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| Thread ID: 123666 | 2012-03-09 21:17:00 | Photos Of My Old GF 8800GTS with the dust cover off | Trev (427) | PC World Chat |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1264021 | 2012-03-09 21:17:00 | :) | Trev (427) | ||
| 1264022 | 2012-03-09 22:36:00 | Nice! It's longer than my 8600, probably more powerfull too. When did the 8800 come out? |
goodiesguy (15316) | ||
| 1264023 | 2012-03-09 22:49:00 | Is that card any good? | ChazTheGeek (16619) | ||
| 1264024 | 2012-03-09 22:54:00 | pressf1.pcworld.co.nz | feersumendjinn (64) | ||
| 1264025 | 2012-03-09 23:24:00 | Bloody big heat sink. What would be in the tubing ? :) |
Trev (427) | ||
| 1264026 | 2012-03-10 01:02:00 | I thought it was going to be photos of your old girlfriend (GF) with the dust covers off. Disappointing. | Richard (739) | ||
| 1264027 | 2012-03-10 01:35:00 | 8800GTS was like the best you could buy back in the day right? or was that the 8800GTX or just the GT. I can't remember lol. | icow (15313) | ||
| 1264028 | 2012-03-10 02:58:00 | [QUOTE=Trev;1081298]Bloody big heat sink. What would be in the tubing ? :)[/QUOTE Air and some cooling liquid of some type. Heatpipes use the properties of liquids to make a passive form of heat transfer similar to the active system in a fridge. Liquid is heated at one point by the GPU or CPU and heatblock which causes it to evaporate and travel to the other end of the pipes where it is cooled and condenses causing it to flow back to the hot end and repeat the cycle. I'm not quite sure how they make it work when the pipes are horizontal, but they do. |
dugimodo (138) | ||
| 1264029 | 2012-03-10 02:59:00 | Think it might of been. :) |
Trev (427) | ||
| 1264030 | 2012-03-12 06:27:00 | Pretty dust free...Nice | Gobe1 (6290) | ||
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