Soldato
Its LN2 yes. It is quite expensive at around 75p per litre+ to buy.
Its a skill on its own LN2 overclocking. You need to figure out much more about components when clocking in this way to get the best results. You have exact control of temps and need to use this to your advantage.
Most guys think with LN2 you just pour to the lowest possible temps but almost no components like this and results are terrible or the system simply freezes, with components cold bugging.
The GPU in this case liked -125 loaded. Other Ti I have like -135 or even -145 any lower they all cold bug. The CPU in this bench cant go lower than -180 but at -177 will not run at such high frequency.
So many variables with LN2 clocking to take into account as well as equipment prep to deal with condensation and moisture.
Thanks for the reply ... Sounds like it takes a fair amount of knowledge and skill to achieve the best results ! It's epic ! I imagined it would be difficult to deal with the moisture and condensation that's one of the reasons I asked about it. If you wanted to could you incorporate LN2 cooling into a full case then or do you have to have all the components out in the open like on the pics ?
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