and allow the liquid to expand with in an area coupled to your CPU or GPU and it magically drops to -540 C and then magically collects and rises to the top ofrace you rout back to the continuous flow system. You'll never wast another drop of liquid nitrogen again, and this baby works constantly nonstop, not just for a quick 7 g Hz. OC, a continuous; perhaps given the differences in temp 12 G Hz. OC. But I'm just a Quantum Mechanic, what do I know about OC'ing?
@jakea718 Yeah, that would be a nifty trick to go beyond absolute zero. I think it would cause a quantum chain reaction and all matter stuck to such cold stuff, would instantly loose all kinetic energy which which would probably bounced from the lowest possible energy state and bounce to the largest in the system and release a tone of to light in the process, and end up loosing 1/4 it's mass. Absolute zero is 0 K. there is nothing below that. Look up the Z-machine to learn more.
if you can believe that. Then this magic liquid is at some 540 below C and conducts heat exchange automatically as it flows through the copper tubbing, to give the grand thermal effect, you add something you find in a cars air condition system, an aspiration (heavy metal with conical large to very small hole or apature) device,
using an asetline blow torch and a silver-copper brasing rod. The magic is that liquid helium flows continually with no resistance, actually flows backwards; or up if you like,
if you can get your hand on some liquid Helium, you can fill any great air cooled passive heat-sync copper heat pipe tubbing with the stuff, and then route the liquid out of the box, and back in using an extension of the heat pipe you could braes together....
Hey have any of you OC'ing GURU's out there ever her of the superfliud effects of liquid helium? Strangly does not obey the lays of physics, do to quantum mechanics principles. Any hoooo... read on...
men this is like the grand prix for computer :D
xmodmodifier 7 months ago
Read the follow backwards... Stupid editor does like long explanations...
@ProtoBytes
Awykel 1 year ago
and allow the liquid to expand with in an area coupled to your CPU or GPU and it magically drops to -540 C and then magically collects and rises to the top ofrace you rout back to the continuous flow system. You'll never wast another drop of liquid nitrogen again, and this baby works constantly nonstop, not just for a quick 7 g Hz. OC, a continuous; perhaps given the differences in temp 12 G Hz. OC. But I'm just a Quantum Mechanic, what do I know about OC'ing?
Vola! Done....
@ProtoBytes
Awykel 1 year ago
@Awykel I like the way you've gone past absolute zero there.
jakea718 1 year ago
@jakea718 Yeah, that would be a nifty trick to go beyond absolute zero. I think it would cause a quantum chain reaction and all matter stuck to such cold stuff, would instantly loose all kinetic energy which which would probably bounced from the lowest possible energy state and bounce to the largest in the system and release a tone of to light in the process, and end up loosing 1/4 it's mass. Absolute zero is 0 K. there is nothing below that. Look up the Z-machine to learn more.
Awykel 1 year ago
Comment removed
Awykel 1 year ago
Respond to this video... Yes, it's a typo, should have been stated: -540 degrees relative to room temp measured in C.
Awykel 1 year ago
if you can believe that. Then this magic liquid is at some 540 below C and conducts heat exchange automatically as it flows through the copper tubbing, to give the grand thermal effect, you add something you find in a cars air condition system, an aspiration (heavy metal with conical large to very small hole or apature) device,
Awykel 1 year ago
using an asetline blow torch and a silver-copper brasing rod. The magic is that liquid helium flows continually with no resistance, actually flows backwards; or up if you like,
Awykel 1 year ago
if you can get your hand on some liquid Helium, you can fill any great air cooled passive heat-sync copper heat pipe tubbing with the stuff, and then route the liquid out of the box, and back in using an extension of the heat pipe you could braes together....
Awykel 1 year ago
Hey have any of you OC'ing GURU's out there ever her of the superfliud effects of liquid helium? Strangly does not obey the lays of physics, do to quantum mechanics principles. Any hoooo... read on...
Awykel 1 year ago
Yeah, but I think MSI won this year....
Awykel 1 year ago
Good video :)
Poseidonn666 1 year ago