I wonder how old he is because he still looks under 30 but he's been into hardcore overlocking even before 2010. Maybe he also applies some good paste on his skin LOL
This is basically a perfect video with a manufacturer rep. I know Roman is a bit of a special case because he's also a TH-camr, but it's a relaxed and jovial conversation that isn't laden with marketing buzzwords.
Gotta be honest here; as a German, I am really proud to see what Roman brings to the table of PC gaming. He does so much to pc gaming and to the German pc community, really nice!
@@0Synergy yeah with how advanced the technology is I thought it was a lot but damn I'd pick this over anything, everything stays clean with no traces left
I liked this "booth visit" the most out of everyone's. Amazement and excitement for each piece Roman brought to the table. The joy in his eyes as he showed each piece was the best part. That was a pleasure to watch and now have some products I want to add to my rig for sure. Thanks for taking the time to sit with him and share with us. ☕🐢
I have a friend who is a graphene researcher at ESA and a German university , i asked her in 2015/2016 about using graphene for cpu/gpu cooling because of its thermal conductivity and she told me it wouldnt work because heat will only go sideways and not through it. and then went on to explain that you would need to make it the exact way Roman just described how the kryo sheet being made...this was like 8 years ago ..
The idea of cutting graphene is simple. Actually cut the graphene in that thickness is the hard part. (graphene is the strongest material known, and it's brittle. Guess they use super strong laser or something to cut it)
@@offspringfan89 It's basically graphite sliced in the direction it's more electrically conductive in. That's kind of unavoidable, thermal and electric conductivity aren't quite the same but they strongly correlate with each other.
der8bauer's non-booth is more impressive than most booths. If those sheets perform like he says then they can change how we build computers. (Speaking as someone who spent an hour cleaning Cryonaut paste from a CPU before selling on ebay...)
I'm using the honeywell PTM7950 sheet right now for my main rig and it's fucking wonderful, so having an actually supported option with equal or better performance is just going to be the only thing I buy for my paste needs in the future.
@@sunderkeenin From what I've read I don't think it will be difficult to outperform this Honeywell product as it's only rated at 8.5W/mK which is on par with Thermal Grizzly Aeronaut entry level paste (according to Newegg listing) whereas the older Carbonaut graphene sheet is already rated at 62.5W/mK (according to several 2019 reviews) I can't compare with the new Thermal Grizzly Kryosheet presented in this video, as they seemed to have removed every technical product specifications from their website (which is quite a weird decision for a business mainly targeting enthusiasts and prosumers) but pretty certain that with the cutting description Roman made it will significantly outperform the already excellent Carbonaut.
@@PainterVierax Ive used the Carbonaut sheet for 2 Years now on my 5800X (OCed to 4,9 all-core). Cinebench and Handbrake reached 85°C after 30min on a Kraken X73. Unfortunately it ripped last week (had to remove the Cooler), it runs with Kryonaut Extreme now and has the same temperatures. Sooo I can't complain about the old sheet and I would bet the new one is significantly better. (And yes I do realize that the AIO is probably the Bottleneck here, still)
@@noba4696 yeah at some point the thermal compound chosen doesn't matter much as the cooler is at saturation. That's why good old white silicone paste is still heavily used for things like power transistors or linear regulators. Though a better conductivity can help for short workloads especially for GPUs and newer gens like Zen4 as burst freq are more temperature dependent below their power limit.
This is by far the best computex "vendor" showpiece so far, what a great selection of innovations. I've seen a number of really nice ideas but they all seem to be tied to some proprietary system I'm never going to buy into, so they're all just things to ooh at. I'm in the middle of rebuilding two rigs & I really can't wait to see what those pads can do, I despise messing around with paste & they apparently work better on top of being more convenient? almost sold just on the idea. Although if there's any more applicable innovation I'll really never get round to cutting tubes...
I look forward to Hardware Unboxed to do a review of these thermal pads in comparison to thermal pastes and liquid metal if you could. That would be nice to help us on our next builds. Thanks!
Not this specific product, but thermal pads in general perform worse than decent thermal paste, around 5 to 7 C depend on what you are comparing, maybe they innovated, buat thermal pads are mostly only for convenience not performance, it will never outperforms thermal paste
If the independent tests confirm the effectiveness of the KryoSheet, I think I'll definitely use it the next time I replace the cooler or set up a new system.
Yes I'm waiting on Gamers Nexus to test it. They also tested the first graphite pad from Thermal Grizzly the Carbonaut and that was a lot worse than their paste which makes sense because it's a pad and not paste, but if the Kryosheet is noticably better than paste then that's an insane improvement in technology. Not only no degradation but also no residue! With paste you can't quite clean everything off and liquid metal fuses into the IHS, heatspreader, coldplate and everything so having a solution that leaves no residue behind and performs better than paste? That would be amazing.
Yes. Thermal Grizzly is amazing. A few years ago you had to take a box cutter to your CPU. My brother killed his 6700k that way. Now we have brilliantly engineered devices for everything that take out the user error and deliver consistent results. It's awesome. Direct die drops temps insanely well, perfect for SFF systems and everything really.
Today I found out that Roman works with Thermal Grizzly. This guy revolutionizes everything he touches, from the legendary cases with Lian Li, delid systems, thermal pastes and liquids, etc, etc. Eager to see more of his ideas for the community!
I understand der8auer's concern about the price, but $20 is nothing for who the Kryosheet is aimed at. Even for those of us that like building high end systems using an air cooler, this is a great product. When using a dual tower air cooler, it would be nice to not have to worry about thermal paste when installing or relocating it to a different pc.
I learned most of my overclocking from him and it brings a smile to my face to see someone passionate about their craft succeeding the way he has. Innovator.
I'll be picking up loads of those thermal sheets. Laptop, htpc, steam deck, 6800xt and probably my main rig too. I'm a little crazy about thermal paste. I try to re-paste most things every 18 months or so. But with this, put it on and forget about it. Brilliant.
Roman is such a great guy to be the front man for this tech. I love this candid conversations and Steve being so giddy. I love Computex just for all these YT guys seeing each other and doing stuff like this.
Not much more satisfying as an engineer than hearing a German perfectionist talk about how his products are made. Roman is a friend to all PC enthusiasts.
I'm surprised that roman hasn't been approached by big companies to work for them , he seems very creative and works to solve lots of problems with PC hardware. Good man.
Roman's Kryosheet saved my XFX 7900 XTX. It would pump out any thermal paste after 3-4 weeks hitting 108c hotspot and after repasting 4 times with 4 different pastes, I tried a Kryosheet and now it never goes above 84c even with an OC. Thank you for this outstanding product Roman!
Gamers Nexus, Hardware Unboxed and der8uer my only go to channels and they collabed here and I'm so happy! It's like those marvel universe movies! 🥰🥰😅😅
This chat was nice. Really cool seeing you guys out of the studio, too. I know this format doesn't fit most of your hardware videos but it'd be fun to see more.
If Der8auer could implement a DDC pump into that direct die frame/block, that would be an absolute game changer for high end systems as well as extra compact setups where space is at a premium. Great video, thoroughly enjoyed 👌👌👌👌
@@Your_Paramour I'm not so sure, I've looked for direct die cpu block/pumps for AM5 and have been very unsuccessful, the best I've encountered thus far is the modultra LOBO, absolutely insane design.
derbauer introduced me to lian li cases when i first got in to pc building. just notice his badge on my 011D and said who the heck is this. searched the youtube and found out the man's a legend.
The heat dissipation of the display could be easily handled by a custom water loop, or in extreme circumstances, LN2! ;-) Another opportunity. Nice to see two of my favourite channels getting together.
I'd buy these water blocks before I'd ever think about spending what amounts to a absurd cost, for a ek brand block. Loved the presentation. Roman is a cool guy.
Der8auer created the O11 case design which is a market standard right now. No bullshit, no RGB, no LCD, only pure innovation.A fine specimen of German engineering.
I love how people talk about direct die cooling like it's some bleeding edge thing to do, and here i am remembering a time before CPU's with heat spreaders, and how everything used to be direct die cooled, and no one thought anything about it.
As long as the aluminium covers can be fully stripped down, automotive paints are fairly simple to lay down and come in an almost endless variety of colors. No need to wait for white parts, just paint your own and you avoid the 'different white' problem.
A small tube of Kryopaste is more expensive than the graphene sheet. So I'm going to build up a stock with these sheets and use that instead of paste. It save costs to clients and work for me. A good one Roman.
If you think about it... Modern consoles also use direct-die cooling. PlayStation 5 uses a large heatsink and liquid metal to transfer heat directly from the die. And Xbox Series X uses vapour chamber heatsink with normal thermal paste and is directly seated on the APU die.
I was looking for the wireview a few weeks ago after seeing it on the derb8uer channel. I've seen some cheap 180 degree 8 pin modules. I'm happy to pay $60-70 for a 3 by 8 pin adapter that'll make cable management soooo much cleaner and also not be a fire risk! Roman, shut up and take my money!!! I've only managed to find them listed on the German resellers so far, but I will be getting one as soon as I can!
Kryosheet sounds incredible! I'd love to see a side-by-side temperature test comparing it against Liquid Metal, Kryonaut Extreme, & typical thermal paste. This sounds like it could be the best of both worlds product for extreme performance, high longevity, and easy application! I look forward to independent reviews to confirm before I allow myself to get too excited. The crazy part of Kryosheet is the vertical orientation of the graphene, which is why the weird manufacturing has to occur. Normal graphene sheets are horizontal meaning that it's incredible at moving heat from side to side (along the x-axis), but not good at dissipating heat from top to bottom (z-axis) which is what would be necessary in PC cooling. If anything, based on the weird positioning of the CCX's in Ryzen processors, it would potentially make sense to use it to transfer heat from hotspots to a more centralized location under the IHS and therefore making better use of the IHS and the typical CPU coolers that are usually designed to remove heat from the middle of the IHS rather than the outskirts where AMD has placed the chiplets.
When you apply high pressure on this kryosheet, doesn't it bend (or completely flatten) the "tubes" of the graphene and makes its performance actually worse? I think it sounds quite an interesting aspect to check if above a given amount its performance starts to deteriorate... what do you think?
I'm just curious how reusable the KryoSheets are. There have been graphene sheets before and they kink and tear/shear at the edges of the processor, so they can't be reused for other sizes and you have to line them up almost perfectly to even reapply them to the same CPU
It's interesting when considered in relation to nice video Roman had with Steve(Gamer's Nexus) concluded the rather small impact of the termal pastes and over-importance assigned to it 😀
If the WireView GPU can save the 12VHPWR from melting I'd buy it in a heartbeat. And KryoSheet is maybe something I should consider since I build my system and I don't touch the cpu for 3+ years.
I wonder how the KryoSheet will compare to Honeywell's PTM 7950 on direct die cooling. I've used the PTM 7950 on my laptop and have never looked back at thermal paste anymore.
It's nice seeing everyone meeting up again after years of show cancellations. Brings back at least some sense of normalcy in today's market of inflation and greed that's made this hobby tough to enjoy some times. Just a little ray of light to brighten the pessimism and anger many of us feel today.
Roman turned a hobby to a career of innovations, impressive.
Hes also an engineer
I wish I was this productive
Yeah, it's every hardware nerd's dream.
@@GewelReal nothing stopping you
@@Tomart0 it's easy to say that. I'm not even lazy or anything. I just struggle to go for that 100%
der8auer is a legend. He has dragged us all out of the primordial ooze of what was thermal paste and continues to innovate!
Primordial paste?
I wonder how old he is because he still looks under 30 but he's been into hardcore overlocking even before 2010. Maybe he also applies some good paste on his skin LOL
@@valentinvas6454 he looks like mid 30ies
@@valentinvas6454 it's the kryosheet keeping him young. he applies it to his face every night
@@Airwave2k2 before the big bang we used silvery stuff.
This is basically a perfect video with a manufacturer rep. I know Roman is a bit of a special case because he's also a TH-camr, but it's a relaxed and jovial conversation that isn't laden with marketing buzzwords.
I know right! He doesn't actually need to use marketing fluff most of the time because his target customers aren't mindless morons! lol
Gotta be honest here; as a German, I am really proud to see what Roman brings to the table of PC gaming. He does so much to pc gaming and to the German pc community, really nice!
same here ! Roman ist ne geile Sau xD
yes and he is not a complete sell out like hardware payed for.. with their terrible 30 min benchmarks comparing only what they want
Yea, he seems to be only one German I can tolerate, in truth, I like him, and his work. But I am biased. :P
...and for ASUS ahahahah xD
Gotta love that tribalism. Roman is awesome full stop. Him being German shouldn't matter or make your heart skip a beat.
I love how Roman is like, "This is kinda expensive" and then says a reasonable price for what the product is.
realistically it is expensive compared with just paste but I also expected more when I heard him say "it's expensive"
@@warlordwossman5722 Same thought he was going to say $40-$50
@@0Synergy yeah with how advanced the technology is I thought it was a lot but damn I'd pick this over anything, everything stays clean with no traces left
@@imnotusingmyrealname4566 and specially not having to repaste from time to time
@@pwnlads yes, with an air cooler it's zero maintenance.
He's such a cool dude.
He's open and honest.
Everything he does is the highest quality.
Great Meetup and advert.
I liked this "booth visit" the most out of everyone's. Amazement and excitement for each piece Roman brought to the table. The joy in his eyes as he showed each piece was the best part. That was a pleasure to watch and now have some products I want to add to my rig for sure. Thanks for taking the time to sit with him and share with us. ☕🐢
Stuff PC enthusiasts actually want
Nicely worded. That gets a thumb up
I have a friend who is a graphene researcher at ESA and a German university , i asked her in 2015/2016 about using graphene for cpu/gpu cooling because of its thermal conductivity and she told me it wouldnt work because heat will only go sideways and not through it. and then went on to explain that you would need to make it the exact way Roman just described how the kryo sheet being made...this was like 8 years ago ..
The idea of cutting graphene is simple.
Actually cut the graphene in that thickness is the hard part. (graphene is the strongest material known, and it's brittle. Guess they use super strong laser or something to cut it)
@@ETERNlTUS will be meeting her tomorrow, will ask how she thinks they would need to cut it and keep it all stuck together in a sheet
Isn't graphene a good electrical conductor like graphite? If so I wouln't like that near the SMD capacitors on the CPU or socket pins.
@@offspringfan89 you need to protect them with nail polish or a sticker
@@offspringfan89 It's basically graphite sliced in the direction it's more electrically conductive in. That's kind of unavoidable, thermal and electric conductivity aren't quite the same but they strongly correlate with each other.
der8bauer's non-booth is more impressive than most booths. If those sheets perform like he says then they can change how we build computers. (Speaking as someone who spent an hour cleaning Cryonaut paste from a CPU before selling on ebay...)
I'm using the honeywell PTM7950 sheet right now for my main rig and it's fucking wonderful, so having an actually supported option with equal or better performance is just going to be the only thing I buy for my paste needs in the future.
@@sunderkeenin From what I've read I don't think it will be difficult to outperform this Honeywell product as it's only rated at 8.5W/mK which is on par with Thermal Grizzly Aeronaut entry level paste (according to Newegg listing) whereas the older Carbonaut graphene sheet is already rated at 62.5W/mK (according to several 2019 reviews)
I can't compare with the new Thermal Grizzly Kryosheet presented in this video, as they seemed to have removed every technical product specifications from their website (which is quite a weird decision for a business mainly targeting enthusiasts and prosumers) but pretty certain that with the cutting description Roman made it will significantly outperform the already excellent Carbonaut.
@@PainterVierax Ive used the Carbonaut sheet for 2 Years now on my 5800X (OCed to 4,9 all-core). Cinebench and Handbrake reached 85°C after 30min on a Kraken X73. Unfortunately it ripped last week (had to remove the Cooler), it runs with Kryonaut Extreme now and has the same temperatures. Sooo I can't complain about the old sheet and I would bet the new one is significantly better. (And yes I do realize that the AIO is probably the Bottleneck here, still)
@@noba4696 yeah at some point the thermal compound chosen doesn't matter much as the cooler is at saturation. That's why good old white silicone paste is still heavily used for things like power transistors or linear regulators.
Though a better conductivity can help for short workloads especially for GPUs and newer gens like Zen4 as burst freq are more temperature dependent below their power limit.
This is by far the best computex "vendor" showpiece so far, what a great selection of innovations. I've seen a number of really nice ideas but they all seem to be tied to some proprietary system I'm never going to buy into, so they're all just things to ooh at. I'm in the middle of rebuilding two rigs & I really can't wait to see what those pads can do, I despise messing around with paste & they apparently work better on top of being more convenient? almost sold just on the idea. Although if there's any more applicable innovation I'll really never get round to cutting tubes...
I look forward to Hardware Unboxed to do a review of these thermal pads in comparison to thermal pastes and liquid metal if you could. That would be nice to help us on our next builds. Thanks!
I think Der8auer has one on his channel
@@the_drunk_balalaika60 I was looking for one and never found it
Not this specific product, but thermal pads in general perform worse than decent thermal paste, around 5 to 7 C depend on what you are comparing, maybe they innovated, buat thermal pads are mostly only for convenience not performance, it will never outperforms thermal paste
Der8auer did the test in one of his own videos: th-cam.com/video/qKFYawQOKJo/w-d-xo.html
This is graphene, should be much better than the normal thermal pads. Graphene works really well.
If the independent tests confirm the effectiveness of the KryoSheet, I think I'll definitely use it the next time I replace the cooler or set up a new system.
Yes I'm waiting on Gamers Nexus to test it. They also tested the first graphite pad from Thermal Grizzly the Carbonaut and that was a lot worse than their paste which makes sense because it's a pad and not paste, but if the Kryosheet is noticably better than paste then that's an insane improvement in technology. Not only no degradation but also no residue! With paste you can't quite clean everything off and liquid metal fuses into the IHS, heatspreader, coldplate and everything so having a solution that leaves no residue behind and performs better than paste? That would be amazing.
I love seeing all these strange beings, the so-called tech tubers, meet up and interact. Awesome people!
The vibe is so good
3 legends in 1 Video.
I would watch an Interview/Podcast/TechTalkshow like that all day ❤👍
Roman and HW unboxed together is a great collaboration.
Roman is one of those people who gets a spot in the apocalypse bunker. Genuine genius.
Def interested in doing direct die for my next build, glad to see the process becoming more intuitive!
Yes. Thermal Grizzly is amazing. A few years ago you had to take a box cutter to your CPU. My brother killed his 6700k that way. Now we have brilliantly engineered devices for everything that take out the user error and deliver consistent results. It's awesome. Direct die drops temps insanely well, perfect for SFF systems and everything really.
Today I found out that Roman works with Thermal Grizzly. This guy revolutionizes everything he touches, from the legendary cases with Lian Li, delid systems, thermal pastes and liquids, etc, etc. Eager to see more of his ideas for the community!
I think he may be the owner of the company if I remember correctly
@@mitlanderson Yes, he is the owner.
I understand der8auer's concern about the price, but $20 is nothing for who the Kryosheet is aimed at. Even for those of us that like building high end systems using an air cooler, this is a great product. When using a dual tower air cooler, it would be nice to not have to worry about thermal paste when installing or relocating it to a different pc.
Greets from Germany, your beautiful, well-crafted gpu benchmarks on the other side of the planet are very welcome here
I learned most of my overclocking from him and it brings a smile to my face to see someone passionate about their craft succeeding the way he has. Innovator.
I'll be picking up loads of those thermal sheets. Laptop, htpc, steam deck, 6800xt and probably my main rig too.
I'm a little crazy about thermal paste. I try to re-paste most things every 18 months or so. But with this, put it on and forget about it. Brilliant.
That's me but only fans
lol
Roman is such a great guy to be the front man for this tech. I love this candid conversations and Steve being so giddy. I love Computex just for all these YT guys seeing each other and doing stuff like this.
Not much more satisfying as an engineer than hearing a German perfectionist talk about how his products are made. Roman is a friend to all PC enthusiasts.
I'm surprised that roman hasn't been approached by big companies to work for them , he seems very creative and works to solve lots of problems with PC hardware. Good man.
in all the contend created you can feel how everyone is pretty happy that computex is happening and they can all meet up
Never knew Roman was Thermal Grizzly. I've only been watching derBauer in the last 9 months. Will be buying exclusively Thermal if i can now
I would be interested to see what that kryosheet would do with a GPU.
Roman's Kryosheet saved my XFX 7900 XTX. It would pump out any thermal paste after 3-4 weeks hitting 108c hotspot and after repasting 4 times with 4 different pastes, I tried a Kryosheet and now it never goes above 84c even with an OC. Thank you for this outstanding product Roman!
Gamers Nexus, Hardware Unboxed and der8uer my only go to channels and they collabed here and I'm so happy! It's like those marvel universe movies! 🥰🥰😅😅
This chat was nice. Really cool seeing you guys out of the studio, too. I know this format doesn't fit most of your hardware videos but it'd be fun to see more.
Only released 1 minute ago? Never been this early.
Wow, I'm really excited to see how the graphene cooling paper works. Thanks, Guys. Keep up the great work.
Love seeing Tim and Steve having a blast. Much deserved workcation for HUB crew 🎉
Imo this pad is the go-to for laptops since most laptop heatsink is copper without nickel plating
0:07 Blessings
Great video. Quite informative. You guys make content fast and I've come here to watch it fast again!
Nice to see you guys together. Next time make *Daniel Owen* get around with you.
Yeah I get a kick out of seeing these blokes meet up. They are with their tribe.
If Der8auer could implement a DDC pump into that direct die frame/block, that would be an absolute game changer for high end systems as well as extra compact setups where space is at a premium.
Great video, thoroughly enjoyed 👌👌👌👌
There is probably patents around that sadly.
@@Your_Paramour I'm not so sure, I've looked for direct die cpu block/pumps for AM5 and have been very unsuccessful, the best I've encountered thus far is the modultra LOBO, absolutely insane design.
My three favorite tech TH-cam presenters at the same time!
My favourite part, Steve, Roman and Tim all saying Aluminium correctly!!!
derbauer introduced me to lian li cases when i first got in to pc building. just notice his badge on my 011D and said who the heck is this. searched the youtube and found out the man's a legend.
The heat dissipation of the display could be easily handled by a custom water loop, or in extreme circumstances, LN2! ;-) Another opportunity. Nice to see two of my favourite channels getting together.
It's really cool to see you guys on one screen.
Ok, I need Yeston to make a version of the Wireview just to see what kind of crazy integration they would do with their GPU designs.
I love the idea of the 180 degree power monitoring adapters. So much more useful than some silly LCD in the middle of a fan hub!
The most anticipated piece of open loop gear in ages for me, the direct die AM5 block...
multiverse of tech tubers crossover😀
I'd buy these water blocks before I'd ever think about spending what amounts to a absurd cost, for a ek brand block.
Loved the presentation. Roman is a cool guy.
Der8auer created the O11 case design which is a market standard right now. No bullshit, no RGB, no LCD, only pure innovation.A fine specimen of German engineering.
Wow, that stuff from De8auer is awesome. Really thinking of getting one of those GPU meter/crossover/tidy fittings. So cool!
An actual Computex TH-cam video where I learned things. Not another Computex case video. This was an awesome video to wake up to.
Cool to see some innovations in the PC builder space!
I'd order a white WireView today if I could. Love all this stuff. Steve looks so excited.
I love how people talk about direct die cooling like it's some bleeding edge thing to do, and here i am remembering a time before CPU's with heat spreaders, and how everything used to be direct die cooled, and no one thought anything about it.
That direct die waterblock + the pad is awesome 😎. Sadly im not going am5 any time soon.
My favorite two channels on TH-cam
As long as the aluminium covers can be fully stripped down, automotive paints are fairly simple to lay down and come in an almost endless variety of colors. No need to wait for white parts, just paint your own and you avoid the 'different white' problem.
it’s so nice to listen to some smart people, especially these days.
im excited for these products on my next am5 build
A small tube of Kryopaste is more expensive than the graphene sheet. So I'm going to build up a stock with these sheets and use that instead of paste. It save costs to clients and work for me. A good one Roman.
German viewers surprised about finding their TH-camr at hardwareunboxed. :)
Der8auer sponsors HUB, how far we have come. 😄
Wow love that we're still waiting on a product 2.5 months now that was said to be release in weeks
If you think about it... Modern consoles also use direct-die cooling. PlayStation 5 uses a large heatsink and liquid metal to transfer heat directly from the die. And Xbox Series X uses vapour chamber heatsink with normal thermal paste and is directly seated on the APU die.
I really like the idea of the sheet, just drop it on, done.
I was looking for the wireview a few weeks ago after seeing it on the derb8uer channel. I've seen some cheap 180 degree 8 pin modules. I'm happy to pay $60-70 for a 3 by 8 pin adapter that'll make cable management soooo much cleaner and also not be a fire risk!
Roman, shut up and take my money!!! I've only managed to find them listed on the German resellers so far, but I will be getting one as soon as I can!
I’d happily pay $50-$60 for that GPU power monitoring device, especially if it has support for triple 8 pin cards!
Looking forward to testing and reviews!!!
Love seeing my favorite youtubers all in one spot, really enjoyed watching this one. Work work balance 🤣
I really like products that you don´t have to change!
So i have used earlier those graphine pads!
This new one seems even better.
Kryosheet sounds incredible! I'd love to see a side-by-side temperature test comparing it against Liquid Metal, Kryonaut Extreme, & typical thermal paste. This sounds like it could be the best of both worlds product for extreme performance, high longevity, and easy application! I look forward to independent reviews to confirm before I allow myself to get too excited.
The crazy part of Kryosheet is the vertical orientation of the graphene, which is why the weird manufacturing has to occur. Normal graphene sheets are horizontal meaning that it's incredible at moving heat from side to side (along the x-axis), but not good at dissipating heat from top to bottom (z-axis) which is what would be necessary in PC cooling. If anything, based on the weird positioning of the CCX's in Ryzen processors, it would potentially make sense to use it to transfer heat from hotspots to a more centralized location under the IHS and therefore making better use of the IHS and the typical CPU coolers that are usually designed to remove heat from the middle of the IHS rather than the outskirts where AMD has placed the chiplets.
Steve you 100% need to bring some more kryosheet back.
any ideas if Der8bauer suggests using a paste guard given the conductivity of the graphene ?
Oh wow 🤔 I was gonna go with TX-6 to avoid fussing with liquid metal maintenance, but I'm intrigued by this Kryosheet. 👀
that wireview is pretty cool :D and yes definetly needs a white one
I'm also looking forward to the white version of the WireView...or at least alluminum, to go along with the 4080 Suprim
Hope you guys will do some testing with that KryoSheet thing!
When you apply high pressure on this kryosheet, doesn't it bend (or completely flatten) the "tubes" of the graphene and makes its performance actually worse? I think it sounds quite an interesting aspect to check if above a given amount its performance starts to deteriorate... what do you think?
the kryosheet is a must-buy, wow! and 50-60 usd for the power display seems really affordable, I'm sure it will sell at that price.
I'm just curious how reusable the KryoSheets are.
There have been graphene sheets before and they kink and tear/shear at the edges of the processor, so they can't be reused for other sizes and you have to line them up almost perfectly to even reapply them to the same CPU
What a nice interview :)
I have bought the delid tool from derbauer for my 7950x and all the mounting tools, liquid metal. Good stuff.
Waddup Roman, welcome to our channel once again 👍🏾
Den Typen da kenne ich doch...
.. always love some international collab!
Now I want a direct dye contact frame for AM4
It's interesting when considered in relation to nice video Roman had with Steve(Gamer's Nexus) concluded the rather small impact of the termal pastes and over-importance assigned to it 😀
Looking forward to the direct-die water block!
I hope he releases the direct die waterblocks soon. I'm currently building a new system and this is the last piece I'm waiting for.
Thermal Grizzly seriously just up'd their cred with these 2 new products.
When i see you tubers from different channels mingling, it feels like 2 films have just merged.
best interview , great products as well
kryo sheet vs ptm 7950 would be cool
If the WireView GPU can save the 12VHPWR from melting I'd buy it in a heartbeat.
And KryoSheet is maybe something I should consider since I build my system and I don't touch the cpu for 3+ years.
Am I the only one who is subbed to his channel and didn't know he worked for thermal grizzly? lol
Definitely gonna pick up a cryo sheet for my loop
I wonder how the KryoSheet will compare to Honeywell's PTM 7950 on direct die cooling. I've used the PTM 7950 on my laptop and have never looked back at thermal paste anymore.
Lets try to get these guys to 1m share the hell out of it
It's nice seeing everyone meeting up again after years of show cancellations. Brings back at least some sense of normalcy in today's market of inflation and greed that's made this hobby tough to enjoy some times. Just a little ray of light to brighten the pessimism and anger many of us feel today.
quite a missed opportunity here.. at the end all three of you should have pointed at the camera 😁
The infamous german work/work balance.