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Originally Posted by deakin
I clearly stated that i have a AMD 1035t and as you know this chip runs nice and cool. Yes even with the stock cooler.
And and for you saying that one can not achieve a cpu temp lower than the ambient room temp. Of course you can. A good air cooling set up can do this effortlessly unless you happen to be in a room where the temp is unusually high, like a server room without air conditioning or you live above Satan and he's got his central heating on at max due to having a nasty does of the flu.
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Umm, no. This is absolutely impossible. One of the fundamental basics of cooling and physics. Since you don't seem to understand this, it seems obvious why the rest of what you've said is also total rubbish.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_cooling
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As active heat pumps which consume power, TECs can produce temperatures below ambient, impossible with passive heatsinks, radiator-cooled fluid cooling, and heatpipe HSFs."
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http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=1561895
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Ok, there is a guy I know saying that his P4 (I don't know the speed) runs at 57F (yes farenheit), when the room temp is ~70F
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Note 57F is 14'c and 70F is 21'c room temp (an average to warm room). Pretty much the exact same BS you're claiming.
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It's not possible with a traditional air cooled heatsink setup, including the heatsink you linked to. If you're using 50F air to cool a 75F hunk of metal, you're not getting under 50F no matter what.
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Impossible. I am aware of that pressure principle you mentioned, and yes it is true, I have seen the effects of it...... but any kind of normal HSF combo isn't capable if actually achieving it. It takes quite a bit of pressure going through a fairly small area to see the effects. If it was in fact getting that cold, there would surely be evidence of condensation on the HS.
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I call BS as well.
even with Bernoulli's Principle of Pressure it is impossible to get 100% efficiency. Forget getting over 100% which he would need to get below ambient temps. If he refuses you know he's lying out his rear. Bring a digital camera too. I'd really like to know what his setup looks like if he's claiming over 100% efficiency in cooling.
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If that were possible, to easily get an object below ambient temperature with just a heatsink, there wouldn't be any problem at all cooling something to absolute zero. But that's not the case, as we need advanced methods like pulsed lasers to cool clouds of atoms to near-absolute zero.
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that's against the law of physics. He needs his temperature gauges checked.
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Need I go on?
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Originally Posted by deakin
To be blunt, you come across as a bit of a arrogant git. Perhaps in future you might want to choose your words a little more carefully before basically accusing people of lying.
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To be blunt, you
are lying. The fact that you think you're right while you have absolutely no clue what you're talking about, and are adamant you are achieving the impossible in the face of overwhelming evidence proves
you're the arrogant git.
Perhaps in future you might want to check your facts before making claims that are impossible then accusing other people of being arrogant when called out on your lies.