so, I'm looking to do something totally retarded and I'd like to ask you guys if its possible or wallet suicide (in the burning money sense, not the spending it on worthless shit sense).
This is the Hades nuc, and for my purposes, its a very attractive buy because I want to stick it into a book and need the slimmest gaming rid i can find.
the video has an disassembly of the nuc and the question I have relates heavily to its heat sink. My goal, is to cast a copper heat sink and apply it to the exisiting heat sink. The die of the sink will be mounted in a hollowed out book's binding, drawing heat from within outward. the problem I'm unsure about obviously is weather or not it will work
The heat sink itself seems at least vaguely sound, there are fan less heat sinks available on the market and some of them approach the amount of surface area and amount of copper I hope to use. that doesn't necissarily mean it will work though, or be something you could physically touch. but before we get into "will the copper be cool enough to touch" A much higher priority is "this heat sink wont be bottlenecked ontop of the existing heat sink for some reason and fry my cpu."
The video shows the heat sink is dark black, while the other images show a copper heat sink. assuming thermal paste and a plate, I'd like to get some idea of how effectively you could draw heat from the processor. gaming laptops seem to do just fine for what they're capable of, the thing runs hot and the fan is obviously on all the time in them, but the CPU doesn't generally die while the heat is making its way to that fan. but this is more like attaching a heat sink to a heat sink and I'm just not confident without someone to explain to me any technical hurdles this idea might introduce.
regardless of what you end up going with, you need to make sure that surface of the cpu and heatsink is mirror finish and apply a small bead of thermal paste. if its made of copper and has fans, it most likey wont overheat.
Nathaniel Peterson
Are you sure paper transmits heat well enough that thing won't fry? I guess it should be ok but can't say for sure.
Paper is more like insulation. That's why homeless people use it for blankets.
Julian Wright
I would like to know the opinion of the future you about what he thinks about your present actions. I bet it would develop just like you now judging the younger you.
Matthew Ortiz
actually the radiated heat should be exposed to the air, not the book, though I imagine the book will take some of the heat but the main goal is to expose the metal to air and have it radiate
despite how gay this is I am pretty sure I'll like this idea for decades to come. /tg/fags are nerdy like that
Diamonds are for loser, use Moissanite. Silicon for Silicon, no need for filthy carbons.
Lincoln Perry
is this for fucking real?
it must be a matter of not being able to shape it right for it to work.
Parker Bailey
you're retarded
Camden Parker
where do heatpipes fit into this equation
Thomas Hall
Nope, they already exist, just extremely expensive hence Worked for the government a few years back, can’t say much more other than they have thousands of these
Are you retarded? You basically HAVE to put it in a vacuum chamber anyways because otherwise you’d constantly have to cool the liquid nitrogen and it would waste a boatload of energy. Putting it in a vacuum chamber prevents ice formation because there isn’t any water to freeze. There isn’t any air which contains a small percentage of water vapor.
Dominic Ramirez
OP, please don't listen to this LARPer. Here's a WAY easier solution: get a modest liquid cooler, leave the radiator outside the case.
Any particle interaction between the liquid nitrogen and anything else will heat it faster and make costs higher. This is because temperature is average kinetic energy per unit volume. When you remove the particle interactions entirely via a much simpler and more effective vacuum chamber you end up with lower costs, even when you include maintenance. ;)
Jack Russell
ok mr college enough of your lectures none of us could afford a setup like that
Mason Gray
how do you prevent it from catching fire?
Austin Anderson
>>>/g/
Cooper Price
that looks great, you should leave that in a public place and walk away briskly
Adrian Clark
why?
Elijah Allen
Conformal coating. Oil bath.
Jackson Murphy
not him but the average cpu won't burn cardboard. unless your chips are reaching over 450F you won't burn cardboard