Newtun
Storage is nice, especially if it doesn't rotate
Indeed, sir!There should be time to read with all Canadians in the toilets.
Indeed, sir!There should be time to read with all Canadians in the toilets.
You have two pedals and a steering wheel. What more do you need to know? :scratch:There is no instruction manual in rental cars nowadays.
How do you know they're all in the toilets, not just more of them? Did you do a survey/poll?There should be time to read with all Canadians in the toilets.
You have two pedals and a steering wheel. What more do you need to know? :scratch:
How do you know they're all in the toilets, not just more of them? Did you do a survey/poll?
DD's new case. The Corsair 1000D.
That guy talks way too fast.
I don't need a second computer in the case. I'm actually looking for just a flat plate that will mount the motherboard and PSU, with the GPU mounted co-planar to the MB and VESA holes to mount the whole thing behind the monitor. Then just mount waterblocks and plumb it out to an external cooler.
I see. Or you could buy the imac pro.
I'm not made of money...
The only parts of my current workstations are:
1. Motherboard (CPU, RAM, M.2 SSD onboard)
2. GPU
3. PSU
With waterblocks connected to the CPU and GPU, they aren't particularly large or heavy. There are PCIe extension cables that allow the GPU to be mounted near (but not sticking out of) the motherboard. I want a single piece of metal plate that has mounting holes for the motherboard on one side, a bracket for the GPU on the other, and in the middle a VESA-spec set of holes. The whole thing will fit (or just about) behind a 32" monitor. Links for stuff to help visualize below:
[FONT="]Motherboard:[/FONT][/COLOR][COLOR=#111111][FONT="] http://a.co/7d6jYSO
[/FONT][FONT="]GPU:[/FONT][/COLOR][COLOR=#111111][FONT="] http://a.co/7d6jYSO
[/FONT][FONT="]PSU:[/FONT][/COLOR][COLOR=#111111][FONT="] http://a.co/269t9xd
[/FONT][FONT="]GPU Cable:[/FONT][/COLOR][COLOR=#111111][FONT="] http://a.co/fCCn9cz[/FONT][FONT="]
[/FONT]
Which GPU? CPU & GPU links are the same.
...and the CPU is irrelevant, but the waterblock is here: [FONT="]Link:[/FONT][FONT="] http://a.co/86REgQ4[/FONT]
[FONT=&]GPU Link:[/FONT][FONT=&] http://a.co/70tlSgL[/FONT]
Why is the CPU irrelant? It's the main part of the computer! Where does the water go, to a drain or is it recycled somehow?
He has an undocumented worker gather it up in a bucket and discard it out the back door behind the house and then insert cold.How exactly are you heat exchanging?
Well, I didn't want to confuse anyone with the talk.Nice ninja edit. ;-)
What is wrong with Brazil?
Even with you helping me google that I still don't understand Lunar's reference regarding Brazil?
Until you remove so much heat that the condensate doesn't evaporate, and you get water pooling under the fridge... :wink:I decided to not actually mess with the house plumbing, but my water heater uses an electric heat pump. This means that it pulls heat from the air around the water heater to heat the water. All the waste heat from my rack goes out to the garage, and a radiator right next to the water heater blows the hot air directly onto the water heaters intake. It was actually some really easy plumbing work, and I trust myself to do it as it isn't hooked to any potable faucet and has a limited volume of liquid to pour out. I'm actually tempted to do the same pulling the heat away from the back of the fridge; I'm sure the fridge will be more efficient if their heatsink isn't hot, and the spare heat can go into the hot water.
Worth it? Unlikely. But trying to optimize systems is fun.
Are your finances straightened out for school in the Fall? Don't they have some academic pricing on MS?
Until you remove so much heat that the condensate doesn't evaporate, and you get water pooling under the fridge... :wink: