WEBVTT

00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:07.360
Of course, there's more to it than just dropping your CPU in a vat of liquid nitrogen.

00:00:07.360 --> 00:00:09.440
No, that's a bin CPU, Linus.

00:00:12.880 --> 00:00:17.280
So I guess step one is we just warm it back up. Linus, why did you have to do this?

00:00:18.960 --> 00:00:23.600
Look, it was for the lulls. Think of the lulls, Alex.

00:00:26.160 --> 00:00:26.880
Poor thing.

00:00:30.960 --> 00:00:32.320
How hot is it?

00:00:39.680 --> 00:00:44.640
Well, it's lower than minus 40. We know that. Oh, there we go. It's in the positives now.

00:00:46.800 --> 00:00:52.800
Woo! There it is. Okay, let's have a look here. The first thing I'm concerned about is the fact that

00:00:53.360 --> 00:00:57.920
Linus dropped this into the water bottle, which could damage it. It seems fine. You can see a

00:00:57.920 --> 00:01:03.840
little bit of stuff there, but that's not too concerning. My larger concern is that

00:01:03.840 --> 00:01:09.680
even when you're doing LN2, the CPUs don't get that cold. And you have a bunch of different layers

00:01:09.680 --> 00:01:14.560
in here, like fiberglass and copper and so on. And those are going to expand at different rates.

00:01:14.560 --> 00:01:24.560
So even though it looks fine, internally, it might be not so much. Also, by the way, this

00:01:24.560 --> 00:01:29.440
you can see the SPLAVE logo right there. This is like a binned top 10%

00:01:30.400 --> 00:01:35.520
chip right here. It would be a real sin if it was dead. Okay, let's see here.

00:01:39.120 --> 00:01:53.920
Okay, this is so hard to do while filming. I'm sorry, everyone. There we go. Beauty.

00:02:01.840 --> 00:02:10.880
All right, moment of truth. Moment of truth.

00:02:10.880 --> 00:02:22.480
Oh, good sign right there.

00:02:26.400 --> 00:02:27.200
Oh dear.

00:02:31.360 --> 00:02:35.280
Currently, I'm plugging and plugging back into your keyboard and mouse can fix this.

00:02:35.280 --> 00:02:40.720
I'm just going to try resetting it.

00:02:41.360 --> 00:02:52.800
Yeah, this seems like GPU problems, not CPU problems. Hey, Jono. Hey.

00:02:52.800 --> 00:02:58.080
I'm filming a full plane exclusive about getting a CPU to work. And is it not working?

00:02:58.080 --> 00:03:06.000
It's not working. Oh, that sucks. Yeah, that does suck. It's a it's a binned CPU. I guess it's not

00:03:06.080 --> 00:03:14.880
good enough. Yeah. Well, let's try this. Because it doesn't seem like a CPU problem.

00:03:14.880 --> 00:03:20.720
It must be a CPU problem because the system was working without the CPU in it. But I refuse to

00:03:20.720 --> 00:03:25.440
believe that it's dead, even though like it did get dropped into a vat of liquid nitrogen. And it's

00:03:25.440 --> 00:03:32.480
saying 99 again. It's bad. Well, I'm going to keep trying, but it's kind of looking like Linus

00:03:32.480 --> 00:03:44.560
killed the play of CPU. They're just laugh, Jono. That's rude. I'm sorry. I'm very sorry.

00:03:49.120 --> 00:03:54.640
Trying it again. I receded the CPU. I don't think it's going to work, but you know, worth a try.

00:03:55.440 --> 00:04:06.640
Oh, wow, she lives. Amazing. I have no clue why it didn't work before. That's pretty weird.

00:04:08.080 --> 00:04:11.280
Well, I don't know how happy it is.

00:04:14.640 --> 00:04:26.000
Yeah. Wow. That's fun. We got the tension for the Floatplane exclusive, but it paid off. I can't believe it.

00:04:27.520 --> 00:04:37.680
I legitimately thought that it was dead, just like air. I figured it was just, you know, CPU issues.

00:04:38.640 --> 00:04:48.800
Well, we get into Windows. Oh, there it is. Just run a Cinebench, see if it's happy. Okay.

00:04:50.160 --> 00:04:55.280
Yeah. I don't know if I'd say it's stable, but it's not crashing. So that's a plus.

00:04:55.840 --> 00:05:03.440
Yeah, running at 4.6 gigahertz, which is expected on air. Score of 28,000. Beautiful.

00:05:03.440 --> 00:05:08.960
Yeah, the CPU is working. All right. We didn't kill it.
