![]() ![]() Posted in computer hacks Tagged air conditioning, cooling, overclocking Post navigation This is making us think about just 3D printing a faceplate for our air conditioner to hold a few Raspberry PI boards. Still, the way they did it has the advantage of being simple and reversible. An alternative would be to use a double loop as a nuclear reactor does, with a water loop on the CPU and the refrigerant loop in the air conditioner. We wondered though, if you could tap into the cooling loop and actually push refrigerant through a water cooling block. We really liked the thermal interface test rig, which they used to test interface media. ![]() The temperatures stayed cool even at high speeds. With the air conditioning running, they disconnected at least some of the stock fans. Admittedly, it isn’t any worse than plunging your computer in liquid nitrogen, and we’ll admit that air conditioning units are made to keep large areas cold and work at high duty cycles. It doesn’t actually interface with the CPU cooling block, instead it just forces cool air into the case and this tends to cool everything inside. The trick is to create a simple duct to attach to a 5,000 BTU air conditioner. They think they haven’t hit the ceiling yet, and got their AMD Ryzen 8-core processor up to 4.58 GHz.Īn advantage of forcing air from an air conditioner is that the air forced into the system is quite dry and clean. is living proof as they modded a computer case to use a window air conditioner for overclocking a computer. We never insist that a hack be practical. ![]()
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