1. This forum is in read-only mode.

Processor...too cold?

Discussion in 'Computers & Modding' started by elk1007, Sep 28, 2008.

  1. elk1007

    elk1007 Well-Known Member

    Is it possible to get your processor TOO cool?
    I know that freezing it completely might have some deadly effects, but what about getting a 2ghz dual core down to 60 degrees?
    I'm basically using a hand towel and a big ice pack to draw heat from underneath my laptop (no leaking or anything).
     
  2. sesa

    sesa Well-Known Member

    ...I have never heard of any complaining there processor is to cold...unless you live in really cold area well anyone the general rule for electronics is the ideal heat is 70-80 but 50-110 it will be ok and anything lower or higher can lead to issues.
     
  3. waylonn

    waylonn Well-Known Member

    It will just don't run at it's maximum performance, around 60 degrees is good.
     
  4. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    Actually, the colder it is, the better it runs, so long as you don't get it anywhere near -187C (absolute zero). I would say it may take damage below 2C as the pins on the chip are starting to become brittle, but the colder you get it, the better. My CPU idles at 34C and has yet to get anywhere near 50C even under full load. Only bad thing about using an ice brick is the potential for water damage from condensation.
     
  5. waylonn

    waylonn Well-Known Member

    Is that right loony? So the Intel guy told us a bad thingy!
     
  6. Cahos Rahne Veloza

    Cahos Rahne Veloza The Fart Awakens

    Loony what are your views on this guy who made a PC mod that had liquid Nitrogen inside his PC to constantly keep his system cold? I guess it would be pretty hard for him to change parts from his PC from time to time as he needs to extract the stuff out of his system first, but is that a good idea in general?
     
  7. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    liquid nitrogen cooling can work when done properly, but I don't recommend it because its highly dangerous stuff. It can freeze anything solid, and if the object sustains an impact afterwards it shatters. Even a human hand. Additionally, the CPU would need to be artificially heated underneath to prevent the pins becoming brittle.
     
  8. Cahos Rahne Veloza

    Cahos Rahne Veloza The Fart Awakens

    So in the end that guy who made that mod made a rig that may cut down processor heat build up, but may have sacrificed sturdyness. Oh snap :(
     
  9. Born2killx

    Born2killx Well-Known Member

    I heard of something called phase change cooling; apparently it does something to cool the computer down to like -50 degrees Celsius. I bet Loonylion will give us some info on that. *wink wink*
     
  10. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    its effectively having a refrigerator cooling your CPU.
     
  11. elk1007

    elk1007 Well-Known Member

    I heard Microsoft is making an OS that makes your processor run at extremely low temperatures.
    But they'll only be selling the OS in Antarctica.

    Some kind of region lock-out I guess.
     
  12. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    that's a load of crap, the OS can't control processor operating temperature.
     
  13. elk1007

    elk1007 Well-Known Member

    ......./facepalm
     
  14. anandjones

    anandjones Well-Known Member

    I hope you're talking about Fahrenheit.
     
  15. elk1007

    elk1007 Well-Known Member

    I don't see how putting ice under my laptop would cause the processor to run at 140F.
     
  16. Born2killx

    Born2killx Well-Known Member

    Core temps should be monitored in Celsius, but this guy chose Fahrenheit. 60 degrees Celsius is my Core 2 Quad under load.
     
  17. elk1007

    elk1007 Well-Known Member

    Oh wait. Egg on my face :-X

    Yeah it is in Celsius. My bad.
     
  18. fallenleader

    fallenleader Guest

    dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry,dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry,dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry,dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry,dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry, dry,

    its annoying but to proove a point. whatever you do, keep it dry. and no matter what, it will heat up on its own. redicilous temperatures are exactly what they are. but rule of thumb, the cooler the better, most damage is heat damage. when i rebuilt my ps2 the emotion chip had actually hazed over a bit of rainbow from heat. and i put arctic silver on my pc's and xbox's cpu/gpu's.

    and DUST!!! kill the F-ing dust, people.


    an os can only be resource un-demanding and allow your pc to run slightly cooler. but the bios/Mboard controls fanspeed and voltage. and dust controls heat...overall.

    there is a program called everest that will allow you to monitor some stuff like rpm and temp but only if your cpu has a therm built in, and best bet is to check the bios first because it porbably has that info built in.
     
  19. elk1007

    elk1007 Well-Known Member

    Yeah I'm using a no-leak ice pack with a towel top to help cut the condensation. I'm going to purchase a better pack when I have some money.
     
  20. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    its not leaks that are the problem, its condensation. Get a laptop cooler.