FunkMiller
Member
Probably start by asking yourself why you don't own a basic screw driver and go from there
They don’t let him have sharp objects on the ward. Not after what happened with Crazy Eyes Bob in the laundry room.
Probably start by asking yourself why you don't own a basic screw driver and go from there
Probably start by asking yourself why you don't own a basic screw driver and go from there
They didn’t.Oh okay.
Have they revealed what the recommended vacuuming intervals are like?
adaptive L1 cache could be. L1 shared through all CUs.Yes they are both RDNA2, was just toying as the post deserved it
I also dont think ps5 will have big pC like 128 MB or whatever the rumour is cache either on the GPU. Zen2 has bigger CPU cache as well on teh cPU side.
Consoles wont do big caches to the pC extent, but ps5 will have something to help I believe.
Its a massive heatsink but its not liquid or a vapour chamber................sorry folks i think we are in for a jet engine again
3.1 Million views if a smartly dressed Japanese man unscrewing some electronics.
Probably start by asking yourself why you don't own a basic screw driver and go from there
If you don't have a screwdriver on hand for anything then you're screwed.I haven't seen anyone ask, does the PS5 come with a full tool set, because it seems like you will be opening this thing up to do maintenance and add parts to it like with the SSD and even to simply lay it down on its side or are you suppose to provide your own tools, just asking for a friend.
Why is there a playstation 5 building in the background? Is this continuing the PS3 building tradition?
I don't think you'd need your car to bring it home... probably something larger like a crane or something.
Seriously though, as someone who's interested in inner workings and all, I am pretty delighted that FINALLY I got to see what I've pre-ordered for.
Same goes to Xbox Series X - that as soon as they had their internal showing of how it's made, I was convinced that I would buy that machine too, even though I skipped Xbox on this current gen.
Yes, it will be LARGE, but I will think of having a super slim AV receiver or sort. (It's smaller than Marantz Slim AV receiver that fit into my current cabinet, so I'm sure it will work find)
Yes, it comes with a full Stanley roll away chest of tools including the required angle grinder and forklift.I haven't seen anyone ask, does the PS5 come with a full tool set, because it seems like you will be opening this thing up to do maintenance and add parts to it like with the SSD and even to simply lay it down on its side or are you suppose to provide your own tools, just asking for a friend.
The CG on this teardown was impressive.But the PS5 isn't real.
Good point, you just reminded me actually.One point that maybe hasn’t been brought up yet:
This thing seems very easy to take apart, which bodes well for potential repair issues in the future.
The CG on this teardown was impressive.
Why is there a playstation 5 building in the background? Is this continuing the PS3 building tradition?
I don't think you'd need your car to bring it home... probably something larger like a crane or something.
Seriously though, as someone who's interested in inner workings and all, I am pretty delighted that FINALLY I got to see what I've pre-ordered for.
Same goes to Xbox Series X - that as soon as they had their internal showing of how it's made, I was convinced that I would buy that machine too, even though I skipped Xbox on this current gen.
Yes, it will be LARGE, but I will think of having a super slim AV receiver or sort. (It's smaller than Marantz Slim AV receiver that fit into my current cabinet, so I'm sure it will work find)
So does this mean when the unit is upright all the liquid metal runs to the bottom lol.
Only one who should read anything about that is you.Liquid metal heat conductor... LIT! People mentioning replacement and corrosion read a fucking chemistry book! 350W is what's blowing my mind though...
Do you mean the back bracket? Every GPU has those.
It just presses the PCB and APU against the heatsink. It even has plastic to protect the capacitors on the back.
The patent was with heat pipes and heatsinks on both sides of the chip.
My phone is 20x more powerful than it. No excuse for this monstrosity whatsoever
You need a left handed screwdriver.I haven't seen anyone ask, does the PS5 come with a full tool set, because it seems like you will be opening this thing up to do maintenance and add parts to it like with the SSD and even to simply lay it down on its side or are you suppose to provide your own tools, just asking for a friend.
Yep, they got this far without any of their engineers considering this despite depicting it standing up and designing a stand to stand it up with.So does this mean when the unit is upright all the liquid metal runs to the bottom lol.
Glad I could help. Let's hope they also assembled it laying downYep, they got this far without any of their engineers considering this despite depicting it standing up and designing a stand to stand it up with.
Luckily, you figured it out and I'm sure they will read this and re-design it before launch.
So does this mean when the unit is upright all the liquid metal runs to the bottom lol.
I thought I saw a smaller heatsink on the opposite side of the mother board in addition to the mother of all heatsink in a console?
Do you know of any?The 22110 is simply the physical dimension...why couldn't you have a 22110 that is gen4?
Jesus. That size may turn off anyone but the most hardcore.
I haven't seen anyone ask, does the PS5 come with a full tool set, because it seems like you will be opening this thing up to do maintenance and add parts to it like with the SSD and even to simply lay it down on its side or are you suppose to provide your own tools, just asking for a friend.
Maybe the plates are necessary.Can we run the PS5 like this, or will taking the plates off ruins the thermal dynamic designs?
Not yet, I'd assume SONY has met with SSD manufacturers and road mapped what is coming over the next 5 years and built accordingly.Do you know of any?
Fuck, I need this in my life. Might have to hit up a fucking scalper.
Question as i truly dont know:
With the SSD being soldered on, what happens when it reaches its read/write limit...will you be able to install and run the OS from a secondary SSD?
Or do SSD not suffer from the read/write limits of the past?
I've been told...on the other hand I play my consoles for a long time...still playing my PS1/2/3 consistently...Pretty sure you won’t reach that limit in your life time for gaming use.
Only one who should read anything about that is you.
There is your not existing corrosion:
Galinstan - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
It also reacts with copper, but resulting alloy is not as brittle.
And there is your not existing degradation:
Liquid Metal Degrading After 6 Months
Hey guys, Recently I've noticed that my cpu temperatures have been consistently going up, and this time I have pictures to prove to myself that I'm not going crazy . As you can see when I first applied the liquid metal to my 8700k (6/1/18), I was getting amazing temperatures with highs in the mid...linustechtips.comLiquid metal in a laptop 1 year on, and temps are terrible.
www.overclock.net
Really? I thought 8GB of GDDR5 RAM in 2013 was quite exotic?I like what sony engineers are cooking. It looks like a premium product, unlike PS4.
Not yet, I'd assume SONY has met with SSD manufacturers and road mapped what is coming over the next 5 years and built accordingly.
Has there been any explanation (or clarification) as to why it seems like the air intake is at the top?
Maybe it's a bad Japanese to closed caption translation. Maybe the fan at the top is actually the exhaust. But if the air intake is at the top, that's just ... bad design?
'The CNN effect'It seems they cannot rise to the occasion or compete fairly, so the only option left is to try and tear down PlayStation with lies, distortion and other cheap tricks.
So much crow was eaten today,i'm afraid that the poor birds have become an endangered species.