Building an ACTUALLY water-cooled PC

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2023-07-31に共有
Sending PC hardware underwater in style! Thanks to ASUS for sponsoring this build! Visit asus.click/DIYPerks to check out the Zenbook Pro 14 Duo OLED for those in search of incredible!

Making a submersible PC has a lot of challenges, but also a lot of potential benefits. Namely COOLING! Sticking this in a 17c pond should yield impressive results... let's find out.


But thanks to ASUS for sponsoring this build, and for the various manufactures for sending over the hardware:

Zotac 4090: www.zotac.com/product/graphics_card/zotac-gaming-g…
Crucial T700 SSDs: crucial.com/products/ssd/crucial-t700-ssd
Seasonic Prime Titanium 1000w PSU: seasonic.com/prime-ultra-titanium
WATERCOOLING PARTS: www.ekwb.com/

#ASUS #InSearchOfIncredible #Submersible #ISOI2023 #Zenbook #ZenCreator

コメント (21)
  • @seasong7655
    I love not only how it looks, but also how this setup is 100% silent and 100% dust free
  • @Baldrjac
    As a licensed plumber, I've always wanted to build a PC with a water cooled system integrated with a homes potable water plumbing system. We could build a loop in the homes cold water system and use a recirculation pump to displace the heat of the PC among the entire plumbing system 👀 I guarantee it would work
  • @UNATCOHanka
    4 Months without a video? This guy must be water cooling his whole house by now!
  • @hunzhurte
    The coincidental timing of this video and Linus' pool PC is almost comedic.
  • @echtnietjaifi
    Hello, plumber here! Note on the soldering of the outer piping: you used the wring kind of joints. These have a rubber inside of them, which won’t take kindly to tho soldering process. I’m sure you’ll fare much better with joints that are meant to be soldered with. Some tips if you’re interested: -ensure enough ventilation -Make sure theres no dirt on the pipes -make sure to use sandpaper on the bits that will be soldered -after that use some flux (s-39 will do great) to cover the surfaces that are to be soldered. -after assembly, make sure you heat both parts about equally -the tip of you flame is the hottest -if the joints are at the correct temperature, the solder will be pulled in the joint. Just touch one spot, the flux will pull it in. Stop when you can see solder all around the pipe. I always leave a little droplet underneath (assuming your weld is horizontal) as proof that it’s full. -i know it sounds obvious, but do not any part of the project with your hands when heated. It’s all hot
  • The pre-soldered copper fittings were a great choice just for style alone with those ribs. Very steampunk! Yet another amazing build, Matt.
  • @adwilson0286
    My man, you have aerial drone footage, submersible drone footage, footage from a submersible vessel that is not a vehicle but a complete personal computer with visual feedback temperature instrumentation, plus footage from whatever other gear you have for the tutorial build. The commitment here is mind-boggling. Absolutely and imminently professional. AND the build quality is insane. Bravo.
  • @t3chnicolor
    This is beyond cool, and the temps achieved were impressive. But I was more impressed by the underwater footage of your pond and the fact it was actually 7 feet deep!
  • @ftwgaming0
    17:45 Just imagining it continuing to go down as the foam slips off and the frantic attempt to catch it from going fully underwater
  • @medianna
    Another great way to prevent a leak would be to have the inside be pressurized slightly. If there is a leak, you will have air leaking out instead of water leaking in, and you can have a pressure sensor that warns if the pressure is going too low
  • @cy9nvs
    I work for a heat pump manufacturer, and your solder joints look better than most of the joints I see being produced here. Great job.
  • @osakanone
    I think this would make a lot more sense with copper gaskets, and an electrically neutral medium or an electrically neutral coating to prevent corrosion, and a positive interior pressure which would help reduce buoyancy and a sealed top so if there is a leak, the natural buoyancy of the system will prevent liquid from entering. Beyond that, this is genuinely incredibly cool. When its got the yellow and dark blue lights going (yellow rim, blue interior) it has a weird aesthetic resembling some of the real quantum computers I've managed to see. Quite surreal.
  • Looking this guy build stuff and looking at how happy he is doing it gives me years of life man
  • @WarpedHorizon
    Funny that you and LTT both released watercooled PCs that both use radical forms of watercooling, yet both are so different. This PC looks amazing! Great work!
  • Way to go! This was so intriguing to watch. Thank you for all you do, Matt! Your quality of work and video production is smooth. Always has been. :) Cheers!
  • @juleast
    You never cease to amaze me! This build is incredible! I'm not someone who works in the professional field but this is beyond even that. Your videos always brings inspiration for me to try new things. Awesome job!