They'll put whatever you like as coolant.Do you deliver this, dry ice, in your liquid series or is it something I have to do myself ?
I prefer @SpyderTracks answerView attachment 30997
To the OP, dry ice cooling wouldn’t be an option you could order from PCS and would likely kill a system dead. If it didn’t, it would be exorbitantly expensive and impractical to maintain.
‘PC Specialist and Heinz accept no responsibility if your system is damaged and your warranty will be void’I prefer @SpyderTracks answer
If it gets too cool just add some certain peanuts to the mix............‘PC Specialist and Heinz accept no responsibility if your system is damaged and your warranty will be void’
Do you fry your bacon on the intel cpu ? 😇
Not sure DRY RICE is the best medium for cooling thoughim also waiting for 4th january and AM5, will order on that day it comes out, if its 4th or 6th
time will tell if prices on Zen 3 drops then Ill overclock a R9 3950 to its max, maybe dry rice cooling too... looking forward to AMD`s new platform.
We also get PCIe 5.0 and DDR5 with that new socket
Where is this dry ice idea coming from? You realise dry ice is a gas? This is the second time you've bought it up, first time I assumed you were joking but now not so sure.im also waiting for 4th january and AM5, will order on that day it comes out, if its 4th or 6th
time will tell if prices on Zen 3 drops then Ill overclock a R9 3950 to its max, maybe dry rice cooling too... looking forward to AMD`s new platform.
We also get PCIe 5.0 and DDR5 with that new socket
Well you learn somthing new everyday.Dry ice is just solid Carbon Dioxide. As it warms it will evaporate and become a gas. You would then need a solution to create or supply more. CO2 is heavier than air and toxic in high concentrations. You can also get serious cold burns if you handle it incorrectly. Things will get very wet, as all the moisture in the air will freeze and create a hard coating of ice, which will make everything wet when it melts.
The ‘smoke’ seen from dry ice at concerts is effectively fog caused by moisture being condensed by the very cold CO2 sublimating. Any really cold fluid can cause a lot of ice. The pipe work and valves on LNG / LPG carriers gets quite a thick coating of hard white ice when loading / unloading, even in the Middle East, due to airborne moisture freezing.Well you learn somthing new everyday.