dry ice with acetone is around -60*C, ln2 is around -120*C, and liquid helium is -190*C(costing upwards of $4 a liter, and the only cpu's that don't coldbug at that temp is the phenom 2's)
Aren't those dry ice setups only temporary and usually just used for benchmarking? They look pretty strange, with the tube and all.
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Pretty much, although if you have like a 5-stager you can do phase change that gets some really insane temps, but the amount of energy required and the condensation hinder the ability to run it 24/7 (theoretically though it is possible, but for good clocks the voltage would kill the chip much sooner than standard.
be carefull though
Any thing that cold can easily condense close to a source of heat. Its like breating in winter...
make sure the air is "Dry" before you use it...
I've been running this system for at least 4 months, i've resolved the moisture issue, hav'nt had a single problem. And it's not really a refrigerator so to speak but uses the same components.
be carefull though
Any thing that cold can easily condense close to a source of heat. Its like breating in winter...
make sure the air is "Dry" before you use it...
i declare this to be the ultimate computer cooler -167 degrees C and as for condensation that's easy, you just insulate the board
Yeah, thats the 5 stage i was talking about. Sweet setup![]()
he said it eats 1 euros worth of electricity each hour even when not under load![]()
Complete and utter waste of money in terms of degree reduction vs cost. Especially when you consider the alternatives such as water cooling. Even then, i run my HD5770 on max with crysis, and it doesn't top 50oC. why bother?
Complete and utter waste of money in terms of degree reduction vs cost. Especially when you consider the alternatives such as water cooling. Even then, i run my HD5770 on max with crysis, and it doesn't top 50oC. why bother?