How to Blow a hole in a table with a CPU
How to Blow a hole in a table with a CPU
OC a AMD Duron to 4GHz and give it VCore of 4.xxx VDC.
then, while its already reaching melting points, snatch the Heatsink off of it!!
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 4265757054
then, while its already reaching melting points, snatch the Heatsink off of it!!
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 4265757054
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Ace, that video is fake. AMD mobos since the K6-2 days have options in the bios to shut the system down when the temperature reaches a certain point. Default is 70C or ~180F IIRC. Hell, even my mother's previous system (K6-2 450 + Gigabyte GA-5AX) had this feature, and that board was pretty much a bare bones board.
- Mobius
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Fistly, that no-spinning 40mm fan is a dead giveaway.
Then you have to ask yourself - how would a CPU run without clamping pressure and no fan spinning? Then you ask yourself what actually happens when a CPU heatsink is removed?
Then you have to ask yourself these questions:
1) A CPU at 3818 MHz without any clamping pressure, and a stopped 40mm fan? Yeah - right.
2) What physical law allows for even a 100 watt CPU to explode with such force that it would break the ceramic packaging, and be physically thrown from the very tight CPU socket?
3) What strength explosion would it take to blow a hole in the moitherboard AS WELL AS a hole in the table?
Not too hard to figure out now is it?
Then you have to ask yourself - how would a CPU run without clamping pressure and no fan spinning? Then you ask yourself what actually happens when a CPU heatsink is removed?
Then you have to ask yourself these questions:
1) A CPU at 3818 MHz without any clamping pressure, and a stopped 40mm fan? Yeah - right.
2) What physical law allows for even a 100 watt CPU to explode with such force that it would break the ceramic packaging, and be physically thrown from the very tight CPU socket?
3) What strength explosion would it take to blow a hole in the moitherboard AS WELL AS a hole in the table?
Not too hard to figure out now is it?
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I like Mobi's meticulously detailled explanation.AceCombat wrote:Mobius..........
STFU!!
we know its a fake. we dont need a uber-geek breakdown on how its fake
He maybe a grammar Nazi , but that's probably just the downside of a positive character trait: Going into the depth of matters ...
Feeling embarrassed, Ace?
fyrephlie wrote:i once blew out a pIII 500 on purpose, it was giving all sorts of trouble (the board and cpu), since i had run it so long without adequate cooling, finally deciding to be done with it i oc'd it too the max, it didn't explode though, just sizzled and crackled for a while. smelled really bad too.
we cooked a few P-II's in A+ classes. god did that stink.....
one got hot enough, that it melted the solder holding the metal plate protecting the silicon core and it slid off
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I noticed that too Vind. I work with SMT boards on a daily basis. I find it hard to believe that cooking a CPU off could generate that kinda reaction. It might burn the board a little but no WAY could it blow a whole through a mobo AND the table. ...come on. You guys know how tought mobo's are. what are they.. 4 layer? 6? nearly a 1/4" of metal reinforced fiberglass. You'd blow a cap before that kinda power would blow up a CPU.
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Not to mention that IF a processor could react so violently, don't you think this would've been caught in lab testing?Duper wrote:I noticed that too Vind. I work with SMT boards on a daily basis. I find it hard to believe that cooking a CPU off could generate that kinda reaction. It might burn the board a little but no WAY could it blow a whole through a mobo AND the table. ...come on. You guys know how tought mobo's are. what are they.. 4 layer? 6? nearly a 1/4" of metal reinforced fiberglass. You'd blow a cap before that kinda power would blow up a CPU.
As for the fan, yes it was in fact plugged in.
Emphasis on the blue arrow. Furthermore, lets look at the exact frame where the chip is "exploding".
As you can clearly see, the explosion is from BELOW the processor, and not the processor itself. Also, if this even was the processor doing all the damage, there is NO possible way that it could explode with enough force to do the damage it did to the table. The motherboard would direct the "blast" upward against the chip, which would force the debris to move upload in a MUCH less spectacular fashion. All it would have done is sizzle and smell really bad until either the socket melts (zapping the power supply in the process), or the operator gets tired of the stench and pulls the plug.
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