What happens if you put thermo plastic pellets on a running CPU? Let's find out! need new thermal paste? check out YeesterPaste and all my thermal paste accessories! www.yeesterpaste.com
@@ATCmon no isopropyl alcohol has a little but more bubbles when things are thrown in it, but CPU's can go in water, in fact anything can go in water you just got to let it dry the fuck out.
@sf2253 that makes no sense. ford has plastic oil pans, most cars have plastic valve covers which also get covered in oil, among a ton of other parts. theres just no way you could possibly be right. maybe you should know engines better before you say something dumb next time
@@timdeathlyActually☝️🤓, they you use mineral oil in submerged tank builds lol. Mineral oil is non-conductive and it’s called mineral oil because its oil found around rocks or “minerals”, not that it actually has corroding/conductive minerals in the oil itself
@@Furry_smasherdon’t worry even if yt thinks it’s spam they won’t do anything about it. It’s not like they don’t have 1000 bots on every channel that they do nothing about or anything
@@BlackArche0psit isn't like they don't do anythubg about it, it is that they are always different accounts, just read their names you will never find 2 bots with the same name
@@prathix4339 nah RU-vid could do a lot more. Unlike on other apps like Instagram they use common words when spamming. Pretty much the only thing RU-vid does is ban swear words and links
Water doesn't instantly harm electrical circuits if it isn't running. The amount of comments like this on videos I've seen of people washing their GPUs is crazy lol. Just let it dry for a few days and it'll be fine, maybe with a dehumidifier next to it with some rice.
@@VoidHxnter some were talking about corrosion, which is a valid concern, but only if it's not dried out immediately and you plan on exposing it to more and more water. gold on a CPU won't even corrode, and nothing important is exposed, it's just silicon, gold, and the metal IHS. None will corrode anyway.
You have to use an old cpu with no thermal throttling or shutoff built in. However, I feel like you can cook an egg well under 100c, which is the the thermal limit for most cpu these days?
There are three basic classifications of polymers: thermoplastics, elastomers, and thermosets. Thermoplastics are polymers like the one shown in the video which can become malleable when heated. This property is due to the lack of cross linking between polymer chains and they can pass eachother with enough energy to break the van der waal forces (similar to loose thread or yarn). Thermosets are polymers that begin as a liquid or a thermoplastic then are cured when exposed to UV light or an activator chemical. This creates cross links between the chains causing them to harden. However, due to the cross linking, the plastic is unable to be reheated and malleable again and instead burns (similar to a woven piece of fabric that’s hard to neatly take apart). Elastomers are between thermoplastics and thermosets. They have more cross linking than thermoplastics but less than thermosets. This makes them elastic due to the spacing between cross links allowing for minimal movement between chains (similar to a fishing net). Hope this is helps!
To people confused about the cpu in water, yes electronics plus water is bad right, sorta. The caviate is they have be RUNNING with CURRENT flowing through them, if they are running and touch water it can short circuit which is what causes damage, if its not running t should be fine as long as ot wasn't for too long as you cant just aoak it forever, if you do water can soak in and permanently damage the electronic
I wonder what would happen if you blended everything that you use as a thermal paste alternative with thermal paste, to make the ultimate thermal paste, like liquid metal toothpaste, diamond dust, gold dust, etc. And then did a comparison of temperatures between those two
Until you said it wasn't very thermal conductive I was thinking why not slowly tighten the heat sink onto it to make a new kind of thermal paste that envelopes the cpu.
What type of plastic was it? Thermoplastics are a wide range of materials, from stuff like this to nylons that are in loads of things, to plane interiors since they can be fireproof and even stuff capable of withstanding pretty much all chemicals, up to 280 C and being stronger than steel by volume.
As an experiment, I rinsed my old dusty graphics card with water. Blow dry with a electric blower, and let it sit for a few days. Installed back on my PC and it worked fine. I'm sure washing CPU is fine as long as it is not on, so the circuit is not shorted.