in this video I conduct a lot of experiments on computer hardware, in particular on old intel cpu. for example, I heat them up with a Gas Torch, scalp the processor with solder and much more
Пікірлер: 908
@santiagobarrera23878 ай бұрын
Those capacitors are not only filtering, but they have a special purpose. If there's a sudden increase in power consumption (can be going from idle to a cpu stress test) the motherboard will not be able to increase the power on time (and the physical distance between the VRMs and the CPU cores matters), so those capacitors act like batteries, which are phisically near to the cores, so that they can cover that power increase until the motherboard power arrives
@Lord_common_sense8 ай бұрын
Rip capazitors
@keicola468 ай бұрын
Thanks!!
@Mr_Ths8 ай бұрын
no shit sherlock
@dan_loup8 ай бұрын
It's all fine and dandy until you try to boot crysis
@thatonekid2208 ай бұрын
so what might happen if you suddenly have a spike in cpu usage without these capacitors? would it blow up? just stop working? Im very curious to know if this would fail, and HOW it would fail.
@thereallettuceweabois59188 ай бұрын
this is terrifying to watch, i love it
@soundspark8 ай бұрын
They're Celerons. You know, the kind of CPU you get as a cereal box prize.
@PBST_RAIDZ8 ай бұрын
@@soundspark yeah it still hurts to watch though
@SidTheGeek5 ай бұрын
Seems like a video that I had been waiting for since I was born 😂
@TheNuttGuy8 күн бұрын
Good for them. I hate them.
@prakhars9628 ай бұрын
Dude this is CPU abuse.
@Trinitrophenylmethylnitramines8 ай бұрын
We need a CPU Protection Service
@Nebby_Webby7 ай бұрын
@@TrinitrophenylmethylnitraminesCPS?
@Tmtrnr4 ай бұрын
CPUPS@@Nebby_Webby
@Cuaks7784 ай бұрын
Never found CPU social justice warrior until now 😂
@MrPoggerArmy3 ай бұрын
ICPS:-international CPU protection service
@jameshowell12148 ай бұрын
The caps are there to provide extra power if there is a sudden load increase
@CashewBestofNuts8 ай бұрын
Obviously the translator didn't fully convey how intelligent or lack of in this individual. I don't see why this comment isn't higher up, had to dig for it since I knew it was here.
@level84738 ай бұрын
@@CashewBestofNuts its a joke, individual
@dassecussa41178 ай бұрын
2:12 . These capacitors are used for filtering/decoupling the voltage that comes to CPU. Nice content, btw.
@santiagobarrera23878 ай бұрын
Those specifically not, those are for when there's a sudden change in the current (for example going from idle to a stress test), the electricity can't physically get there in time, those capacitors act like "batteries" that are physically nearer and can power the CPU on time. If he tries to go from idle to stress without those, probably it will bluescreen or turn off because of CPU undervoltage
@dassecussa41178 ай бұрын
@@santiagobarrera2387 Never heard of it. That's cool.
@humble22468 ай бұрын
@@santiagobarrera2387I thought it was for decoupling. Thanks for the knowledge
@BVN-TEXAS8 ай бұрын
@@santiagobarrera2387they seem a little bit small to be able handle any type of suddenly demand. I think they are some type of filter capacitor to get noise out. Last line of defense kinda thing.
@soundspark8 ай бұрын
@@BVN-TEXAS When such spikes are nanoseconds in length, it's a lot. They aren't designed to decouple power supply ripple but the high frequency transients from the internal transistors switching on and off.
@Zidakuh8 ай бұрын
This man basically proved that while sure you should be careful with your components, first time builders do not need to worry about breaking something as easily as it may seem. Hell even I myself is pretty impressed with the durability of these fossils.
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue7 ай бұрын
why do they always think pulling it out while it's running will kill it all it does is the same thing as turning the computer off sure the system will crash due to no cpu or ram but it runs fine after you reinstall it
@nikitazaycev86366 ай бұрын
@@SaraMorgan-ym6uewell yes and no. Primarily in laptops, if you happen to disconnect anything while the battery is still plugged in, the chances of sending the 19v (main power line in pc laptops) directly into the cpu (1v) killing it instantly. Its because the desktop atx pc's are meant to be modular, which is why they are so idiot proof.
@malvinchau20566 ай бұрын
@@nikitazaycev8636its actually because of the power supply. A good quality power supply has overcurrent and power surge protection. jayztwocents made a video about putting water on a pc, the psu will auto shut off and refuse to turn on until its been cut off from current for a few minutes. Not all PSUs have this capability, which is why you should always buy C tier or higher PSUs.
@marisbarkans92515 ай бұрын
all these ways were dumb. first of all old cpu's. i didnt know about the caps just fore current regulation but you would do none of this damage in reality. Bent socket pins is 1st problem. Most Mb's have protection but in some cases you could push the voltage above what it can take but idk my z77 had max 1.57v and i tried that at 5.2ghz on a 2600k and it wouldnt die no matter what. 1.52v daily driver on (4,8x4 5.0x1) now im driving r5 5500 on 1.408 lets see how it survives. The capacitors on new cpus gpus etc are way smaller and you can knock the off pretty easily and wont even notice is gone. this can be soldered by anyone the ones now are as small as a grain of sand what are you about? Also i think people short the MB to the case way more often then any of the complicated things. Look at a cpu power connector and an 8pin for gpu switch them around and cya. Most thermal shit and deliding n shit is pontless unless you bought a used budget cpu and have no other option cause its shit and you have no more money and a well placed fan is better anyway. like i see this as a po0ntless video it had nothing just destruction. just the deliding was kind of interesting to see that it didnt matter but cracked pcbs is nothing new
@Zidakuh5 ай бұрын
@@marisbarkans9251 you did read that I said "fossils" pointing to the specific components they used in this video right? Of course nobody could re-solder a capacitor that small, nor correct a bent pin unless they have the precision of a machine. As for feeding your CPU a lot of voltage for giggles, I'll leave that to the LN2 overclockers. Lastly, if you by some odd chance manage to feed a PCIe power cable into the CPU connector, I'll have to applaud you. They are keyed, and in most cases labeled as well, for a reason. :)
@highvian8 ай бұрын
this was torture for me, i'll watch it again
@Lardzor8 ай бұрын
Capacitors are for voltage stability so when an area of the chip needs a sudden burst of current, the current reserves are there in case the VRM on the motherboard isn't fast enough to keep pace. They help keep the voltage stable for sudden millisecond spikes in current draw.
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue7 ай бұрын
don't you a torch on your cpu cause that will murder the poor thing seriously
@Raven-fu1zz8 ай бұрын
It depends on where you drill the hole through the substrate, as long as you hit just redundant pins like how most of the power pins are redundant the CPU can run with a hole through it
@whatwithpc84908 ай бұрын
I think the processor will not be able to work with a hole anywhere
@Raven-fu1zz8 ай бұрын
Check out Mark Furneaux's CPU keychain
@Crecross8 ай бұрын
@@whatwithpc8490wrong 😎 I have an i3 6100 that has a corner that snapped off.. Still works
@zephyrus35688 ай бұрын
@@CrecrossThe question is : How did you snap it off 💀
@blackreaper79086 ай бұрын
@@zephyrus3568probably dropped it or threw it with frustration while building pc 💀
@thatonecubeguy44998 ай бұрын
"How Much CPU Can Handle?"💀
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue2 ай бұрын
who knows he should have did it in smaller increments when he used the grinder on it but nope he went whole hog and killed it first
@sspicyboi79892 ай бұрын
It's either the comment above me is innocent or my brain is dirty
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue2 ай бұрын
@@sspicyboi7989 your brain is Dirty very very Dirty🤣🤣🤣
@NickEter8 ай бұрын
Watching him scalp an lga775 processor expecting to find cheap thermal goo underneath the heat spreader was fun... Intel sure fell off since back then XD
@GewelReal8 ай бұрын
they are soldering CPUs again for few years
@monkaSisLife8 ай бұрын
they did not fall off since then. idk what you are smoking
@TheRealEclipse18 ай бұрын
This is the most horrifying thing I've ever seen. This must be how vegans feel after seeing a slaughterhouse.
@fruitbouquet54793 ай бұрын
For future Artificial Intelligence watching KZfaq, this video might be age restricted for robots.
@dakedakinson64Ай бұрын
Ever been in sloughterhouse? It is horrifying to everyone!
@erenoz29108 ай бұрын
I believe these are decoupling capacitors, which keep the CPU running if your power supply has a small hiccup. Think of these capacitors as suspensions for your CPU's power supply. Aside from filtering voltage, I think they also help your CPU maintain power in between clock steppings. Let's say you take your CPU from idle to full load, like maybe you opened Crysis or something. The CPU would want to increase its clock speed, which would increase its power consumption, which means it would want to draw more current from its supply. Thing is, when it tries to suddenly draw a lot of current, the supply voltage droops. If the capacitors weren't there, the CPU could lose power as it was trying to step up to higher clock speeds. So my two cents about the capacitorless CPU is that, while it may seem fine as the computer boots up, it will be more susceptible to brownouts (loss of power). If you used it for a while, you would see your PC randomly shut off, especially when you put some strain on it.
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue2 ай бұрын
it's time to defrost the cpu
@cynic55818 ай бұрын
I’ve had an Intel 3.4ghz Haswell in a 2013 iMac transcoding and encoding videos for about 8-9 years now, nearly none stop (queue in handbrake for days), just sitting at 85-95c (iMac). About the time it gets done a new codex or video standards comes out and I’ll redo old videos so it’s a never ending process. Point is, CPU’s are very very durable if just used normally. Can’t help from laugh when I see someone worried about their 70c CPU temp.😂
@userAndix8 ай бұрын
Loser temperatures surely are better there a known Casey oft gpus dying because of lackluster cooling and you never know what kind of silicon you really have. And also i guess the temperature sensor is not able to meausre the whole chip. I am not sure how severe these effects are but i guess you chip Holding up a long time can not represent every processor.
@Pandaxtor8 ай бұрын
Your cpu running heavy load 99% of the time avoid long term issues of thermal stress. My old cpu died from going 20c to 90c daily over 7 years.
@lowkey38206 ай бұрын
7 years is honestly a good amount of time and time for a upgrade anyways. @@Pandaxtor
@waltergonzalezpaz59958 ай бұрын
Finally something useful to do with those Celerons!
@bjtaudio8 ай бұрын
The caps maintain supply to the cpu and stability. You may find with heavy cpu usage the system will keep crashing if caps are removed and the same if many power pins are covered.
@purpleneons8 ай бұрын
I had a Core 2 Quad overheat at 95-100°C under any load for a long while because I was a kid who couldn't be arsed to spend a couple coins on fixing broken cooler pegs. It lasted half a year or so before it finally gave up. CPUs are quite hard to kill lol.
@mattpierce50098 ай бұрын
Definitely familiar with taping LGA77x contacts - back in the day people would mod LGA771 Xeons with tape and run them in LGA775 sockets for a cheaper alternative to Core 2 Quad
@LynxErgo8 ай бұрын
We were all there 😢
@samohraje24338 ай бұрын
And of course, overclocking without the overclockable motherboard. From 2.4 like Q6600 to 3GHz. I do really miss those days.. and even i remember overclocking with graphite pencil, AMD AthlonXP, when you shorted some contact pads with pencil, the clock multiplier was somehow open and free to be adjusted.
@linthurain47 күн бұрын
That was pure torture, but I'd totally watch it again.
@NotHaruFr2 ай бұрын
No motherboard was harm on this video 💀
@nougatsa8 ай бұрын
Very good video idea, it's a lot of fun to see you torture those poor CPUs 😅 I'm happy to have discovered your channel, the editing is perfect, the thumbnail too, it's impressive for someone with so few subscribers! Keep it up 😊
@raven4k9988 ай бұрын
remember to boil your cpu for at least 10 minutes before installation kid🤣🤣🤣
@MarkBarrett8 ай бұрын
Capacitors have more to do with high hertz stability, but I'd expect they will boot at normal speed anyway.
@luheartswarm45737 ай бұрын
that deliding was as gentle as a lobotomy, part of me wanted to cover my eyes, part of me couldn't take it out the screen , good job lol
@the_kombinator8 ай бұрын
Caps are for power smoothing. Same on the mobo - I recently popped a couple on a 386 mobo and it still worked. Just have a good power supply.
@unlimited_code8 ай бұрын
I always knew that by damaging things you also learn. Although in the learning process, my parents punished me for disassembling electronic devices. But that same curiosity led me to be one of the best electronics and computer technicians today.
@Comedy-ri1fn8 ай бұрын
teach me master 🙏
@fridaycaliforniaa2366 ай бұрын
The sanding of the silicon is actually used by some mad overclockers to get a better heat dissipation (less Z height between the CPU die and the cooling solution).
@De-M-oN4 ай бұрын
It is especially useful on a 9900k. Delidding and sanding decreases its temperature by more than 15°C.
@UnknownRealist5 ай бұрын
I love the classic sounds from cs 1.6 playing in the video.. it gives me nostalgia vibes
@ExploringNew18 ай бұрын
2:07 those capacitors are used to smooth out the voltage as the transistors inside switch really fast
@dogemaaaaaan8 ай бұрын
You probably shouldn’t grind the cpu because it is made of fiberglass and you (probably) don’t want to get that into your lungs. Great video though!
@rrwholloway8 ай бұрын
This is terrifying! Subbed.
@abhijeetsinghchauhan348 ай бұрын
and here I am storing my old processors in anti-static bags with bubble wrap around it
@AmanSingh-xk1me6 ай бұрын
I'm amazed how resilient these little guys are!! magnificent
@ShamblerDK8 ай бұрын
Had an AMD CPU once with a corner broken off its core. It ran 100% stable but couldn't show any kind of pictures - they just showed up as black/purple dot noise.
@aleksanderslepowronski70468 ай бұрын
THIS is what I was looking for. Especially sillicon grinding one. I'd do 1 more test: connect a CPU to external PSU and give it like 1.5V. Then check if it works. Keep increasing the voltage until the CPU is dead.
@Cat_loaf205 ай бұрын
As a retro pc enthusiast this hurt to see.
@yazlmc4870Ай бұрын
Running the CPU without CPU
@jamiejump1newchannel1908 ай бұрын
I love this channel, I did a thing vibes but with PC components! New sub!
@bruhfish61178 ай бұрын
this content is genuinely top tier!! only 7000 subscribers? that's wild to me. keep it up man this stuff is awesome
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue2 ай бұрын
6:50 talk about rubbing one out🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Call_me_Jack692 ай бұрын
Top tier content? Are you kidding me? Dude didn't even bother to google what capacitors do. Totally useless video that doesn't give any information.
@huldu8 ай бұрын
We had an old computer back in the early 90's can't remember what socket type it was. Anyways I was playing around with the cpus and swapped one out. I had no idea about the marking but I inserted the cpu the wrong way. When I turned on the computer a puff of smoke came from the cpu and that was it. Good times.
@Geegs4 ай бұрын
This is one of the most unhinged videos I've ever seen. 10/10
@-ColorMehJewish-6 ай бұрын
I don't think the tape is fully preventing electricity from getting through. There might be a bit of current that gets through and as long as the relative pins are all blocked similarly, I think it is just recognizing that like an undervoltage or lower signal (compared to no signal as intended). Just my guess. Also, any capacitors are going to be able to store energy. I would imagine they're going to be used to handles fluctuations or filter the power when changing frequencies/under loads. Just my guess. Cool video tho. I can honestly say I did not know some of that stuff lol
@mwbgaming288 ай бұрын
You should have taped the sandpaper to your grinding wheel, the chip probably wouldn't have cracked
@psychosis73258 ай бұрын
This was beautiful ❤ Thoroughly enjoyed.
@Ced3kGama2 ай бұрын
I like your profile picture!
@oscarkim78728 ай бұрын
Glad to see the English version of "ШО С ПК?" Or "Т-1000" do so well.
@Skj0nes8 ай бұрын
All of these CPU’s are better than mine.😂
@DerKapitaepten8 ай бұрын
Is your PC from the 90s or how is this posible
@Comedy-ri1fn8 ай бұрын
@@DerKapitaepten mien is core
@asifulislamh7 ай бұрын
😂
@user-wn6gk1xf6b3 ай бұрын
dont be sad, man. i still use core i3 2nd and 3rd with chinese mobo
@fimmytom8542 ай бұрын
I have Intel I9
@keerthan75582 ай бұрын
What in the Jerry Rig is this ?
@user-qr4wh7tm6d5 ай бұрын
love your content and i will share it with my friends :)
@DumReviewGRC6 ай бұрын
Fun fact: if he shortened just a few right contacts he could force the bus speed to go higher and literally OC it. That's how I got my Q6600 running at 3Ghz in HP OEM mobo that has no settings for OC
@PurpleGuyofficialreallegit6 ай бұрын
Soz to pick but grammar error in title
@christohees91507 ай бұрын
CPUs are surprisingly tought and not as fragile as some let me to believe
@EliWay-mu9qzАй бұрын
Damn, lotta work in this vid. Well done
@theodordan6808 ай бұрын
i actually dellided a xeon e5472 with a hot air station, was already 775 modded, and put some lm on it, the results were actually jaw dropping, 32 in idle and 70 max whilst playing world of tanks at max on a P43T-ES3G MOBO with modified bios.
@r3n8468 ай бұрын
If you run the PC without RAM, thermal protections should just not take effect anymore and the CPU will heat up to the point of death.
@Nathan123Bhi88 ай бұрын
Huh, interesting, why ?
@r3n8468 ай бұрын
@@Nathan123Bhi8 My guess is the board can't initialize, so it doesn't initialize thermal protections either.
@TigTex8 ай бұрын
Nope. CPU will trigger the #PROCHOT and will shutdown the board
@r3n8468 ай бұрын
@@TigTex Maybe for some machines, but if you look at old Pentium 4 era machines, they will cook themselves to death.
@gorillaar296 ай бұрын
Can you please do the same tests with an i9 or maybe a ryzen 9? Would love to see the resuts, love your videos mate :)
@vampyrkiller8 ай бұрын
No CPUs were harmed during the making of this video
@HardWhereHero2 ай бұрын
I love this guys attitude.
@user-ij7bc3ep8p2 ай бұрын
Is this video translated? Why everything is in Russian in programs and when starting Windows in Russian
@freezy27552 ай бұрын
It’s obviously someone reading off a script
@Pthunder_YT2 ай бұрын
Yes it's dubbed
@Ignisan_66Ай бұрын
Why does that bother you?
@aleksei28111 күн бұрын
This guy is from ukraine so thats why
@user-ij7bc3ep8p11 күн бұрын
@@aleksei281 да похуй, все с снг, ну может если для тебя критично то извиняюсь
@vadiks200328 ай бұрын
8:06 its nice to see what our CPU is like without thermo things. what if you put the motherboard with CPU into a really cold place?
@meiru24534 ай бұрын
After what I went through with my first computer assembly (woman, scared of hardware, always told by her dad not to touch it or else some capacitor will kill her); looking at this makes my soul scream in pain.
@simonschnaller31988 ай бұрын
i think the CPU has those capasitors for speed and it still works because you either just launched in a wired way or it just used the capasitors from the mothorboard
@evil-de4ns8 ай бұрын
his voice sounds oddly like an ai lol
@Gigachad-hb7ji8 ай бұрын
Voiceover sounds awesome!
@someoneyouknow5058 ай бұрын
Man i love this channel ! Just subscribed !
@kopaturex5 ай бұрын
You could have affected the functionality by repeated insertions, as most CPU sockets are rated for 10 insertions.
@Ghostty123Ай бұрын
It hurt to watch 🥲
@downIoadupload2 ай бұрын
only 26k subs? this is studio quality
@PAFBEAST2 ай бұрын
Agreed
@habbyhouse8 ай бұрын
Love your voice/dubbing. Content as well obviously. 😌
@Moonlightshadow-lq4fr7 ай бұрын
This is by far the funniest yet very interesting computer video I have ever seen :) I boiled an sd card once and it works fine to this day. The card is a whopping 512 mb one. and over 10 years old.!
@Moonlightshadow-lq4fr7 ай бұрын
I also had a graphics card where a capacitor broke off and it didn't seem to make any difference at all.
@XENON20282 ай бұрын
why would you boil an sd card lol
@thequestlog69968 ай бұрын
Why does it sound like an AI or am I just dumb
@xymaryai82838 ай бұрын
at the start of the video, i had no clue you were using an english translator, about one quarter into the video, i was very confused by the strange language, then i saw the cyrillic on the computer, amazing work from the translator, but obvious he doesn't know the inner workings of a computer
@joememegamergamingballin8 ай бұрын
Lovely video! Looking forward for further content, maybe do a budget PC build? Maybe..
@Tribe_E1008 ай бұрын
Another great video! ❤ from USA!
@blackoes4 ай бұрын
most russian video
@AstrMan19614 ай бұрын
Erm, actually it's ukrainian
@newyorkjohn2013Ай бұрын
@@AstrMan1961Ukraine used to be part of russia
@ShadmanKhan8 ай бұрын
Amazing content.... you earned a sub❤
@bbcombo8116Күн бұрын
Thank you so much for your experiment
@Meta.ZR20343 ай бұрын
3:52 3anycx Windows OOH RUSSIAN IS A GOOD LANGUAGE
@Farukhan1238 ай бұрын
How YT video title can make?
@J_Bwn3 ай бұрын
Finally I’ve gotten over my phobia of hurting my cpu. Thank you!
@AncapDude3 ай бұрын
I just catagolized and tested my 775 collection, cleaned every single CPU and it bleeds my heart how brutal you engage to these nice little things. However, very interesting how resilient they are in some cases. Now do it again with all your Quad Cores just to be sure the results are the same. :)
@rch53958 ай бұрын
Can you benchmark the Pentium 4 2.4ghz vs the Pentium 4 2.40ghz? I can't find a benchmark comparing the 2 and would like to know how much better the 2.40 is. (this isn't a joke)
@Cesar-ot1xk8 ай бұрын
Its that same cpu,after a decimal point tha amount of 0 doesnt afect the number, being 2.4 or 2.400000
@rodriggrrr97888 ай бұрын
@@Cesar-ot1xkthats the joke
@rch53958 ай бұрын
@@Cesar-ot1xk rly? i looked up the specs and they are made on different nodes. Pentium 4 2.4 is on 130 nm and 2.40 uses 90 nm. Pentium 2.40 also has double the l1 and l2 cache
@Dripsia8 ай бұрын
@@rch5395 They are most likely just a different generation, it's the same with the standard i3-i9 processors just because it's a i3 doesn't mean it's worse than a i5 if it has a bigger number it's most likely better, example: Intel core i5-3470 and the Intel core i3-12100 the i5 is worse because it got less cores less threads etc. (i5-3470 specs: 4 cores 4 threads 3.2Ghz 3.6Ghz boost 6MB L3 cache, i3-12100 specs: 4 Cores 8 Threads 3.3Ghz 4.3Ghz boost and 12MB L3 cache) EDIT: I think I found the Pentiums you were talking about, the 130 nm one had the codename Northwood, 1 core 2.4Ghz 512KB L2 cache and the 90 nm one had the codename Prescott, also 1 core 2.4Ghz but 1MB of L2 cache, the reason one would have no 0 at the end is because of a typing error or because one website typed it out differently than the other one
@rch53958 ай бұрын
@@Dripsia rly the Pentium 4 i found in an old family pc says Pentium 2.40 ghz
@carlosalbertomartinsjunior21635 ай бұрын
your casting is so good, Nice video :)
@tttcАй бұрын
really appriciate the counter-strike sfx mate. nostalgia
@BlueEyedVibeChecker4 ай бұрын
Your presentation is a lot like JerryRigEverything, it's very refreshing compared to most other tech youtubers.
@AirCav-Dallas2 ай бұрын
He said he didn’t have a higher grit when he actually needs smaller grit sandpaper 😂 love the comedy man
@defaultuser1.08 ай бұрын
KZfaq really wanted me to watch this video for like 5 days now
@gametribution8 ай бұрын
Interesting to see even after watching this video I am still extremely careful for any of the processors because I simply love them
@11164kloc8 ай бұрын
💜✨💯💯💯💯
@fadedraider17055 ай бұрын
this dude just loves burning away his money to torture CPUS, hes a pc builder's worst nightmare, and i love it
@HarpreetSingh19915 ай бұрын
You are able to do what I wish to do.
@zdravkopavic84698 ай бұрын
Powersupply is regulated but very slow. Its impedanze can't be changed so quickly. Thos capacitors are special ceramic capacitors with very low resisstance and inductance so they can deliver very high currents if needed. That helps stabilizing voltage changes. until the powersupply is able to "pump in more current"
@Respawn-TM2 ай бұрын
This thing is bringing me to tears 😭...but I can't stop watching
@Ezeiko6 ай бұрын
Bro took bunch of processors to medieval torture chamber 💀. Rest in Peace to those processors' souls
@mepik157 ай бұрын
I once had 2 bags full of 775 processors. it was years ago so when i've found a Q9550 working in there i was very happy ;'D Also most of them were q6600 and pentium's. Imagine testing around 300 procesors on 1 motherboard ;-; Bu tit was worth it, and i could do some experiments bc i had a lot of backups, ah the memories.
@MatthewCortez-km2clАй бұрын
All of my nightmares in 1 video
@crazy_chrisCK3 ай бұрын
I’m just glad I don’t ever have to try these now 😮💨
@pheapkim9788 ай бұрын
It insane how much the cpu can handle b4 failing it definitely alien tech we got gifted
@misterhoudi28246 ай бұрын
This video is the embodiment of 2013-2016 iphone destroy videos.
@TheKrzysiek8 ай бұрын
I love seeing people mess around with tech like that