What is a Heatsink as Fast As Possible

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  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2024
  • I get asked all the time "what is a heatsink" and "what does it do?". This video is a little longer than usual but I felt like this topic needed some special TLC.
    Sponsor message: Try Hotspot Shield for FREE and get 20% off an Elite subscription with offer code LINUS. Go to bit.ly/HSShare
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @BrownJedi87
    @BrownJedi87 Před 2 lety +92

    I love how every time I have a question, Linus shows up with an answer even if it’s from 7 years ago.

  • @anubratakhan9115
    @anubratakhan9115 Před 10 lety +184

    That moment when Linus says "Speaking of......" and u know it's over... :P

  • @LightningSonic
    @LightningSonic Před 10 lety +38

    Linus, good job explaining what a heatsink is in an easy-to-understand way. I knew most of this already, but I was thinking wrong about what thermal paste does. I just thought it helps to conduct heat better, but didn't think about why it did this. I guess it makes sense that two metals almost never make 100% legit contact evenly.

  • @trippplefive
    @trippplefive Před 10 lety +92

    ah..the unibrow Linus, we meet again.

    • @oXObsidianXo
      @oXObsidianXo Před 10 lety +11

      Noo, he fell asleep on a caterpillar.

    • @RevolutionV12
      @RevolutionV12 Před 9 lety +3

      God damn it. A unibrow is when the space between the eyebrows has as much hair as the eyebrow area itself. I always see people calling a little bit hair a unibrow, but it is infact incorrect.

    • @eeee69
      @eeee69 Před 9 lety

      then what is the correct term?

    • @RevolutionV12
      @RevolutionV12 Před 9 lety +2

      Ka Jacob nothing, just a bit of extra hair. Unless its as thick as the actual eyebrow it cant be called a unibrow.

    • @eeee69
      @eeee69 Před 9 lety +2

      ok

  • @TheHerpieDerpies
    @TheHerpieDerpies Před 10 lety +58

    linus is like on every single techchannel on youtube

    • @SargeRho
      @SargeRho Před 10 lety +6

      TechQuickie, NCIX, LinusTechTips and LinusCatTips are the only ones I can think of.

    • @pixhodo
      @pixhodo Před 10 lety

      Sarge Rho Tech Of Tomorrow also =)

    • @SargeRho
      @SargeRho Před 10 lety

      I haven't seen him there yet, I kinda stopped following ToT tho.

    • @Graytoke
      @Graytoke Před 10 lety +2

      there are actually many many Linus's, the proper pluralisation being Linusi..that is how he is in so many places at one time NCIX has hangers full of backup Linus models to be deployed at a moments notice.

    • @Jirinoshi
      @Jirinoshi Před 10 lety +5

      Also MKBHD

  • @andrewweeks6407
    @andrewweeks6407 Před 10 lety +4

    This just reminds me of a conversation I overheard between a customer and colleague when I was working in best buy many many years ago.... The customer was trying to haggle the price down with the agent, even going so far as to say that if the heatsink was removed, would they be able to lower the cost by a few bucks. It makes me glad that you post these sorts of vids Linus, because sadly there are folks out there that simply don't get it.

  • @joeking5835
    @joeking5835 Před 10 lety +2

    I love your "as fast as possible" segments.I cant tell you how helpful they have been!Keep up the excellent work!

  • @goxcpre
    @goxcpre Před 10 lety +1

    Long time Linus subscriber, new Techquickie sub. Even though most of your other audience is more advanced than this stuff, these simple videos are appreciated! Keep up the good work!

  • @explosivedude8295
    @explosivedude8295 Před 8 lety +180

    *Instructions weren't clear. Cooled CPU to 5 milliKelvin. CPU went quantum and I can't differentiate output 0s and 1s anymore.*

  • @pangeltveit
    @pangeltveit Před 10 lety +45

    So thats why youtubers want us to type comments! They want their videos to be higher up on the searching ranks! Sneaky sneaky! :P

    • @imjonathan6745
      @imjonathan6745 Před 2 lety

      You really didn't know that? Are you proud that you discovered that common fact about this site?

  • @youspic
    @youspic Před 10 lety +1

    ive actually watched a dozen or more of your videos,
    great job man, thanks!!

  • @PedroCancel
    @PedroCancel Před 8 lety +1

    I like the fact that you went thru each type of heatsink and what to be aware of very informative thank you

  • @thejinchoi
    @thejinchoi Před 10 lety +3

    I just learned about heat sinks in my engineering class a few weeks ago! Thanks for this educational video Linus!

  • @WolvenSpectre
    @WolvenSpectre Před 10 lety +3

    Three things you might want to add
    1)You mention speed of airflow without mentioning volume of airflow and how faster active cooling doesn't always equal faster cooling airflow
    2)The blocking of cooling surface from dust et al lowers cooling and if it gets bad enough actually acts as an insulator to heat up what is being cooled.
    3)I think you should touch on Water Cooling/Remote Heatsinks since they are becoming so common with the sealed units.

  • @says_suhel
    @says_suhel Před 9 lety

    THANKS A LOT Linus, ur videos have cleared a lot of doubts about a lot of things.
    You ROCK!!!!

  • @BrickTamlandOfficial
    @BrickTamlandOfficial Před 10 lety +185

    a heatsink is a piece of metal. the end

    • @farouq1983
      @farouq1983 Před 10 lety +9

      I've heard you love lamp!

    • @farouq1983
      @farouq1983 Před 10 lety +6

      Brick Tamland I believe carpet is in the game now? :D

    • @BrickTamlandOfficial
      @BrickTamlandOfficial Před 10 lety +8

      Farouq Obaidi only if she matches the drapes

  • @EmmaCross94
    @EmmaCross94 Před 10 lety +132

    Could you do an AFAP about power, more specifically voltage and watts? You seem to know a bit about that.

    • @LukePTBA
      @LukePTBA Před 10 lety +6

      EmmaCross94 voltage(volts) = current(amps/ampere) X resistance(ohms)
      wattage(watts/power) = voltage X current
      current = voltage divided by resistance
      resistance = voltage divided by current.
      Current is known as electrical potential, whilst voltage and can be loosely termed as 'electrical pressure.' ie: the voltage 'pushes' the current from the source (battery/outlet/distribution grid) to the appliance.
      If you need more explaining just google "ohm's law."
      Source: I'm a sparky :D

    • @LapXGaming
      @LapXGaming Před 10 lety +4

      You are supposed to learn that in high school...

    • @LukePTBA
      @LukePTBA Před 10 lety +3

      LapXGaming Depends on what subjects you do.
      I didn't do physics

    • @EmmaCross94
      @EmmaCross94 Před 10 lety +6

      LapXGaming Welcome to Australia! :P

    • @frollard
      @frollard Před 10 lety +1

      *****
      One thing I'd like to see is power factor explained in simple terms (I understand it but I bet a lot of people don't) - the weird crap that happens when you pull current constantly from an AC source, but AC has zero voltage during parts of the cycle and that voltage makes it really hard to constantly draw current.

  • @CrazyFunnyWeirdScaryStories

    soo ehh go to town!! lol love your videos dude! Such clear concise information, you make the topics fun and easy to listen to!

  • @Amnevriste
    @Amnevriste Před 10 lety

    This is a very good presentation, clear and simple. Good job Linus.

  • @truelazerlight
    @truelazerlight Před 10 lety +86

    You forgot a very important way of improving a heat sink's performance: keeping it dust-free.

    • @TimBrandtCorstius
      @TimBrandtCorstius Před 10 lety +2

      Yah how long does it take for the fans to really lose performance on dust? Because in my house there is a 2.5 year old laptop without ever cleaning the fans ever (btw the pc is still running decent speed)

    • @truelazerlight
      @truelazerlight Před 9 lety +7

      Tim Brandt Corstius
      Your point being? Are you really going to argue that a heat sink's cooling fins being clogged with dust and grime isn't going to have an impact on the heat sink's performance?

    • @TimBrandtCorstius
      @TimBrandtCorstius Před 9 lety +4

      truelazerlight No I only want to know how many times a year you need to clean it

    • @truelazerlight
      @truelazerlight Před 9 lety +2

      Tim Brandt Corstius
      Depends on where you live. Some areas have way more problems with dust. A heat sink works because the air that flows through the fins picks up heat and takes it away from the heat sink. If the fins are clogged, air can't flow through the heat sink as well resulting in lower heat sink performance. Ergo: hour heat sink can never be too clean.

    • @TimBrandtCorstius
      @TimBrandtCorstius Před 9 lety

      truelazerlight Holland (wet country most of the time)

  • @SirDizel
    @SirDizel Před 10 lety +4

    good video, even tho i know all that stuff you talk about i still enjoy watching the videos ;]

  • @rebornlol
    @rebornlol Před 10 lety

    Love these videos Linus. Thanks

  • @NOTHREATTECH
    @NOTHREATTECH Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for your wonderful content! It is clearer and you are more engaging than any other presenter I have researched. My instructor at San Diego City College has a ton of your content as part of our instruction resources, gratefully.

  • @SupahCebrailShow9540
    @SupahCebrailShow9540 Před 8 lety +11

    About those materials.
    I'm not a genius, just got this info from my friends, so please take this with a grain of salt.
    Copper is great at conducting heat, but not great at removing heat from itself. (i.e: cooling down)
    Aluminium is more or less the opposite, being worse at conducting heat, but very good at removing heat from itself.
    This is the reason why heatpipes are copper, they are there to remove heat from the nearby component, but after the heat is removed from said component, there's not a big rush to move the heat to the attached heatsink, which is aluminium because it can move heat to the surrounding air much faster.

    • @nuddin99
      @nuddin99 Před 8 lety +1

      +Sypadizre This comment needs more upvotes!

    • @lokegustafsson247
      @lokegustafsson247 Před 8 lety

      Actually is copper better then aluminum when it comes to transfering heat. Dissapating is about the same and we have aluminum heatsink because it is cheaper

    • @SupahCebrailShow9540
      @SupahCebrailShow9540 Před 8 lety +2

      +Loke Gustafsson I'm quite sure aluminium is better at sweating off heat than copper.

    • @lokegustafsson247
      @lokegustafsson247 Před 8 lety +1

      www.overclockers.com/forums/showthread.php/187162-Does-aluminum-dissipate-heat-better-than-copper - Just read what the experts are saying, I am just some random guy with a keyboard.

  • @Johhnyp10
    @Johhnyp10 Před 9 lety +312

    Why even bother buying heatsinks, just place ice cubes on the cpu and your good to go.

  • @osamaajarmeh7313
    @osamaajarmeh7313 Před 10 lety +1

    good work linus this video is a great idea

  • @dylanbenz7724
    @dylanbenz7724 Před 7 lety +1

    this channel teaches me something new every time I watch

  • @rehanchougle18
    @rehanchougle18 Před 8 lety +43

    Linus u have made understanding tech so simple :)

  • @dylanwebber763
    @dylanwebber763 Před 4 lety +3

    Linus! Bring back the unibrow bro!

  • @RBASB10
    @RBASB10 Před rokem

    I can’t believe I’ve only just watched this video. Thank you. Extremely direct and informative.

  • @burdettboy213
    @burdettboy213 Před 10 lety

    You should do more of these videos. You teach very well and you will make it very easy for people to learn about pc components. Ty for the awesome video

  • @dr4aces
    @dr4aces Před 10 lety

    Wow - a lot of detail! Very interesting.

  • @Sinkatze
    @Sinkatze Před 10 lety +5

    Ok this will improve your search rankings

  • @seireiart
    @seireiart Před 6 lety +32

    Linus : "Speaking of..."
    Me : Ok, I'm done, see ya...

  • @mitchbossart4352
    @mitchbossart4352 Před 4 lety +1

    Very helpful and clearly stated. Thank you!

  • @TheGarrison89
    @TheGarrison89 Před 6 lety

    This was a really good overview of what a heatsink is!

  • @dacasman
    @dacasman Před 10 lety +46

    Surprised he didn't talk about liquid cooling. but I guess that's not a "heatsink"

    • @mohda5418
      @mohda5418 Před 10 lety

      in one way or another they are not. but i guess they already talked a bit about water cooling in the h110 but they still deserve a more in depth look. maybe a custom water cooling tech quickie

    • @LukePTBA
      @LukePTBA Před 10 lety +15

      That's exactly what a radiator is...
      Water cooling still is technically air cooled.

    • @boywhogames
      @boywhogames Před 10 lety

      Heatsinks don't have to be air cooled. They just have to dissipate heat.

    • @domantasl
      @domantasl Před 10 lety

      boywhogames Heatsinks don't have to be [actively] air cooled.
      There, I fixed it for ya :) The heatsink is surrounded by and dissipate heat into the air and thus are air cooled.

    • @skifree0
      @skifree0 Před 10 lety

      Bla Blurybla By definition, a heat sink doesn't have to be air cooled. The definition of a heat sink, is a heat exchange device to cool by dissipating heat into a medium. its just so happens, that 99.9% of all people use air as the medium. but water can still be used (just stick open end of the sink into a large body of water like a lake. On a slightly more practical note, you heat sinks don't use air if they are oil immersion pcs :)

  • @jacoblong4086
    @jacoblong4086 Před 10 lety +8

    How in the hell am I supposed to tell you what I didn't learn???? Think about that for a moment.

  • @HKS-Digital
    @HKS-Digital Před 10 lety

    Omg I have been wondering what a heatsink for years now. Thank you so much for this video.

  • @pspvita99
    @pspvita99 Před 10 lety

    Thanks for putting the adds at the end of the video so we dont have to watch them even though you can skip through them regardless. Puting them at the end makes everyone happy. You get paid and we dont have to watch them as soon as we see the add pop up we know the videos over. Good video as usual.

  • @zackpinkman4240
    @zackpinkman4240 Před 8 lety +23

    Question: Should fan suck hot air from the heatsink or blow cold air into a heat sink?

    • @thomasshepherd3413
      @thomasshepherd3413 Před 8 lety +15

      +Zvone_ Blow cold air into it. The hot air isn't the issue, the temperature of the heat sink is. So blowing cold air onto in helps more than taking the slightly-higher-in-temperature-air around it out.

    • @zackpinkman4240
      @zackpinkman4240 Před 8 lety +3

      Thomas Shepherd thank you

    • @polpottopg
      @polpottopg Před 8 lety +1

      +Thomas Shepherd Th&$@$nk you buddy

    • @VeselinMarkovic
      @VeselinMarkovic Před 8 lety +2

      It's completely the same.

    • @faudanke4459
      @faudanke4459 Před 8 lety +1

      +Thomas Shepherd The XBOX 360 and One has heatsinks and fans... But the heatsinks fans on the CPU is sucking air not blowing air into it... Does it help colling or not than a PC????

  • @ShiroKage009
    @ShiroKage009 Před 10 lety +4

    The problem with Arctic Silver is that it takes eons until it cures. For the first many hours of operation the temps are not pretty, but they get much, much better over time.
    Designated curing time is something like 200 hours with multiple cycles ...

    • @DLTX1007
      @DLTX1007 Před 10 lety +2

      Yeah many people still think AS5 is good. It was good BACK THEN. Not anymore. The cheap top performer these days is Prolimatech PK1

    • @Unconditionaldanger
      @Unconditionaldanger Před 10 lety

      Konoe Eita +1 for prolimatech! Nice stuff

    • @Turskaify
      @Turskaify Před 10 lety

      also hardening the smallest heatspreaders on my GPU cooler took ages (I mean ages, instead of a regular 30mins to an hour, they took 6 hours to harden) on arctic silver

  • @xtinmancamx
    @xtinmancamx Před 10 lety +1

    love the honesty at the end about search rankings. comment just for that.

  • @AMindGame
    @AMindGame Před 10 lety

    very complete guide thanks linus!

  • @letsgoiowa
    @letsgoiowa Před 10 lety +4

    Stock coolers will be just fine for most people, but I run an aftermarket cooler on my i3 2120 because it gets hot during the summer (70C+).

    • @Brownboy42069
      @Brownboy42069 Před 10 lety

      Yikes! Where do you live that your ambients affect the CPU that much??

    • @letsgoiowa
      @letsgoiowa Před 10 lety

      See username, but it's because of where I had to stuff the tower (in the corner so airflow sucks). It's not a problem during the winter with temps like 20C right now.

    • @Brownboy42069
      @Brownboy42069 Před 10 lety

      Derp! Surprised I missed that... I live just over the river in Omaha! It does get pretty toasty in these parts but I've never had an issue with overheating on the i3-4130 HTPC build I have tucked away into a TV stand.

    • @JaconSamsta
      @JaconSamsta Před 10 lety

      Wouldn't go with an FX chip with the stock cooler.
      Just got a 8150 in my brothers build and I had to clock it down to 2.5 Ghz to get resonable sound levels.
      As for Intel, you can usualy get away with the stock cooler on anything 4770 and below (see brix pro) and I think that alone is woth spending the small premium.

    • @letsgoiowa
      @letsgoiowa Před 10 lety

      TheBernhard100 I believe that. I've only seen Intel stock fans, because the AMD build I did for a friend was using an aftermarket cooler because he wanted to OC heavily.

  • @thedeenz
    @thedeenz Před 10 lety +64

    Linus has an unibrow?

  • @TheFishingHutt
    @TheFishingHutt Před 10 lety

    Great Video Linus! I didn't Learn Much, But it was very well put together

  • @pdowner1
    @pdowner1 Před 8 lety

    Excellent explanation and I;m sure it couldnt have been done faster. lol. Good job. I had to rewind a couple of times but fantastic.

  • @TheAngelBacon
    @TheAngelBacon Před 10 lety +11

    I didn't learn why the sun is so angry at me. I just wanna admire it's beauty but it just burns me at every chance.

    • @GamingTaylor
      @GamingTaylor Před 10 lety +5

      You may want to apply heatsinks all over your body.

    • @TheAngelBacon
      @TheAngelBacon Před 10 lety +1

      ***** are you coming onto me?

    • @TheAngelBacon
      @TheAngelBacon Před 10 lety

      ***** I fucking love you right now xD

  • @Wolfstanus
    @Wolfstanus Před 10 lety +5

    Ask Garus Vakarien about his heatsink

    • @Wolfstanus
      @Wolfstanus Před 10 lety

      MrTingBash He's just calibrating it for the right time to pop the heatsink.

  • @tooley6969
    @tooley6969 Před 7 lety

    thank you for this it really helped me to understand the working principal of the component

  • @jonatannoda1492
    @jonatannoda1492 Před 5 lety

    Hey I got the message, all what you said was very important keep going, I found all you were teaching very usefull and it help me remember what I learned. Thanks

  • @roge0
    @roge0 Před 10 lety +5

    What about waterblocks?

    • @NizzyTV
      @NizzyTV Před 10 lety +3

      not a "heatsink" but it uses one.

    • @roge0
      @roge0 Před 10 lety +7

      NizzyTV
      Technically heatsinks are just something used to exchange heat, which a waterblock does.

    • @OneStepForwardOneStepForward
      @OneStepForwardOneStepForward Před 10 lety +2

      RogueCoder Technically Technically... i'm sick of that word

    • @MegaBoooooooooooooob
      @MegaBoooooooooooooob Před 10 lety +2

      OneStepForward Technically is sick of you too

    • @ShiroKage009
      @ShiroKage009 Před 10 lety +2

      RogueCoder
      The heat sink in a water cooling system is the radiator, not the block. The block and water act as the copper mount and heat pipe whereas the rad is the heat sink.

  • @james64468
    @james64468 Před 10 lety +4

    All I been using is stock cooler. That might have to change.

    • @XPsilocybinDream
      @XPsilocybinDream Před 10 lety +1

      unless your over clocking a stock is just fine

    • @XPsilocybinDream
      @XPsilocybinDream Před 10 lety

      wont make hardly any difference running stock speeds, slightly cooler, now if your going to overclock alot yeah of course buy one.I use the coolermaster hyper n520 cause my cores are overclocked by 700 mhz.Buying a aftermarket cooler like mine but running stock clocks your just wasting money.Also you need a good sized ATX case to fit after market heat piped coolers.They guy says their easy to install but its not just a open the case and quickly replace. you have to completely take out the motherboard, flip it upside down undo every bracket that was holding the other heat sink holder in, then if your by yourself you have to find the correct bracket included in the package carefully screw it in with the motherboard flipped up with pretty much 1 hand while holding the heatsink with the other hand. and hopefully it clears your ram and your video card.Its not like unclip one and clip the other one in like stock coolers are.Its a full installation

    • @XPsilocybinDream
      @XPsilocybinDream Před 10 lety

      ***** kinda missed my point if your talking to me. I build computers and do this all the time and liquid systems.I use the phenom ii x6 1100t and my temps are close to yours except my max temps are 39C but idle is identical. thats at 4.0ghz any higher and its not stable even with higher voltages. stock mine is 3.3ghz

  • @mscir
    @mscir Před 5 lety

    Nice job summarizing a lot of material in a short amount of time.

  • @gogginz
    @gogginz Před 10 lety

    How can someone dislike this,you have told us everything we need to know (really fast) :D

  • @PJemus
    @PJemus Před 9 lety +4

    rankings

  • @y2j1490yahoo
    @y2j1490yahoo Před 10 lety +4

    A comma in the title would have been helpful.

  • @bhatiaalloyforgings4208

    Insightful. Thanks for Sharing

  • @SohilShah_Melodyman
    @SohilShah_Melodyman Před 7 lety

    Well explained......thanks a lot!

  • @PJemus
    @PJemus Před 9 lety +4

    increasing

  • @malmalbaby2
    @malmalbaby2 Před 3 lety +4

    The ps5 heat sink is big asf

  • @westsnest2273
    @westsnest2273 Před 5 lety

    These are the best videos :D

  • @zekeski
    @zekeski Před 10 lety

    nice info.. very useful!!!

  • @ZaeBae22
    @ZaeBae22 Před 10 lety +13

    Eh I'm fine with water cooling + 5 fans

    • @BoredErica
      @BoredErica Před 10 lety +14

      ...Ok?

    • @ZaeBae22
      @ZaeBae22 Před 10 lety

      Yigi Liu yeah haha but i dont really notice it much because im beside a fridge and a furnace (basement)

    • @puppetmassster
      @puppetmassster Před 10 lety

      Yigi Liu Good PC fans are not loud at all. Especially larger fans that can move more air at lower RPMs.

    • @solarisfire
      @solarisfire Před 10 lety

      Ummm, seeing at the water in the loop is basically the sink, and the fins on your radiator serve the same purpose as the fins on a heatsink... You're basically using a more complex heatsink...

  • @Max-mh9nk
    @Max-mh9nk Před 10 lety +4

    pause at 2:15

  • @MrKylePopovich
    @MrKylePopovich Před 10 lety +3

    Thanks Linus!

  • @grmancool
    @grmancool Před 10 lety

    I love this series...

  • @PJemus
    @PJemus Před 9 lety +5

    just

  • @LarsJ1977
    @LarsJ1977 Před 10 lety +4

    +search rankings

  • @DavidRynda
    @DavidRynda Před 10 lety +1

    Great video! A video on the ins and outs of water cooling would be interesting. Including home made set ups.

  • @HitanshuSahu
    @HitanshuSahu Před 10 lety

    Thanks Linus Your thoughts Light up my Mind :)

  • @RaaynML
    @RaaynML Před 10 lety +2

    *guys*
    *_wrong channel_*

  • @PJemus
    @PJemus Před 9 lety +4

    mind

  • @masterevan686
    @masterevan686 Před 6 lety

    Great - very helpful!

  • @PJemus
    @PJemus Před 9 lety +4

    dont

  • @PJemus
    @PJemus Před 9 lety +4

    me

  • @mathewmho
    @mathewmho Před 9 lety

    Great video.

  • @maxter900
    @maxter900 Před 3 lety

    Loving this in 2020!

  • @lloydchambers5913
    @lloydchambers5913 Před 8 lety

    Linus I LEARN EVERYTIME WATCH 1 OF YOUR VIDEOS ALWAYS CLEAR AND HELPFUL BUT THE EXTRA INFO YOU TOSS IN HELPS SO MUCH SUCKS BEING A NEWBIE BUT DAM GLAD I FOUND YOU.ROCK ON BROTHER shoot sorry 4 yelling

  • @zawardcorporation6294
    @zawardcorporation6294 Před 8 lety

    Good job!

  • @pelleg59
    @pelleg59 Před 10 lety

    Very good explanation for those who do not know how it works, grateful that you think of us
    sorry if my english is not so good hope you understand anyway
    / Pelle

  • @BigZ-il5hg
    @BigZ-il5hg Před 9 lety

    you are awesome i learnt a lot from u

  • @heribertogomez5191
    @heribertogomez5191 Před 10 lety

    great video

  • @paddaarshdeep
    @paddaarshdeep Před 10 lety +1

    Yay! I am helping Linus's research ranking

  • @MultiplexZYURANGER
    @MultiplexZYURANGER Před 10 lety

    this vid helped alot

  • @saviorsimon2729
    @saviorsimon2729 Před 10 lety

    So, when will there be a water block video? Will there be a comparison between water vs air cooling? These are things that seem to be look over many times but are VERY important. I just don't know enough. Please do videos on them.

  • @sabuein
    @sabuein Před 3 lety

    Thank you, brother.

  • @Music42Ever
    @Music42Ever Před 10 lety

    nice segue to your sponsor message :P

  • @justinmosher2966
    @justinmosher2966 Před 10 lety +1

    I was wondering if you could do a As Fast As Possible on water cooling on graphics cards and what kinds there are and what are the ups and downs of all the differences. Thanks Linus and Slick for all the help :)

  • @sharifsircar
    @sharifsircar Před 10 lety

    great video as always

  • @jonahw1759
    @jonahw1759 Před 7 lety

    personally what i think helps is taking out a front cover panel and getting a cross breeze in there, ps have a back fan as the item pushing in to stop dust from going in

  • @Ben_D.
    @Ben_D. Před 10 lety

    awesome. thanks man

  • @theamazeable8044
    @theamazeable8044 Před 7 lety

    thanks fr the video

  • @Eton1102
    @Eton1102 Před 10 lety

    Linus and all in the comments do you know a great CPU heatsinks for an I7-4770K because I'm looking for an upgrade and i need some advice(Currently using the base intel heatsink).

  • @jessemna42
    @jessemna42 Před 10 lety

    Yay Linus!

  • @gillss
    @gillss Před 10 lety

    Maybe you guys can make a video for New Computer Build Check List as Fast as Possible.
    Listing things like fan converters/extensions/splitters for cases without fan controllers/short cords/not enough motherboard controllers.
    Or where and how to check compatibility for all your parts, and whatever else needs to be crammed in to know what to do.
    Maybe even have links to your other videos when appropriate.

  • @zanuarrosyidi4034
    @zanuarrosyidi4034 Před 5 lety

    Hello there i have a question for you. I have little problem with car led headlight they aren't long lasting. And produce much heat in the body, even they has heatsink + fan. Can you help me tips for reduce the heat? Thx

  • @napoleon950
    @napoleon950 Před 10 lety

    what are good thermal pasts? I am going to buy a new cpu cooler. (from intel standard heatsink upgrading) but I want the better pasts.

  • @TheFlash9333
    @TheFlash9333 Před 10 lety

    Linus, what font do you use?