I'm doing a science project. My freezer is at -2 degrees farenheight. How long can I keep it in before condensation could fry it?
Im testing to see how the temperature affects the clock speed. So I need to know how long it can stay in before condensation messes it upShouldn't you be the one telling us?
I testing to see how the temperature affects the clock speed
No. I'm putting the CPU in the freezer, then quickly putting it back in the pic to collect the dataActively running? You'll probably burn out the compressor on your freezer.
No. I'm putting the CPU in the freezer, then quickly putting it back in the pic to collect the data
By the time you can run benchmarks it has already returned to normal operating temperatures.No. I'm putting the CPU in the freezer, then quickly putting it back in the pic to collect the data
I'm fine on the quickness just need to know how long it can stay inHow quickly are you doing it, did you wipe off the fingerprints..thats like 2 degrees right there.
I'm fine on the quickness just need to know how long it can stay in
Where the hell will I get compressed air?I say **** it, grab a can of compressed air, flip it upside down and blast that onto the CPU.
Where the hell will I get compressed air?
I'm testing to see how the temperature of the CPU will effect the clock speed. To put it in experiment terms:What are you doing to increase the clock speed? Or are you testing at the same frequency between sticking it in the freezer?
Without adjusting multi or overclocking you don't really gain anything, as per your previous thread about this:
http://www.computerforum.com/thread...50c-without-water-cooler.240217/#post-2019484