Making Intel's Worst Product Better.... And Also Worse

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
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    Intel's i9-12900KS is an incredibly fast processor... but what if we made it faster?
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    MUSIC CREDIT
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    Intro: Laszlo - Supernova
    Video Link: • [Electro] - Laszlo - S...
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    CHAPTERS
    ---------------------------------------------------
    0:00 - Intro
    1:10 - Build Redux
    1:22 - Isn't the IHS already copper?
    3:30 - IHS Removal
    5:40 - TIM Removal
    6:52 - Polish
    8:02 - Liquid Metal
    9:10 - Relid
    10:40 - Did it work??
    12:00 - Testing
    15:27 - Game Testing
    16:36 - Ting!
    17:15 - Outro
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3K

  • @benjiang2600
    @benjiang2600 Před 2 lety +5085

    This is quite literally the most Linus video in a while, the number of drops, incredible

    • @tophlovr
      @tophlovr Před 2 lety +192

      I usually just chuckle when Linus drops stuff. But during this video I got so frustrated that I actually threw up my hands at one point. HOW DOES HE DO THIS! I remove my RX580 to clean it and treat it like it cost 3 million dollars.

    • @ocudagledam
      @ocudagledam Před 2 lety +97

      He had to make up for the chip fab video where he was not allowed to touch anything, let alone drop stuff.

    • @Pumpkinspicelatte777
      @Pumpkinspicelatte777 Před 2 lety +54

      I feel like the editors have been editing out the drops for some of these videos, he went like 4 videos without dropping anything of value. I refuse to believe linus can not drop anything for multiple videos consecutively

    • @pierrea3094
      @pierrea3094 Před 2 lety +21

      He probably does it on purpose. Know your audience. Linus media is a powerhouse not a small goofy quirky studio

    • @seanthompson6720
      @seanthompson6720 Před 2 lety +9

      all the best linus videos have Alex in it

  • @samuelrodriguez6684
    @samuelrodriguez6684 Před 2 lety +1246

    "can you believe they wouldnt send me a second unit after the review?"
    "What a bunch of jerks"
    "I know right?"
    Intel, sponsoring the Intel extreme upgrade: "yes please, insult me more"

    • @travisbic
      @travisbic Před 2 lety +48

      You don't mention Linus pulling the IHS off the CPU then dropping it on the floor. Why not send him more ludicrously expensive hardware? ;-)

    • @dakyno
      @dakyno Před 2 lety +13

      @@travisbic it was a joke dude

    • @waqy
      @waqy Před 2 lety +52

      Don't forget the Intel factory visit too 😂😂

    • @bionicgeekgrrl
      @bionicgeekgrrl Před 2 lety +38

      Linus did the same a few years back with a much more expensive intel xeon processor and damaged it. Unsurprisingly intel refused to send a replacement then.

    • @plixplux
      @plixplux Před 2 lety +15

      What are you doing step-reviewer

  • @bradwilcox97
    @bradwilcox97 Před 2 lety +1334

    I just can't get over Alex's soul leaving his body every time he has to tell Linus
    "Don't do that."

    • @l33tsauce79
      @l33tsauce79 Před 2 lety +26

      a man of wisdom about the sandpaper wank

    • @Guru_1092
      @Guru_1092 Před rokem +8

      @@l33tsauce79 clearly speaks from personal experience lmao.

  • @michaelthompson9798
    @michaelthompson9798 Před 2 lety +626

    With the massive premium Intel charges for the KS variant cpu, they should include a machined copper IHS kit like shown free.

    • @bathrobeheroo
      @bathrobeheroo Před 2 lety +64

      That and much more. Like guaranteed all core clocks for a specific voltage. Like siliconlottery did it.
      The KS series is like an amazing wagyu steak packaged in a terrible paper bag with holes in it. Something you might expect a pretzel to come in.

    • @toby1248
      @toby1248 Před 2 lety +8

      Honestly it should be solid silver

    • @aluckyshot
      @aluckyshot Před 2 lety +15

      @@toby1248 Would gladly pay for a pure silver IHS.

    • @toby1248
      @toby1248 Před 2 lety +4

      @@aluckyshot they used to exist a few years ago. Not sure why they aren't available anymore

    • @nickfosley2882
      @nickfosley2882 Před 2 lety

      I love that Idea, sounds like an amazing way to get your investors to raise their pitchforks

  • @meable3763
    @meable3763 Před 2 lety +3419

    Linus: rips a top of the line Intel CPU apart
    Also Linus: Why won't they send us more free processors?

    • @vsnusv7555
      @vsnusv7555 Před 2 lety +12

      @@Noah-lj2sg but they didnt?

    • @vjollila96
      @vjollila96 Před 2 lety +94

      also classic Linus dropping it

    • @will-bn3nu
      @will-bn3nu Před 2 lety +20

      @@vsnusv7555 They said Intel would probably send more in the FUTURE

    • @CreativityNull
      @CreativityNull Před 2 lety +18

      I mean, what is Intel extreme tech upgrade?

    • @snowboundrecords
      @snowboundrecords Před 2 lety +16

      I read Linus “rips a line on a top of an intel CPU”

  • @philRacoindie
    @philRacoindie Před 2 lety +854

    Linus: "I wonder why they won't send us any more CPUs..."
    Also Linus: Drops the CPU.... twice

    • @UltimatePerfection
      @UltimatePerfection Před 2 lety +21

      Exactly! That's why they should send him more! So he has spares.

    • @gabe_dunn
      @gabe_dunn Před 2 lety +6

      in less than a second

    • @anxiousearth680
      @anxiousearth680 Před 2 lety +1

      I panicked so hard lol.
      "No no! Do it on the floor damn it!"

    • @philRacoindie
      @philRacoindie Před 2 lety

      @@UltimatePerfection really good idea

    • @Ale.K7
      @Ale.K7 Před 2 lety +1

      And it's not the first time. Remember he dropped a $10K Xeon (off camera, sadly), damaging one memory channel. Intel didn't send another...

  • @Kelkschiz
    @Kelkschiz Před 2 lety +449

    Seems like a process that should be implemented by CPU producers on their top-tier products.

    • @namonaite
      @namonaite Před 2 lety +55

      I actually find it insane that top of the spec products don't even, consider outsourcing cpu lids for a product that just only realistically exists because a competitor is outperforming you.

    • @TheEchelon
      @TheEchelon Před rokem +10

      @@namonaite Not insane at all. That's how halo/flagship products work. Why do people forget that Intel wants high margins.

    • @heickelrrx
      @heickelrrx Před rokem

      but u also can said the other way around if they gone that way, that u need to pay more for non crap IHS

    • @brice0403
      @brice0403 Před rokem +11

      For real, I don't buy the explanation that manufacturers couldn't scale this up to mass production when they are producing chip dies that require far lower tolerances than machining smooth IHSs.

    • @rrteppo
      @rrteppo Před rokem +2

      @@brice0403 it would also cost them far less because scale.

  • @maddyasneeded
    @maddyasneeded Před 2 lety +101

    This may not be the right place to say this but I want Linus and the whole team to know that the love of my life looked up to Linus and loved everything about you guys. We would watch your videos together, and he would explain everything because I'm not techy. He was taken from this world way too soon. Thank you Linus for bringing a smile to his face everyday. Every time you all drop something, too of course.

    • @bluepurplepink
      @bluepurplepink Před 9 měsíci +11

      So sorry to hear, but it’s comforting to know that LTT could be a way to reconnect with those memories.

  • @carnotan
    @carnotan Před 2 lety +873

    Finally something in Linus Tech Tips that I might be able to afford: the copper heat spreader.

    • @Kalyptic
      @Kalyptic Před 2 lety +7

      🤣🤣😅

    • @afriedrich1452
      @afriedrich1452 Před 2 lety +29

      Why buy a copper heat spreader when you can buy a gold one?

    • @josemartinez280
      @josemartinez280 Před 2 lety +12

      Not if you break your CPU trying to remove the original heat spreader

    • @RogerRamjetLips
      @RogerRamjetLips Před 2 lety +8

      yeah i might be able to afford it, but i have got zero chance of replicating what they did in this video. Too complicated for my sausage fingers.

    • @bathrobeheroo
      @bathrobeheroo Před 2 lety +3

      ​@@afriedrich1452 I heard diamond is better! /s

  • @bruceisdashiz
    @bruceisdashiz Před 2 lety +550

    "Your house might burn down."
    "But look at these reflections."
    That's right; priorities.

    • @rajukakaju4009
      @rajukakaju4009 Před 2 lety +9

      "PRIORITIES" Indeed

    • @Xenoray1
      @Xenoray1 Před 2 lety +5

      this comment gave me HEY THIS IS AUSTIN vibes

    • @vjollila96
      @vjollila96 Před 2 lety +1

      I can get behind those priorities

    • @FranciscoTChavez
      @FranciscoTChavez Před 2 lety +7

      Burning the house down might raise the temp a bit more 10 degrees C (at first), but once you're rocking outdoor PC lifestyle, the Winter temperatures should let us get even more performance out of it.

    • @vjollila96
      @vjollila96 Před 2 lety +1

      @@FranciscoTChavez i like how you are thinking

  • @kaios26k90
    @kaios26k90 Před 2 lety +133

    Weird to find a compromise in a no-compromise CPU. I wonder how much more Intel would have to charge per CPU if they used a tighter tolerance heat spreader for the massively high end CPUs only. If it doesn't matter for 99% of all chips okay, use the other process, but for that remaining 1%, it seems like billions of dollars of R&D could be bought cheaply simply by refining this one component.
    I hope someone with some power and vision at Intel watches this, since AMD is looking to eat their lunch again with Ryzen 7000 and they could use every advantage.
    Or someone at AMD could watch this, improve their own high-end and continue embarrassing Intel in the future.

    • @satibel
      @satibel Před 2 lety +11

      Tbh offering a "top bin" for the higher end CPUs at like 400 bucks more without an IHS or with a lapped IHS may be interesting. I wouldn't buy it but people looking for absolute best performance may want it.

    • @RowanBird779
      @RowanBird779 Před rokem +5

      Or, like, design the CPU to use a somewhat reasonable TDP? This thing draws more power than my entire computer

    • @deepspacewanderer9897
      @deepspacewanderer9897 Před rokem +1

      8 months old comment, but anyway, i think the issue may be that the cost may be higher than what the price of buying that lid would suggest and that in practical applications, as shown in the video, the gains are minimal to non-existant:
      1)Because of the random factors during manufacturing process (and manufacturers designing around the existance of said random factors), you only get to know if any particular chip can be made into a top tier/mid tier/low-end processor after evaluating (i.e. (mostly?) testing) it. Which means that you have to either
      a)disassemble, clean and then reassemble already working processors (which, besides costing money, adds some risk of breaking them),
      b)or you have modify your production process to have your testing done before fully assembling the processors, which will probably increase production costs for all of the processors, which, given that only a very small percentage of the processors would actually use that super flat IHS, would effectively make installing that IHS an expencive process (if 100 processors with standard IHSs cost, lets say, 1000$ make and 99 "standard" and 1 "super flat" processors cost $1050, then that super flat IHS effectively costs 50$).
      2)You now also have to manage having 2 similar items in your facility, which increases costs of running said facility (i.e. the production cost of all of the processors), which, same as above, means that it is, effectively, really expencive to store those super flat IHSs.

  • @severgun
    @severgun Před rokem +6

    main issue with this is that cupper and gallium will react and liquid metal will "dry out".
    Maybe precuring cupper surface with LM will create layer of CuGa2 and it will not dry out anymore, but I did not test that.

  • @mrfilipelaureanoaguiar
    @mrfilipelaureanoaguiar Před 2 lety +1251

    For 10celcius, intel could have made a special heatspreader just for the KS mostly for the money. At least it worked flawlessly, nice job.

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Před 2 lety +87

      That would really justify the KS name

    • @girlsdrinkfeck
      @girlsdrinkfeck Před 2 lety +34

      why did everyone forget about that concept PC build that had copper wool as a heatsink for processors that was as cool as water cooled systems ? was like a wire mesh of copper wool and it disperses heat way better than fins

    • @vinaychekuri5043
      @vinaychekuri5043 Před 2 lety +3

      @@girlsdrinkfeck which video was this?

    • @FalloutProto
      @FalloutProto Před 2 lety +5

      I’m excited to see how it holds up long term.

    • @bathrobeheroo
      @bathrobeheroo Před 2 lety +20

      @@girlsdrinkfeck The game is not about heat dispersion for a long time now, CPU cooling is like 95% about heat transfer from the die/IHS to a few milimeters away. That's the bottleneck, especially because CPU/chips are small. Once we can move the majority of heat just a few milimeters from the IHS, it's almost trivial to get rid of it.

  • @buttonsjr
    @buttonsjr Před 2 lety +1694

    I want to see how Silver which is more conductive than copper would perform. Like Linus and a few other youtubers could afford to show testing on Silver heatsinks. I guess it would perform 7% better than copper.

    • @dieubermensch
      @dieubermensch Před 2 lety +59

      Wouldn't it bend?

    • @enlightenme2115
      @enlightenme2115 Před 2 lety +187

      Diamond - 2000 - 2200 W/m•K... They should Use Diamond 💎. Better than Silver 5x times 🤣😅

    • @ProjectPhysX
      @ProjectPhysX Před 2 lety +130

      Not too much difference, although it is probably a bit better.
      But consider that a copper heatpipe is about 20-200 times better thermally conductive, and you'll realize why hardly any coolers use silver. Ease of manufacturing and corrosion resistance of copper metal play a role too.

    • @thunderarch5951
      @thunderarch5951 Před 2 lety +91

      Why yes, silver is 7% more conductive than copper(that in this case would at best give you a couple degrees less), it also costs 50 to 150 times more per pound
      Do I need to explain why it would be such a stupid thing to do, or you think you can manage that for yourself?
      Also, metal liquid is mostly gallium
      Silver and gallium make an alloy, Ag2Ga, that can happen spontaneously at room temperature
      This alloy increase its electrical conductivity, against its thermal one, enjoy

    • @ShadowClod
      @ShadowClod Před 2 lety +28

      just looked into that and seems like it would need some sort of plating cause silver alloys with gallium which is in liquid metal, which would ruin it

  • @RussSirois
    @RussSirois Před 2 lety +5

    Man, this takes me back to when I had a phase where I lapped the mating surface of my heatsink as well as the top of the IHS so there was less thermal compound needed to fill the gaps. I certainly didn't get a 10c improvement, but it was pretty cool to have a near-mirror finish on your CPU 😎
    That was right in the era of having a DFI LanParty motherboard with UV reactive PCI slots. Wish I had pictures of that setup still!

  • @Chonchi999TheG
    @Chonchi999TheG Před 2 lety +6

    The stuff they used to get rid of the solder is actually a Gallium, Indium, and Tin alloy called “Galinstan”.

  • @ChillinSicilian
    @ChillinSicilian Před 2 lety +879

    Last week: “Intel let me see their cpu production”
    This week: “Let’s exploit and rebuild Intel’s fastest gaming cpu”

    • @bananab3813
      @bananab3813 Před 2 lety +75

      next week: "i established a new startup in silicon valley"

    • @g00gle1sw4tchingme
      @g00gle1sw4tchingme Před 2 lety +17

      Although modding something that you legitimately own is not a sin. It's your CPU after you own it. Not Intel's.

    • @DragonOfTheMortalKombat
      @DragonOfTheMortalKombat Před 2 lety +6

      @@bananab3813 Next to next week I am making my startup public, invest now.

    • @Freestyle80
      @Freestyle80 Před 2 lety

      When will you buffoons understand that Intel isnt as salty as you people

    • @maruftim
      @maruftim Před 2 lety +1

      pissing off Intel month

  • @mitchell2719
    @mitchell2719 Před 2 lety +147

    "This isn't abuse, we're making it faster"
    I get the feeling Alex blew up a few engines back in school

    • @fila1445
      @fila1445 Před 2 lety +20

      Just 5 more psi of boost…

    • @ruikazane5123
      @ruikazane5123 Před 2 lety +9

      With two strokes, a little lean on fuel makes a little more power
      Guess the catch

    • @mh13mini
      @mh13mini Před 2 lety +8

      @@ruikazane5123 knock knock!

    • @MrGamelover23
      @MrGamelover23 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ruikazane5123 what?

    • @GhastUnity
      @GhastUnity Před 2 lety +4

      @@mh13mini who's there? mr rodney!

  • @mr.unknown4589
    @mr.unknown4589 Před 2 lety +2

    Few hints (from old delidder): 1. Cut the cotton part from ear-stick-cleaner and spread thermal grizzly with plastic sharp part (avoiding any cotton hairs that can stick in), and 2. Don't remove all glue from cpu pcb just gently clean it with isopropyle alchol, (it's okay to have part of it left on pcb) then apply medium-thin silicone glue / whatever you use. Tested many times, 100% best way. And gift tip ... dont wait too much for glue to settle, put in cpu socket and lock it, left it there to settle under pressure of locking mechanism, that way you get correct thermal compound distribution over cpu die + IHS.

  • @QruisS
    @QruisS Před rokem +6

    10 extra lower degrees of temp for just 40 dolars is actually amazing

  • @bubbledoubletrouble
    @bubbledoubletrouble Před 2 lety +208

    “Don’t want to get that in your eyes.”
    It’s almost like wearing eye protection/PPE would be a good idea…

    • @thiccanimethighs7589
      @thiccanimethighs7589 Před 2 lety +9

      Dont be ridiculous thats way too sensible

    • @Tomieszek
      @Tomieszek Před 2 lety

      OSHA staring motherfuckerly O_O

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy Před 2 lety

      Don't be silly. We are in the "masks don't do nothing" days. Ppe is seen as infringement of rights now.

    • @andreibalasa745
      @andreibalasa745 Před 2 lety

      Linus dropped the eye protection goggles and they cracked or sum

  • @Exilum
    @Exilum Před 2 lety +361

    Everytime the CPU boosted higher with the temperature dropping. Now what I want to see is a situation in which the CPU doesn't draw more, to see the true temperature difference. Maybe limiting the CPU clock to whatever the stock CPU was running at. I think it should actually reach the 15°C mentioned online.

    • @ViciousTuna2012
      @ViciousTuna2012 Před 2 lety +38

      Limit the CPU clock in both tests, that way all factors will be the same.

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Před 2 lety +30

      I think this is really what they should have done before thinking about 20W extra, higher clocks, overclocking or whatever

    • @longjohnsilveri3733
      @longjohnsilveri3733 Před 2 lety +2

      Also.. if they want to have a legitimate comparison, they probably should have used the same cooling system..
      As impressive as the temp drop is, the fact that they used different coolers for the 2 stress tests invalidates everything in my eyes.

    • @Exilum
      @Exilum Před 2 lety +36

      @@longjohnsilveri3733 I think they used the same setup for both.

    • @flyingtentacle7631
      @flyingtentacle7631 Před 2 lety +8

      nah, nobody cares about the temp of your cpu. The purpose of cooling a cpu is to get more performance out of it, so testing the performance is literally what matters. If a cpu performs the same at 100c and 40c, why would you spend any amount of money to get it cooler? It's not going to help longevity either, you can run a cpu near tjmax it's whole life and you'll need to upgrade your cpu because it's slow as shit due to the time that has passed before anything actually happens to it.

  • @blahorgaslisk7763
    @blahorgaslisk7763 Před 2 lety +7

    What I really would have liked to see is just how much difference lapping the original IHS would have made before they removed it and installed the replacement IHS. They could also have tried delidding and replacing the solder with liquid metal to see if that made a big difference. As it is we don't really know if the improvement is because of a flatter IHS, using liquid metal as a TIM instead of solder, or if it's the new IHS that makes the most difference.

  • @hesperhurt
    @hesperhurt Před 2 lety +26

    RockIt Cool: "It's really flat!"
    Me, having had to remelt 300kg+ of copper/titanium alloy because parts deviated 1/1000th of a mm over 85mm: "😑.... you should try aerospace MFer!"

    • @celestebarrentine4158
      @celestebarrentine4158 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching 🤗
      Send a direct message right away,I have something for you.🔝🔝🔝🔝

    • @FrankieJames7
      @FrankieJames7 Před 2 lety

      where are you making air locks at

  • @erickespinosa8240
    @erickespinosa8240 Před 2 lety +94

    I just finished rendering 5,400 frames of 3D animation, a second less each would have saved me 1.5 hours of downtime so, under the right conditions, it's totally worth it!

    • @matejnemec4616
      @matejnemec4616 Před 2 lety +5

      Can't you render on gpu though?

    • @erickespinosa8240
      @erickespinosa8240 Před 2 lety +13

      @@matejnemec4616 a second less per frame is worth it, either on cpu or gpu --for this video the upgrade was cpu cooling anyway, not the actual cpu

    • @davidgoodnow269
      @davidgoodnow269 Před 2 lety +2

      Makes you think about having one of those coppers on your GPU, and putting the whole thing in an actively-cooled liquid bath, to me.

    • @erickespinosa8240
      @erickespinosa8240 Před 2 lety +4

      @@davidgoodnow269 precisely! especially considering how sensitive are gpu clocks to temperature these days

    • @Winnetou17
      @Winnetou17 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, though it's getting to a point where it would just make more sense to have 2 computers render 2700 frames each. Much faster. And after a point, or at a bigger scale it gets cheaper at the same time. Including the power costs.

  • @InFAMOUSPS4_19
    @InFAMOUSPS4_19 Před 2 lety +48

    I remember back in 2013 when AMD brought out the R9 295x2 and Linus said that intel needed a product that pushed the bounds of what's possible and requires watercooling. Looks like he finally got his wish!

    • @bratisla2040
      @bratisla2040 Před 2 lety

      Damn even the single R9 290 was a mess to cool. Been running in thermal throttle since day one, had to build my custom WC loop

    • @kire929
      @kire929 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bratisla2040 I had a Tri-X 290 for a while back then. After repasting, it didn't go past 75 degrees EVER.

  • @iankeel7914
    @iankeel7914 Před 2 lety +3

    "Graphine infused liquid coolant"! everyones got to love coolants that instantly short everythink out the momoent they leak.

  • @dracobutwhatever8611
    @dracobutwhatever8611 Před 2 lety +4

    7:26 Dracula from Hotel Transylvania

  • @ValentineC137
    @ValentineC137 Před 2 lety +229

    AMD: Next generation 3D stacking technology brings top tier gaming performance on high-midrange CPU's
    Intel: 300W stock, take it or leave it

    • @TehStevz
      @TehStevz Před 2 lety +24

      AKA - Intel: "Best I can do is 300w stock."

    • @kamilkilian7861
      @kamilkilian7861 Před 2 lety +48

      They had the best cooling you can possibly get and this CPU still thermal throttled with stock IHS. What a waste of money this processor is.

    • @DarthCiliatus
      @DarthCiliatus Před 2 lety +5

      @@kamilkilian7861 Not quite the best possible. They have that air conditioner cpu cooler.

    • @joaquinflores2741
      @joaquinflores2741 Před 2 lety

      Good ol' Intel is just trying to bring liquid nitrogen cooling into the mainstream

    • @vladislave7826
      @vladislave7826 Před 2 lety +19

      @@DarthCiliatus which in it's turn takes 2kw of power and has issues with condensate

  • @tonyfweb
    @tonyfweb Před 2 lety +169

    Linus: "I can't believe we're already doing this"
    Me: "I can't believe Linus is letting himself handle it already"

  • @garchamp9844
    @garchamp9844 Před 2 lety +8

    Back in my day we’d just remove the heat spreader and mount the cooler directly on the die. Who knew that heat spreaders would become so good that you would actually want to mount a custom one to lower temps?

    • @Ashen2501
      @Ashen2501 Před 2 lety +3

      AMD Athlons/Durons are welcoming you ^_^

  • @TheTrio3331
    @TheTrio3331 Před 2 lety +2

    The nickel plating on the IHS actually does significantly contribute to thermal resistance due to the nickel being heat-soaked. The thin-wall assumption that you spoke of holds primarily for steep temperature gradients, but under nearly isothermal conditions, like a CPU and cooler at steady-state, the contact resistance of the nickel-to-copper interface is actually quite significant relative to the other sources of thermal resistance. I would cite my sources, but it was a textbook I read like 2 years ago and I can't remember what it was called, sorry folks.

  • @alun1038
    @alun1038 Před 2 lety +13

    His cat standing up for no reason at 13:40 had me dying lmao

  • @Neoxon619
    @Neoxon619 Před 2 lety +446

    For a second, I thought this was going to be another zero compromises build. Still, can’t say no to this.

    • @mineisstupid
      @mineisstupid Před 2 lety +20

      there are no compromises in this build for me

    • @Bruh-nb1hj
      @Bruh-nb1hj Před 2 lety +2

      I just saw a comment just like this

    • @Neoxon619
      @Neoxon619 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Bruh-nb1hj Yeah, they copied me.

    • @Neoxon619
      @Neoxon619 Před 2 lety

      @@mineisstupid True, but it’s damn risky at that.

    • @amicloud_yt
      @amicloud_yt Před 2 lety

      Well it kinda is. just without the case

  • @frankyboy4409
    @frankyboy4409 Před 2 lety +6

    Pah, heatspreaders! Back in the days we had raw and open CPU cores which we'd chip corners off when putting the heat blocks on! Looking at you, AMD Athlon XP Series!

  • @wiggenvan
    @wiggenvan Před 2 lety +19

    I feel like changing thermal pads/paste on the gpu may have actually seen results in this setup. My 3090FE had massive cooling gains for memory temps when I did it (about 20 degrees cooler), I think they really have been skimping in the thermal pads.

  • @Olav_Hansen
    @Olav_Hansen Před 2 lety +134

    Having the extra good heat spreader should have been the standard. Intel wants to pump the absurd extreme, they should offer supreme cooling. As if it's not expensive enough already, while there's almost no way to prevent it from throttling.

    • @jeromegagnon3787
      @jeromegagnon3787 Před 2 lety +8

      nhaaa, they should just rework their stuff, all they do is keep upping the power consumption gen after gen, just like ngreedia does. thats great if you live way north but having a space heater with 300w cpu and 400w gpu is the definition of ''playing on a toaster''.

    • @Olav_Hansen
      @Olav_Hansen Před 2 lety

      @@jeromegagnon3787 it would be better if they made their general line up better, but it if they are going to make a hot part like this they'd better supply it with ample cooling.

    • @jeromegagnon3787
      @jeromegagnon3787 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Olav_Hansen id rather it come with an ac unit then. the part can stand the heat, i don't .

    • @MoraFermi
      @MoraFermi Před 2 lety +3

      The stock IHS is domed for a reason: To make sure it will work even with lower quality heatsinks and low quality thermal compound. You can get the exact same result as in the video by just sanding down the IHS flat.

    • @brokeandtired
      @brokeandtired Před 2 lety

      @@jeromegagnon3787 one the many reasons I got a 75w Series S console....The next gen is gonna be 10X my S's 75w power usage. I will keep my old 200w PC for retro/media usage.

  • @abhinavkumar4063
    @abhinavkumar4063 Před 2 lety +6

    15:27 The wallpaper is hilarious 😁😁

  • @kosmokoshka6232
    @kosmokoshka6232 Před rokem +2

    I've seen Linus complaining about sticky residue several times. Tech tip: contact cleaner dissolves sticker and glue residue like it is nothing. You can even remove void warranty stickers with that stuff.
    Just be sure to use the computer-kind contact cleaner. Automotive contact cleaners sometimes use minute abrasive agents that can ruin the look of some plastics :(

  • @pmh2390
    @pmh2390 Před 2 lety +1

    Linus and LTT you should try IHS's made of silver, 24k gold, niobium, and other metals in your new lab. you can get a jeweler to make them using a CNC or laser I would recommend Riva Precision Manufacturing in Brooklyn NY but I know they deal mainly with large orders but I can definitely help you find a jewelry in your area with the right equipment to do it

  • @adamprzedniczek9200
    @adamprzedniczek9200 Před 2 lety +13

    7:00 It's nice that Linus mentioned us: Polish people also watch LTT.

  • @wasdawasda3849
    @wasdawasda3849 Před 2 lety +21

    I delided my 8600k, was a lot of fun. I didn't even bother glueing the IHS back on, I just used the mounting pressure of the socket to hold it still. I probably got like a 10c drop just putting the previous IHS back on with liquid metal and lightly planing the IHS + heat sink.

  • @kiyosenl.3889
    @kiyosenl.3889 Před 2 lety

    The time consuming part for keeping the tolerances so tight isn't the machine itself nor it's quality (well to a degree on quality of the machine) but the frequency you have to check tolerances and change the tool wear in the settings of your machine, as well as how you mount what you're machining, depending on what you make you may have to choose between something that gives extraordinarily repeatable results and has no play or something thats fast, just depends on what you have to work with because your fixture is definitely important

  • @jasonsaez3668
    @jasonsaez3668 Před 2 lety

    Hey LMG, I have seen on Jay's Two Cents channel, when he does heat/speed testing on a processor, he will often sand/mill down the top of the cpu to make sure it is as flat as possible. So I can see a 3rd party doing this on purpose, for best surface area contact. Love the channel, keep up the great work!!!

  • @zacharytribou2728
    @zacharytribou2728 Před 2 lety +143

    If gold is also an excellent conductor, well I think you gotta test the theory of gold vs copper

    • @CSJSyr
      @CSJSyr Před 2 lety +34

      Gold is worse in thermal conductivity. By quite a bit.

    • @ProjectPhysX
      @ProjectPhysX Před 2 lety +50

      Actually, silver metal has the best thermal conductivity of any metal at 429 W/mK. Gold is 310, copper is 401, aluminium is 205.
      The thermal conductivity of a copper heatpipe is between 10000 and 100000 W/mK.
      So a gold heatsink would make no sense at all.

    • @Sithhy
      @Sithhy Před 2 lety +12

      @@ProjectPhysX So... silver coolers when?

    • @DogsBAwesome
      @DogsBAwesome Před 2 lety +7

      A diamond IHS is the way to go

    • @heyhoe168
      @heyhoe168 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Sithhy for a top price CPU silver heatsink actually makes sence. However if you running water cooling, you want to stick to a mono-metal system.

  • @mitchelloswald6840
    @mitchelloswald6840 Před 2 lety +46

    I love Alex's semi-disapproving parent look throughout this video, as Linus drops the CPU multiple times and makes a mess, to the point where Alex just takes over.

    • @kingkarlito
      @kingkarlito Před 2 lety

      @modest mouse colored person he has completely flanderized himself, "this computer legitimately if you have like bad not up to code wiring in your house it might burn down" his schtick has really lost all of its charm.

  • @joshxwho
    @joshxwho Před 2 lety +10

    I thought the thread ripper consuming crazy wattage was nuts. Thanks intel!

  • @malletdevoted
    @malletdevoted Před 2 lety

    Yesterday, I saw the shorts video you made on this, it was so cool and I’m so glad you made a nice video of it today

  • @tinman123456789
    @tinman123456789 Před 2 lety +247

    1:22 y'all pretty much explained Six Sigma manufacturing better than any corporate trainers I been subjected to 🤣 so considering that Intel isn't realistically expecting a perfect finish, I'd take a guess they're wanting an adequate finish and Sigma 3 or 4

    • @littlejackalo5326
      @littlejackalo5326 Před 2 lety +16

      6S is even more cringe than 5S. All lean manufacturing is soooo painfully cringe. The proponents and the consultants are the type of people that pump 6S during the work week, and a -pyramid scheme- ... I mean MLM scheme... after hours and on weekends. You'll see them at MLM rallies on Saturday afternoons.

    • @torqued111
      @torqued111 Před 2 lety

      @@littlejackalo5326 what the shitballs are you on about?

    • @DirtySoap
      @DirtySoap Před 2 lety +8

      I prefer six ligma

    • @bigqwertycat
      @bigqwertycat Před 2 lety +2

      Oh boy! Have you heard of LEAN SIX SIGMA!?

    • @DirtySoap
      @DirtySoap Před 2 lety

      @@bigqwertycat I first heard about it in 2009 lol

  • @00kidney
    @00kidney Před 2 lety +725

    Petition to have Intel send Linus more free processors to tear apart and to... burn the house down? 😂

  • @-Graham
    @-Graham Před 2 lety +3

    Would love to see you guys make a pefect copy of the IHS out of solid silver for that extra couple degrees. The stock metal would prob cost less than what you paid for this

  • @EngineerNick
    @EngineerNick Před 2 lety

    I would love to see the original heat spreader under an optical flat / monochromatic light to observe the interference patterns. Also, how does the part deform when heated?

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395 Před 2 lety +96

    As electricity usage per square mm goes up, every additional improvement in tolerances will have greater levels of significance (obviously to a point). It’s clear that for the maximum performance units they could do better, but for the overwhelming majority of processors, thankfully, doesn’t matter.
    It does raise a question about the value of keeping the prices down on the high end products when quality suffers. Relying on 3rd party improvements has been standard for top-end systems, usually because of some odd deficiency-whether it’s lapping the IHS, package bending (Alder Lake), IHS-die gap (on the interior), de-lidding, die lapping, or use of liquid metal TIM-halo products could benefit from the additional effort, and we could still enjoy warranty coverage.
    I personally think paying more for better quality in a complete package off the assembly line is worth it for halo products. I would be willing to pay to not risk ruining something so expensive.

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Před 2 lety +12

      Better quality parts would really justify the KS name and price

    • @halycon404
      @halycon404 Před 2 lety +8

      Eh. Don't know. The price may not be worth it to them. Computers are not like any other product on the market. They depreciate so quickly. In a year or two the 12900KS will be outperformed by the rest of the high end market, in 5 it'll be outperformed by the majority of the market. Does it make sense for Intel to spin up entire new boutique divisions just for the KS series? I'd say no. A halo chip is for current headlines, it's not like a halo car which could have an impact on the brand for decades. People don't judge chip manufacturers on halo products. They judge them on what they can actually afford to buy. Chips are commodity priced and sold, which we saw over the last two years with the chip shortage. Noone has brand loyalty to Tropicana, if Tropicana OJ is out they'll buy store brand and be fine with it. With how fast chips depreciate it honestly may not be worth it to Intel.

  • @helipilotuh1
    @helipilotuh1 Před 2 lety +68

    It would be interesting to send the intel IHS to a company that can test its “flatness”.

    • @blockbertus
      @blockbertus Před 2 lety +5

      Its most likely slightly bend now after the delidding.

    • @randybobandy9828
      @randybobandy9828 Před 2 lety +6

      Why? The real issue is how inconsistent Intels IHS are from one unit to the next. Some might be flat while others arent.

    • @concinnus
      @concinnus Před 2 lety

      @@randybobandy9828 There is also the issue, on 12th gen specifically, of the Independent Loading Mechanism (ILM) bowing the IHS.

    • @DarthCiliatus
      @DarthCiliatus Před 2 lety +5

      GN tests that.

    • @samantoniak1657
      @samantoniak1657 Před 2 lety +2

      What you could use to measure it is an optical flat and a low pressure sodium lamp that measures surface flatness by optical interference. It sounds complicated but if you set it up right it's actually pretty simple.

  • @DarkCloud360
    @DarkCloud360 Před 2 lety +3

    10:34 no new thermal paste?

  • @unkn0wn.kn1ght
    @unkn0wn.kn1ght Před rokem

    I challenge you to try combining that Copper IHS with CPu Contact Frame and Diamond infuse Thermal Paste

  • @mrbiggoggles314
    @mrbiggoggles314 Před 2 lety +36

    I actually bought one of these back in 2019 and my temps did go down a good bit, I still have the excel file I made. The core temps went from (90/85/93/86) to (74/73/80/74) using whatever stress test I was using at the time (Probably Prime95).... So they do work pretty dang good.

    • @MrGamelover23
      @MrGamelover23 Před 2 lety +2

      Does that give you enough headroom to overclock instead of getting a new cpu?

    • @DarthCiliatus
      @DarthCiliatus Před 2 lety +3

      What cpu did you put it on?

  • @gamerstar8311
    @gamerstar8311 Před 2 lety +53

    And I love that intel sponsor’s LTT no matter what

    • @wta1518
      @wta1518 Před 2 lety

      But Intel didn't sponsor them, they were sponsored by Build Redux and Ting

  • @KarsonNow
    @KarsonNow Před 2 lety +6

    10:40 nope, you're not tried hard enough to get perfect temperatures... To do this you should sanded the heatspreader and water block up to perfect flatnnes and shine ☝️

    • @ljfran2383
      @ljfran2383 Před 2 lety

      flatness yes, shine, no. thermal compound likes a slight texture

    • @Carg0-
      @Carg0- Před 2 lety

      @@ljfran2383 No need for thermal compound when the surfaces are as smooth as gauge blocks

  • @nothernoah8512
    @nothernoah8512 Před rokem +4

    damn, linus really turned bri'ish at 1:07

  • @ColJonSquall1
    @ColJonSquall1 Před 2 lety +22

    you know when there's tasks requiring dexterity, we're going to get a Linus Drop Tips special, lol

  • @zakk6513
    @zakk6513 Před 2 lety +34

    I would love to see this compered to a direct die 12900ks in terms of temperature

    • @faranocks
      @faranocks Před 2 lety +5

      This plus lapped OEM IHS. I wanna see how much the flatness is a contributing factor.

  • @arnearne12345
    @arnearne12345 Před 2 lety +2

    if i remembeer correctly applying liquid metal to the die and also lapping the die flat had roughly the same effect but this is a very nice alternative for those that do not want to lap the die

  • @Evilsizer82
    @Evilsizer82 Před rokem

    yea never use blend for testing the cpu, that test does a bit of cpu/memory controller/ram. run small and use custom set the max size to the L2 or if you want L3 cache size.

  • @AlexanderTerminator
    @AlexanderTerminator Před 2 lety +9

    6:48
    Linus: Gotta say, the little tissues I dispose of usually don't look like this.
    Alex: Sighs like never before.

    • @dgan2304
      @dgan2304 Před 2 lety

      Linus has some on point jokes sometimes LOL

  • @lescastorsdunord
    @lescastorsdunord Před 2 lety +6

    8:14 Fish Bubbles Sound Effects

  • @kgmarcussen
    @kgmarcussen Před 2 lety

    You need to invest in a set of gauge blocks. If you can wring the IHS to a gauge block, then you know it’s flat. Same goes for the your coolers touch surface. Having a surface grinder with an aluminum oxide wheel, diamond honed, on had will let you be much more precise than the hand pressure wet wheel method seen before.

  • @FireFightJack
    @FireFightJack Před 2 lety +3

    6:00
    Its a good idea in theory, but in my experience those tape guns are vastly inferior. They have another point of failure AND restrict the way you can use it. It may be fine for a couple of uses at home but try packing two or three hundred packages yourself in a day and you will know the difference. Just get the standard 3M tape gun without that "safety feature" and learn how to not cut yourself with your tools.

    • @TheEchelon1619
      @TheEchelon1619 Před rokem

      Those tape guns may be required by Canadian OH&S.

  • @JoseGarcia-mi4ig
    @JoseGarcia-mi4ig Před 2 lety +232

    Intel should definitely still be worrying themselves later this year, now that AMD is fully switching to LGA and potentially brining their 3D cache tech and RDNA2 UHD graphics to do anything into one. After them realizing they’ll be able to break their limits of DDR5 speeds too like XMP, but more insane

    • @nathanpeterson5609
      @nathanpeterson5609 Před 2 lety +24

      Why would Intel be worried about AM5 being LGA?

    • @ArashVenus
      @ArashVenus Před 2 lety +3

      Man that's gonna push Steam Dieck stonks to the roof.. Hell yeah

    • @kuriaspaul
      @kuriaspaul Před 2 lety +2

      I believe Intel themselves will be bringing upgrades with double the small cores alongside higher performance for the big cores. AMD will most likely take the gaming crown while intel workstation crown.

    • @dontmatter4423
      @dontmatter4423 Před 2 lety +6

      Don't know how lga should make them worried, but 3d cache still needs more work. They won't implement it on R7000

    • @beavatatlan
      @beavatatlan Před 2 lety +16

      Honestly, lga1700 motherboards are ridicolously expensive when compared to AM4, especally at the lower end. And I expect similar pricing for AM5 boards, because of PCIE gen5 and DDR5 as well as being the hot new shit.
      Soooo Ryzen might be a king in performance, but could lose on the value front.

  • @emmamitchell1582
    @emmamitchell1582 Před 2 lety +27

    I would be interested in seeing a direct die vapor chamber like in some GPUs and Laptops as an IHS. That would be a lot more thermally conductive than a pure metal IHS and spread the heat even better over the whole area of the IHS.

    • @D3nn1s
      @D3nn1s Před 2 lety

      Actually im not sure it would be. Vapor chambers are used for long distance heat transfere like a laptop or aircooler. Pretty sure when you only need a mm or so that wouldnt even be possible that thin. Also youd transfere the heat from metal to vapor to metal again which should be worse than 1mm of copper i suppose. But im no expert just following my brains logic so pls correct me if theres an expert somewhere here

    • @emmamitchell1582
      @emmamitchell1582 Před 2 lety +8

      @@D3nn1s My feeling is that it may still be beneficial, especially as the whole area of the IHS will be more evenly used, instead of the heat being concentrated where the die is.
      But this discussion is what would make the experiment interesting! Please Alex/Linus!

    • @faranocks
      @faranocks Před 2 lety +1

      @@emmamitchell1582 Dennis is right here, heat pipes work well over several cm plus. Thinner than 3mm and straight copper is objectively better.

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Před 2 lety

      @@D3nn1s
      Ehhhh heat pipes are used for long distance heat transfers
      Vapor chambers are used for large area heat transfer

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Před 2 lety

      Or is it?
      Vapor chamber is when you want to transfer heat across a huge surface area

  • @dijanimations
    @dijanimations Před 2 lety +2

    9:20 killed that smurf, lmao

  • @unkn0wn.kn1ght
    @unkn0wn.kn1ght Před rokem

    I challenge you to try combining that Copper IHS with CPU Contact Frame and Diamond infuse Thermal Paste

  • @dernthehermit3541
    @dernthehermit3541 Před 2 lety +35

    At 1:03 is one of the best "Holy crap!"s that Linus has ever exclaimed, hope the editors are clipping it for use in asides in other videos.

  • @TheHammerkeg
    @TheHammerkeg Před 2 lety +13

    I put one of these on a 8700K a few years back, dropped temps by about 15C at idle, and allowed me to push it to 5.2GHz, which was pretty fast at the time.

  • @ActuallyDarcy
    @ActuallyDarcy Před 2 lety +12

    It'd be pretty crazy to see some emulation with this CPU

    • @FragTix
      @FragTix Před 2 lety

      Yeh

    • @bobtheblob2770
      @bobtheblob2770 Před rokem

      technically any interpreted programming language is emulation

  • @BassBoostedDuck
    @BassBoostedDuck Před 2 lety +1

    another cpu stress test you can run is star citizen, almost all of it is cpu bound right now. running a stock ryzen 5 3600xt with a 3070ti (yes i know that card is over kill when paired with my cpu... , i do game dev ok ...) but i run arround 40 fps in space and arround 30 when in a city.

  • @ruikazane5123
    @ruikazane5123 Před 2 lety +18

    "Intel getting close to the sun"
    If you had a Pentium 4 PresHot that lives at over 60 degrees (C) idle and over 90 degrees (C) at full send without airconditioning on stock clock, that's nothing new
    Would be fun to see an actual car racing endurance radiator on that thing with the baddest fan you could slap on...that gotta be worth a few more degrees, together with a larger water block for enlarged fittings and better flow...don't forget an electric water pump

    • @AmaroqStarwind
      @AmaroqStarwind Před 2 lety +3

      And a peltier cooler module.
      And an air conditioner to blow sub-ambient air through that radiator.
      And a blowiematron.

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Před 2 lety

      And ihs made of diamond

    • @jstar2235
      @jstar2235 Před 2 lety +1

      A Pentium 4 at 90c would've long destroyed itself. I'd know, had one of my chips die on me before the age of thermal throttling.

    • @ruikazane5123
      @ruikazane5123 Před 2 lety

      @@jstar2235 Is that also a Prescott core? The earlier Northwood cores are the better options for OC but suffer from sudden death. We didn't overclock my rig, and runs on the stock cooler. It held all that hotness for over 10 years until it died on a black screen (no POST no boot)
      My 2006 VAIO restoration unit with a Core Duo would throttle to 50% at 98 degrees C so that would still be over 90 degrees...

    • @jstar2235
      @jstar2235 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ruikazane5123 It was a prescott. That cursed thing made me forever wary of CPU temps, so now I just go with a big fat noctua cooler for every build.

  • @ParadoxalDream
    @ParadoxalDream Před 2 lety +18

    6:01 It's these sorts of things that make you realize Linus is really savvy when it comes to tech, but he can be truly clueless when it comes to "normal" stuff lmao As if it's the first time in his life he has to deal with a tape dispenser...

    • @Dreddy72
      @Dreddy72 Před 2 lety +1

      to be fair, that is a crappy tapegun design to use. esspecially when typical use and abuse happens to break off the top flap and the whole gun is unusable now.

    • @ParadoxalDream
      @ParadoxalDream Před 2 lety +3

      @@Dreddy72 As someone who has to send packages on an almost daily basis, this Staple's tapegun is fine and virtually impossible to break by accident, you'd need to try and break it on purpose. And I'm no gentleman when it comes to taping packages...

  • @mrWand.
    @mrWand. Před 2 lety +1

    Alex:Your house might burn down if you have this computer.
    Linus:BUT LOOK AT THESE *REFLECTIONS*

  • @RealCraftspirit
    @RealCraftspirit Před rokem

    2:52 Hey Linux, CNC machinist here !
    The reason why a good surface finish like this costs alot is because we need specialised carbide inserts in the facing tools and alot of machining time to get such a finish. Specialised inserts for insane finishing capabilities are more expensive, as well as the tools to wield them. So its not really a question of a better machine or not, but more like better tools and more work time, therefore the value is higher.

  • @XantheFIN
    @XantheFIN Před 2 lety +22

    That intel IHS i would say is MORE likely pressed into shape in most part instead of CNC machined. As its sooo much cheaper.

    • @ruikazane5123
      @ruikazane5123 Před 2 lety +2

      More like cast "with recycled materials"

    • @faranocks
      @faranocks Před 2 lety +3

      These are usually stamped, with the die-facing side machined for higher degree of flatness.

    • @TheCampi86
      @TheCampi86 Před 2 lety

      You are right, it is stamped, that is the reason why every machined IHS is better than the original one.

    • @faranocks
      @faranocks Před 2 lety

      ​@@TheCampi86 Kinda. There are ways to flatten stamped metals, intel just chooses not to due to the cost of doing so. At scale it wouldn't even be particularly expensive. Honestly I don't know why AMD or Intel doesn't spend a bit more money on the highest end (5900x, 5950x, 12700k, 12900k) replacing the normal stamped IHS with proper machined (or stamped then machined is most likely)/lapped ones. Would cost them probably less than $15 per IHS, and would improve performance by a marginal, but measurable amount.

  • @TheMC1X
    @TheMC1X Před 2 lety +4

    10:45 DAMN! It sounded like a dog barkimg

  • @freemaysin5088
    @freemaysin5088 Před 2 lety

    I used copper shims to repaste my Alienware M15 R5. Ryzen 9 5900hx/3070 130w
    I used 20mm x .3mm for the GPU, and 15mm x .5mm for CPU.
    I have not seen the CPU over 83 since, and GPU hasn't been over 79. Those highest temps were during a back to back Time Spy/ Afterburner overclock session.
    11,091 time spy score with it. This is my first experience with copper shimming. I used to have a computer that instantly throttled during anything more than web browsing.

  • @ESCOTCH
    @ESCOTCH Před 2 lety

    i wish you guys would have a solidworks single core stress test on 250meg file loads for some real world performance indications.. not render so much, but single thread pressure on the cpu, which is primarily large model loading. at work, this can typically be a 15-20 minute load...

  • @Remmerboy
    @Remmerboy Před 2 lety +5

    Here's an idea for cooling experiment.
    Lap that IHS and a cooler for a perfect flatness on both surfaces to see if you don't need thermal paste. You could also try to attach the cooler to the ihs in vacuum to make a cold weld contact.

  • @TobiasDettinger
    @TobiasDettinger Před 2 lety +15

    i think a more 'accurate and scienfitic' method would be like der8auer did - measuring the average thickness of the thing with a micrometer and evaluate a standard deviation. Just measure like 20-50 spots on the heat spreader and compare the standard deviation to the copper one.

  • @MrHakisak
    @MrHakisak Před 2 lety

    I did this to my 12900k a month ago. rockitcool didn't ship it with the liquid-silver to remove the old TIM so I had to use a razor blade. I ran tests before and after and got 10c drop in temperature (difference over ambient temp), also all the cores were %16 closer in temperature to each other then before. Der8auer is rumored to come out with a direct-die frame soon, so can't wait to try that out.

    • @celestebarrentine4158
      @celestebarrentine4158 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching 🤗
      Send a direct message right away,I have something for you.🔝🔝🔝

  • @HIghlordBalkan
    @HIghlordBalkan Před 2 lety +14

    The fact that even with a high-end cooling setup and exotic liquid to boot is STILL not enough to realistically keep that chip under wraps only further proves to me that Intel still has a long way to go if they want to properly catch up to AMD. Yeah, that thing is faster than my 5950X. But, I can still get reasonably close to it in performance all the while drawing significantly less power from the socket and putting out far less heat. I can run my chip on an NH-D15 comfortably all day long w/PBO enabled. I can't run that 12900KS let alone the 12900K on one out of the box without severe thermal throttling. That's just ridiculous.

    • @ValentineC137
      @ValentineC137 Před 2 lety +2

      NH-D15 is what I was/am planning to get for my 5950 but my temporary NH-U12 is keeping it surprisingly cool.
      The fact that I can run PBO and do a full 4K cpu video exporting while not seeing 90*C made the U12 alot less temporary than I was expecting

    • @1337dingus
      @1337dingus Před rokem +1

      @@ValentineC137 Same on a be quiet Dark Rock 4 with a 200w PBO 5950X, it's simply incredible how efficient modern AMD CPUs are. Draws the same as a significantly slower R7 2700X, and I've measured in some workloads 3x better performance

  • @raspberry1440kb
    @raspberry1440kb Před 2 lety +31

    Windows 11 is actually the ideal version of Windows for the CPU since its kernel actually knows how to properly handle the efficiency cores.

    • @manuelkimothy6998
      @manuelkimothy6998 Před 2 lety +7

      Nice try, microsoft

    • @raspberry1440kb
      @raspberry1440kb Před 2 lety +8

      @@manuelkimothy6998 I'm just saying the truth about the difference between Windows 10's and Windows 11's versions of the NT kernel.

    • @AndreiTache
      @AndreiTache Před 2 lety +10

      Nothing you say will make me switch from running XP!

    • @senti2175
      @senti2175 Před 2 lety +4

      Windows 11 is shit and will remain shit throughout its life cycle. Windows 12 will be built on windows 11 with all bugs cleared out and new futures polished. It happens every cycle.

    • @arnox4554
      @arnox4554 Před 2 lety +1

      Maybe, but so does Linux. And honestly, I don't really care anyway. Fuck Windows 11. I'm not running it. And fuck 10 too for that matter, although that's not relevant at the moment.

  • @watercannonscollaboration2281

    The 12900ks and the 3090ti should be renamed the global warming combo

    • @kyleduddleston4123
      @kyleduddleston4123 Před 2 lety +2

      Trade a degree or so for the earth over the next hundred years for top teir gaming for life? Where do I sign up? Lol

  • @KarsonNow
    @KarsonNow Před 2 lety

    08:43 at this point I would polish this surface to get most clean, flat and shiny surface. Just because... You could produce content and have two tests - one with delivered part and one with some tuning. 🤷‍♂️

  • @glennquagmire3258
    @glennquagmire3258 Před 2 měsíci

    @3:19, They interpret they are interpreting the spread of the thermal compound on the heat sink incorrectly. It actually was making better contact on the center leaving more thermal paste on the CPU and was less effective on the sides. JMO.

  • @MatrixGaimz
    @MatrixGaimz Před 2 lety +9

    I'd like to see a mid - high performance build with a focus on low electricity usage as electricity its getting expensive in some areas of the world

    • @Dorlan2001
      @Dorlan2001 Před 2 lety +1

      AMD is your friend on that regard

  • @broklond
    @broklond Před 2 lety +20

    First time I actually got really scared when Linus dropped something. That double-take was something else, man

  • @shabadabadoo4326
    @shabadabadoo4326 Před 2 lety

    Seeing Linus play with the FLIR, reminds me of our department crawfish boil, using our $20000 Search and rescue flir to check oil temps on the fish fryer.

  • @nekolivegaming
    @nekolivegaming Před 2 lety

    15:58, well good thing i redid my wireing to 2.5 mm2 and an 25 amp breaker XD, 230v btw

  • @davidpetry7853
    @davidpetry7853 Před 2 lety +25

    what would be the temperature from just delidding the CPU and putting liquid metal under the stock IHS? Would be nice to know for comparison

    • @StitchExperiment626
      @StitchExperiment626 Před 2 lety +1

      Not much. Der Bauer (der 8auer) already tested it on his channel some time ago ^^

    • @davidpetry7853
      @davidpetry7853 Před 2 lety

      @@StitchExperiment626 did He? I only found the Video where He killed his 12900k

    • @aurelienlux
      @aurelienlux Před 2 lety +1

      I'm also curious about how this aftermarket IHS performs compared to a lapped stock IHS

    • @alexanderm2702
      @alexanderm2702 Před 2 lety +1

      Since it's soldered I think it would be about the same, it's not like the older CPU's that used some cheap paste.
      I think part of the difference might be the thickness of the copper lid. I have one of those (no name brand) for X series and the lid is about 2mm thick, vs maybe 0.5mm stock. More thickness would allow the heat to spread out more better from the CPU die to the rest of the IHS.

  • @LaviArzi
    @LaviArzi Před 2 lety +8

    8:00 I want to die

  • @asumazilla
    @asumazilla Před 2 lety

    The more copper it is (impurities and oxygen) and the microstructure could be ways to improve the heat spreader. Could make it just thicker and bigger too?

  • @Steve_evets
    @Steve_evets Před 2 lety +1

    by the time i desolder the IHS, why not do direct die cooling?
    paying 80$ more for a special waterblock sounds way easier at that point