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View Full Version : Dry ice ontop of CPU Heatsink


kevinbo03
08-20-2007, 12:50 AM
Long story short:

I was at work, We were using Dry Ice to keep some stuff cold, And there was allot left. I took a couple pounds home, Played with it for a bit, Then just "Went for it" and plopped a piece on my Thermalright XP-90:

After One minute, CPU temp 8C full load:
http://img237.imageshack.us/img237/5366/img0037up1.jpg


After Two minutes, CPU temp below 0C full load. I had a screen of Abit sotware reading 0c, But this was awhile ago:
http://img177.imageshack.us/img177/2045/img0038ps9.jpg


the frost buildup was too unnerving, So I turned off the computer:
http://img182.imageshack.us/img182/5757/img0040jc9.jpg


Brr:
http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/6184/img0041iw5.jpg


The Leftover piece of dry ice:
http://img172.imageshack.us/img172/3203/img0042cn8.jpg

^Notice the other piece laying ontop of the now frost-covered box cutter knife, Lol.


This got me thinking- What about placing the entire motherboard on a flat piece of dry ice, And then more on the heatsinks, Etc. Kind of a "Poor Man's Dry ice Benching" for those of us without pots.

Anyways, It was fun. :clap:

Solarfall
08-20-2007, 01:22 AM
hhahah that looks so wonderfully mad.. so where are the results man ??

kevinbo03
08-20-2007, 01:26 AM
I did it a few months ago, And had a screenshot of Abit's Uguru reading a "0c" temperature for the CPU. However, I lost the screenshot sometime ago. :(

ownage
08-20-2007, 02:43 AM
Did it improve you're OC results?

karbonkid
08-20-2007, 04:46 AM
It's interesting that this worked so well with a heatpipe cooler - the heatpipes used in CPU heatsink are designed only to work most efficiently at a CPU's normal operating temperatures - I wouldn't have expected them to transfer heat that well at 0 degrees. Then again, maybe the heatpipes weren't actually doing much work, just the copper they're made out of.

BeardyMan
08-20-2007, 04:59 AM
Remember that cold + warm gives condens :D

better to use some insulation ;)

Jass
08-31-2007, 01:08 PM
You know, I think it would be possible to put a cube of DICE right on top of the CPU (With good Insulation of course). It would be better than putting it on top of heatsink, but the negative thing is, there would be no place to pour acetone on DICE. :ROTF: Not the greatest idea, but could bring couple of degrees down since you're outting it on top of your heatsing anyways.

bluep3ace
08-31-2007, 09:14 PM
You know, I think it would be possible to put a cube of DICE right on top of the CPU (With good Insulation of course). It would be better than putting it on top of heatsink, but the negative thing is, there would be no place to pour acetone on DICE. :ROTF: Not the greatest idea, but could bring couple of degrees down since you're outting it on top of your heatsing anyways.

lol you mean insulating everything but the cpu, and just putting a chunk of it on the chip?
sounds cool to me:cool:
poor man's dice pot.

Bigchrome
09-01-2007, 04:39 AM
No way you could keep it going...you'd kill the chip if the dry ice started to slide or anything.

Monstru
09-01-2007, 07:19 AM
If it works like you described it, I think that this is a very good solution for benching with cold-bugged A64's. Keeping it around 0-9 degrees could help improve the o/c on those Sandy's that really don't like (-) temps. I am talking about dice on the heatsink, of course. Putting Dice directly on the CPU seems like a very dangerous idea...