{"id":82,"date":"2006-01-10T19:52:30","date_gmt":"2006-01-10T11:52:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.darkmirage.com\/2006\/01\/10\/overclock-your-pc-with-cooking-oil\/"},"modified":"2006-01-10T19:52:30","modified_gmt":"2006-01-10T11:52:30","slug":"overclock-your-pc-with-cooking-oil","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.darkmirage.com\/2006\/01\/10\/overclock-your-pc-with-cooking-oil\/","title":{"rendered":"Overclock your PC with Cooking Oil"},"content":{"rendered":"
Feel free to try this<\/a> at home.<\/p>\n Common sense dictates that submerging your high-end PC in cooking oil is not a good idea. But, of course, engineering feats and science breakthroughs were made possible by those who dared to explore the realms of the non-conventional. Members of the Munich-based THG lab are only too happy to confirm this fact. And not only did we find that our AMD Athlon FX-55 and GeForce 6800 Ultra equipped system didn’t short out when we filled the sealed shut PC case with cooking oil – but the non-conductive properties of the liquid coupled created a totally cool and quiet high-end PC, devoid of the noise pollution of fans. The PC case – or should we say tank – also offered a new and novel way to display and show off your PC components.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Feel free to try this at home. Common sense dictates that submerging your high-end PC in cooking oil is not a good idea. But, of course, engineering feats and science breakthroughs were made possible by those who dared to explore … Continue reading