here.
I love all your OC videos especially the ones where you are trying to post your highest scores.
12 year old me making cooling tunnels in my P1 system out of tape and note cards and an extra fan to increase the cooling efficiency of my crappy horizontal case to squeeze like 10mhz on top of the 133 it had LOVES this stuff. There isn't enough jank in modern set ups. like, classy jank like this.
I love these videos! The other videos are awesome too but these particular ones are the reason why I love PCs. The tinkering aspect is what does it.
This is exactly the sillly stuff I subscribed for. Just Jay and pals goofing off.
This is the non-sense I enjoy, just a little more! Sounds like me in my overclocking days. Nice video :)
I love these janky experiment videos.
One that I want to do is to get a water chiller, and connect it to a custom loop system.
Though by this point we're running a subambient, but you can always just set the chiller to dew point or slightly higher to avoid condensation problems.
Slightly annoyingly, I live in humid Florida, where dew points tend to be quite high, limiting how low one can set the setpoint without condensation mitigation.
Hey, I'm a part of that subset! Awesome! Mostly it's because I'm legitimately curious what happens if seemingly dumb stuff is done, but also because I feel like Jay has more fun. Which he admitted to.
If I could offer an experiment idea I'd like to see if it's possible to get a reservoir so big it helps temps either by leveling out temps during short gaming sessions (thinking a gallon here) or by being so big they dissipate heat by themselves (probably a bucket) Maybe if you go far enough you don't even need a rad?
One issue... with the AC unit... you have much higher moisture condensing on the rad, and that is being sent through the PC. Maybe work with an AC technician to build a cooling solution that integrates the AC? or where the Rad is outside the case, and not exhausting the heat it removed into the air that is then used to cool the PC. Maybe instead of having a rad to radiate the heat to air, have a liquid-liquid exchanger, which then sends the heat out of the room?
Janky mod videos are by far my favorite. I just re-watched this one
Anyone can discuss hardware with the same benchmark numbers over and over again. But these wild janky builds are why I'm subscribed. Hilarious and awesome.
I love watching Jay do these things
These are the best type of videos, just having fun and pushing that hardware to its limit, I would of liked to try this on the fx8350 and push voltage until something popped.
@ 10:20 "This beautiful piece of artwork", my first thought was it was some sort of techno-replica homage of the Human Centipede rofl
Great vid Jay! :D
Love it. I live in Vegas, so keeping things cool is a challenge most of the time.
I love when he brings out the portable AC, this is stuff I've thought of doing but never went that far lol!
i have to agree that i enjoy these types of videos more than anything else
Can confirm I'm here for this content. Or, any content where you don't take yourself too serious. It makes you human and it's exactly how I would try to do this!
Love these type of videos. You can learn so much, and you get to hear Phil's laugh 🤣🤣🤣
Temps get in the mid 90's during the summer, so I take off the side panel and have my room ac blow directly into my pc. no cardboard or tape, but my 5800x and 1080ti enjoy the cool air. Another fun video to watch.
This really was an hilarious one. Thanks a lot for that content that kept me smiling me smiling through ;)
Hey guys, you can set in the bios to turn on the computer when there is power to the mobo so you can turn it on just using the power supply switch. It’s there for power outages but it would work when the system resets or freezes to slightly reduce the jankiness
Simple science; Where hot meets cold, condensation will form. I've seen this a few times, the case will rust quickly. Putting the entire PC (case and all) in the cold enclosure will prevent this. This enclosure needs to be built out of something that will not rust, like Plexiglas. Because the cold air coming from the AC is extremely dry, no condensation will form inside the enclosure. And with this cold air flow-through system, the AC doesn't have to deal with the heat directly (as a PC inside a frig would).
* Most people make cooling mistakes on their build due to their poor understanding of thermal dynamics. Reasonably fresh air needs to brush by all of the high energy components (CPU chipset GPU memory & drives). The problem I see most often is, due to the lack of fresh air circulating past the outside of the case, there is no reasonably fresh air available. We talk about the Thermal density of the CPU cooler; the same principle applies to the supply of fresh air. There needs to be some mechanism in the room that moves air, and the PC needs to be within this flow.
Alder Lake scales well with lower temps. I gained 200MHz in prime95 AVX2 stable clocks by reducing the coolant temperature from 30C (reasonable custom water loop) to around 2-3C with my chiller. This also allows for using higher vcore without hitting 100C.
Max stable prime95 AVX2 vs coolant temp for reference:
30C coolant - 5.1GHz / 96C load / 1.245v die sense
20C coolant - 5.2GHz / 96C load / 1.296v die sense
10C coolant - 5.2GHz / 75C load / 1.243v die sense
2C coolant - 5.3GHz / 81C load / 1.318v die sense
Running an AC directly through a PC case is a decent idea, but the downside is that you won't be able to run a 24/7 stable overclock if it depends on the AC running. Anytime the AC cycles off, your temps are going to increase back to a more typical value. The absolute best solution would be a water chiller with the hot side heat exchanger venting outside.
Now this is proper marketing for intel.
I honestly like all of your videos but these kind are honestly my favorite!!
I live in Sweden and had thought about testning oc with the computer outside when its -20c, that would be a fun video Jay.