i really wish youd do a video dedicated to old janky watercooling solutions how people in the 90s and early 00s repurposed car parts etc to cool pc parts. Its so interesting but ive never seen anyone do a video about the history.
@ryanhamstra492 жыл бұрын
That would be cool!
@FishinMagik2 жыл бұрын
I concur!
@nazmulfahad30442 жыл бұрын
I can only imagine the level of satisfaction one got after the diy water cooling system was successfully built back then ngl
@bikerboy3k2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in those times and I've never even heard of it. Where you from?
@popanda36522 жыл бұрын
I love those builds
@AK902 жыл бұрын
Oh Hey I made it into the video :D Some more info: The fountain pump was submersible and had a UV light on it, if you look closely you can see the socket on the left. The big black box is a reservoir from a Zalman Reserator XT and the water block is a Zalman ZM-WB5 also from that kit. And yes I still have the Reserator XT fully working but not in use :P
@knghtbrd2 жыл бұрын
Okay, I really feel like Jay's keyboard/mouse mat vs. GN's modmats vs. Linus's desk pads really sums up the three channels. Linus is like "yahhhh colors! RGB! Oontz, oontz, oontz!" GN's like, "okay, we're gonna spend 45 minutes explaining what each wire does and what all the components are so when you get your [STUFF.] from Gigabyte, you'll know what exploded." And Jay's like "Here's a keyboard. And… a mouse. There. Go play games er somethin'."
@usefulidiot212 жыл бұрын
I agree. And being a mechanical engineer, it makes sense that I have the GN one, though I like all three channels.
@Redbikemaster2 жыл бұрын
@@usefulidiot21 I'm only an engineering student drop out but I'd still want the GN one. It wasn't the engineering that made me drop out lol
@reedlarson3022 жыл бұрын
What about Bitwits mats?
@knghtbrd2 жыл бұрын
@@reedlarson302 I dunno, I follow Paul, but not really Kyle. Probably a great guy, but his videos don't strike a chord with me.
@blze00182 жыл бұрын
I love janky systems. The creativity of people, whether out of need or laziness, is always a treat.
@kingjoe3rd2 жыл бұрын
7:38 I don't get how Jay didn't understand what was so janky about that setup. It's obvious that the PC case is sitting on one of the most rickety shelves I have ever seen and I know it's rickety because I have the same one sitting next to me. I wouldn't set my router on it let alone a heavy ass tower.
@SharienGaming2 жыл бұрын
and you can clearly see how much the board is bending under the weight XD i was like "will it break?" XD it was as if he was looking at the monitor and thought that was the PC XD
@camiblack12 жыл бұрын
when here did a close-up on the retro gaming collection and the Mobo Box was showing the angle thejanky shelf was at was giving me such bad anxiety I stopped the video.
@bazzakrak2 жыл бұрын
Was also my thought of it, bit of a shame that Jay missed it
@PotterPlaysGaming2 жыл бұрын
My apologies for making such a late reply..I wanted to comment I just had to move my almost if not 50 pound pc (ASUS Helios tower) off of my desk, It's so heavy it rocks and shakes both of the desks that I tried setting it on..,I havent been able to find anything that can hold it :/
@poketcg15922 жыл бұрын
Gotta take risks sometimes my dude.
@angel4hire2 жыл бұрын
Josh Bell's jank was the particle board book case it's sitting on and the bow. I've watched a 5 gallon aquarium take so many of those out. Side note, I did a submerged mineral oil build in '96. Messy, but fun.
@Lemurion2872 жыл бұрын
I was coming here to say just that...
@bepbep74182 жыл бұрын
I had a water cooled setup back then myself, I've always wanted to do a 3M Novec build.
@Drummin0032 жыл бұрын
I couldn't understand why Jay or Phil didn't see the danger in that book case and the fact that the top was sagging about an inch from where it probably started. As soon as they put the picture up it was one of those "no, no, no, No, NO" moments.
@gorkskoal93152 жыл бұрын
OOH! DUUUDE lets here! how well did it work? wouldn't that nuke anything plastic on it: ya know like fans and ram holders?
@gorkskoal93152 жыл бұрын
and wasn't that when slashdot was still a thing?
@TheMaristBoy2 жыл бұрын
The sad part about the first one is that it's a lot cleaner than a lot of completed builds we've seen
@killertruth1862 жыл бұрын
And has one of the most sought after GPUs.
@ZaMonolith19862 жыл бұрын
And painted the frame black
@MyCoolStrawSir2 жыл бұрын
For any one wondering what Semi truck that was. It is a Freightliner Cascadia. I can tell by the cabinets and the window up at the top above the monitor. I think it's a 2018 or newer model. Those were very nice and very powerful. It does rock like a boat.
@LavenderSystem692 жыл бұрын
It's a 2016. Those are literally identical cabinets to what I had in my first truck lol
@Redbikemaster2 жыл бұрын
Oh man I remember my Cascadia days. I don't miss those things. I'd joke with friends that they built the interior with eBay posts. Running a KW now that's my own.
@raginOKCTHUNDER2 жыл бұрын
7:20 I think he was referring to his pc literally bending the shelf it was sitting on.
@eskieguy93552 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: Back in the early days of radio, there'd be a water feature in front of the transmitter house, with fountains, which was used to cool the transmitter. Considering the God level voltages involved, combined with pipes full of water, and our lack of knowledge at the time, it would have scared the hell out of me to be in that building when it was running.
@seaninman38992 жыл бұрын
I ran console in my rig for years. Had a great setup with my Xbox 360 and then my PS4. Couldn't have done all my time without it. Always wanted to run a PC setup. Problem is wattage requirement and battery drain. Unless you owned your truck and could dump money into a battery, charging system and or a side mounted generator. PC gaming just requires to much energy demand to be feasible for most of your run of the mill truckers. Thank God for energy efficient televisions, consoles and mobile hotspots. Made me look back at the days when I was lucky to have a crap laptop or portable DVD player and made time on the road much more livable. Thanks for the nostalgia trip!
@aravindpallippara15772 жыл бұрын
You could go with some high efficiency parts and have a system that's capable of playing recent games within 300W reasonably. Watch out for amd's 6000 series desktop apus with ddr5 ram - they will absolutely be great igpus to game with
@LavenderSystem692 жыл бұрын
Am I the only one who idles the company truck if I wanna do some gaming? Gotta keep the broom closet cool if you wanna keep your hardware cool, and it also solves the battery drain problem...
@seaninman38992 жыл бұрын
@@LavenderSystem69 unfortunately I worked for a company for a decade that had Idle limiters. One time I got a Volvo that I could cancel the idle. Other than that. Unless it was over 78 or under 36 degrees. I was out of luck.
@LavenderSystem692 жыл бұрын
@@seaninman3899 Most of the time, all you had to do was wedge something between the driver seat and the throttle, so you could bump the RPMs just enough to trick the truck into thinking it wasn't just sitting there idling... hell, most trucks I've been in, you can set the cruise control at idle, and it overrides the shutdown timer
@KaitouKaiju2 жыл бұрын
You could def get away with an efficient ITX build dedicated to gaming and media
@TheLukemcdaniel2 жыл бұрын
Those rubber tabs for fans have been around a while. I'm pretty certain you can reuse most, but some are sorta single use. Supposedly, they help with noise reduction by preventing vibration transference. It's a LOT easier than having to thread the fans' holes, you just stick it through and pull till the catch part pops out the other side.
@blahorgaslisk77632 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty certain Arctic used to provide those with their fans ten years or so ago. And I have a feeling Noctua used to have them. It's been years since I've used those rubber pull tabs though.
@Celician832 жыл бұрын
Hey @Jayz2cents glad you didnt notice the heavy fully custom loop computer, sitting on the bookshelf that the top shelf was sagging, but thanks for not going too hard on my setup. Also, the desk is a repurposed Sofa table we inherited from my wife's grandma.
@aaroncarrillo72 жыл бұрын
I actual said out loud, "Is Jay too distracted by all the retro games to notice the tower sitting there?!?!".
@Celician832 жыл бұрын
@@aaroncarrillo7 it is distracting. The NES was over by the TV in those pics, plugged in.
@Druid_Plow2 жыл бұрын
1:50 Those tabs look like they came from a box for something like an RC car. To reinforce the places where they run the twist ties through the cardboard.
@benzero2 жыл бұрын
They are actually metal "straight brackets." Got a whole pack from Amazon and used them to secure the radiator and power supply as well. The final design will actually replace some of them with L brackets to make things more compact.
@Druid_Plow2 жыл бұрын
@@benzero are you the builder? If so I would love to see the finished product.
@benzero2 жыл бұрын
@@Druid_Plow Yup, I am :) I will try to remember to post some pictures when it's done, heh
@Druid_Plow2 жыл бұрын
@@benzero nice. Good luck with it bro.
@benzero2 жыл бұрын
@@Druid_Plow Thanks!
@MoldyStir-Fry2 жыл бұрын
The coolest tractor trailer setup I saw was a 42" tv mounted to the sloped roof of the cab and the Xbox tucked into one of the cabinets. He also had all the cables run behind the interior panels and audio was run through the truck's sound system (which was of course far from stock)
@BURTONizAjerK2 жыл бұрын
Such an entertaining series. I love when you review average peeps systems. Jenky or not, cool af. Keep this series alive.
@gwils78792 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I don't think most of hate a janky system as much as Jay does. lol
@Drummin0032 жыл бұрын
This was a great video. As soon as Jay said burninator, TROGDOR! was the first thing that came to mind and I'm glad Jay didn't disappoint. It's been a long time since I've thought about HomeStarRunner. Phil out-dad-joking Jay and Jay just walking away. That cable management debacle made me laugh because even as messy as I am, I couldn't allow something to be that unorderly or chaotic.
@MeruXYZ2 жыл бұрын
Of course that came to your mind. That's literally where is from. "When Jay said toothpaste, I totally thought about brushing my teeth! Lol! 😆"
@usefulidiot212 жыл бұрын
Anybody who likes Homestar Runner and Strongbad is alright with me.
@freddywestside37632 жыл бұрын
I want to see you guys do a frame like the PVC one that's functional to the water cooling. Use copper pipe as a distribution/reservoir and tap the GPU and CPU into it. I'm sure you'll find a place for the rad(s).
@thiagopepper2 жыл бұрын
You sir, you are a genius. Definitely want to see that happen
@lordgarth12 жыл бұрын
Jay if you are finding wood harder to get you should talk to your doc.
@alainmilette64602 жыл бұрын
There's also a guy at my gym who says he can help with that! Like in a steroid kind of way not ......... ahhhh nevermind.... curse my twisted mind!
@DaboInk842 жыл бұрын
I would LOVE to see you build out a system with old junk and parts like the old days, please do it!
@Sabrinahuskydog2 жыл бұрын
Linus already did it with an old janky water cooler. That's why Jay won't do it.
@aidenbuterbaugh14782 жыл бұрын
@@Sabrinahuskydog but jay WILL do it, just wait and see
@drasticbread2492 жыл бұрын
I'm sure that Josh Bell was referring to the cheap bookshelf from Target that the actual PC is sitting on top of. Notice the top of the bookshelf bending under the weight.
@ianchristmas2 жыл бұрын
I had one of those fall from less bending. Not too much damage when it's filled with paperbacks. Unlike a place to casually rest a pile of knives.
@SwervingLemon2 жыл бұрын
Oh my god! That second one! I took apart a water fountain to make a water cooler for one of the first P90 processors off the line! We later just threw the whole board into an oil bath, but the watercooler water cooler worked better. Then, someone in the group had the idea to use the watercooler setup to cool the oil and the pump caught on fire.
@anticlockwisepropeller73792 жыл бұрын
4:37 I had that mouse! It was my first ever optical mouse! It was such a novelty after having used rollerballs for years lol
@BansheeBunny2 жыл бұрын
1:16 Love this concept. He should buy an inexpensive case to cut out the motherboard tray with the entire back for IO shield, power supply mount, rear fan mount and PCIe slot brackets, then build the walnut case around it.
@benzero2 жыл бұрын
Too easy ;)
@TheLordNugget2 жыл бұрын
13:55 I used to have those speakers. Not bad, not great, just good. Yeah, they were the ones that reminded me that I was poor and had been spoiled by my pops' high end stereo system. Yeah, once you've heard the sound of some good quality speakers that cost $2k each, it's hard to listen to computer speakers.
@Haargeroya2 жыл бұрын
It's me! I enjoyed those speakers for about 8 months until the right channel died and instead of repairing them I just bought a decent pair of bookshelf speakers
@technikchaot2 жыл бұрын
11:15 The first Flatscreen of my father (I was too young to have some PC stuff) was manufactured in 2006. Yes this is not one of the early flatscreens but still. And it works still I just replaced a year ago some caps on the power supply pcb in it and I hope it will work for another atleast 4 years to make the 20 years complete.
@xenorias97242 жыл бұрын
My first water-cooled setup was a Pentium 4 "Extreme Edition" (lol!) cooled with a Danger Den CPU block. The plumbing was made from Tygon clear tubing and all fittings/collars came from the plumbing aisle of my local Home Depot. The radiator was a heater core from a 1993 Mercury Topaz, which would fit 2 x 120mm fans almost perfectly. Another popular radiator back then was the Pontiac Bonneville heater core, but the Tempo/Topaz cores were much easier and cheaper to get. I know I scrapped that radiator long ago, but I think I still have that DD CPU block somewhere. I may also have an old GPU block from DD as well. If you're going through with that "retro water-cooled" video, I can try to hunt them down for you. That is authentic stuff from 2004-2005-ish!!
@xuser482 жыл бұрын
I have the parts of an old P4 setup. The radiator came from some A/C. The block was milled out of copper at the local uni and then a Grundfos circulator pump. I haven't used it.
@Redbikemaster2 жыл бұрын
I should've sent in my home server. I didn't know you were doing another one lol As a trucker, I'm impressed how well you described our situation.
@Airdown2 жыл бұрын
I had to give up on my Alienware with an intel 3820 a year ago, and I tried to save as many parts from it as I could. Only problem is that cases have changed a lot, and neither my psu nor optical drive would fit in the new case. I ROUTED ALL THE CABLES AROUND THE OUTSIDE OF THE CASE, and had the disc drive sitting on top above the exhaust. The thing looked like a fire hazard express, and it didn't help that the power supply kept falling off the desk while making horrendus buzzing noises.
@jonathanwessner34562 жыл бұрын
that was why i had to build my son in laws new system in a new case. Nothing would fit except their parts
@amogusamogus84902 жыл бұрын
cases havent changed. You bought a machine with propietary parts
@aul0s2 жыл бұрын
A PSU would not be one of the priority items I'd save from a built to cost prebuilt, but I guess in this market we've been having you probably want to save every dollar when going DIY.
@cutsprings_kyle2 жыл бұрын
as someone who recently built an open air pc case out of sams club cutting boards, i really enjoyed this one. something about “making it work” type of projects is fantastic
@theolang42862 жыл бұрын
I love these setup reaction videos, would be great if you could do more of them.
@WebbTech12 жыл бұрын
For me, out of all of the "jank" featured here...the PVC pipe case build was the best of the bunch...as just a cool idea. I wouldn't personally do it, but yeah...really cool!
@tuttocrafting2 жыл бұрын
Jay do you remember when people was building custom heatpipes in home to increase the efficiency of those old aluminum fins radiators? The memories of those games coolers... I did shit like that, and i still do! Who had a internal fan mounted in the chassis anchored using metal wire using some chassis holes for a parallel/serial port... If only YT would allow to post pictures....
@JCFIV52 жыл бұрын
Please do that “how we used to do water cooling back in the day” video! That would be awesome, take us along to the scrap yards!
@channelunavailable85452 жыл бұрын
when he said "My time of the month is all month" I felt that
@killerdoxen2 жыл бұрын
I used to be a truck driver and I had an itx rig in my truck with a 24” monitor. Even played VR in it, but I had to be careful and tuck away the monitor because I wrecked one playing it. Had a large RAM mount setup to hold the monitor. Made it easy to move it out of the way.
@mortagom2 жыл бұрын
I also remember when we had to make everything for liquid cooling even the water blocks and hope we did not crack the exposed CPU Die when installing it. I think my first store bought water block came from Danger Den.
@QuickWeasel2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, so, I wrote above that that weird piece of "industrial" metal Jay was weirded out about is actually from a Noctua air-fan setup, and it's usually installed on the back of the motherboard so you don't crack your CPU while installing a giant hunk of metal on top of it. So I find it fitting (heh) that it was used to hold down the CPU cooler block. :D
@cooky8422 жыл бұрын
Respect for the trucker picture. Myself back in the day i made a shelf i could put on the dash and the side passenger door to hold my laptop on my downtime. For a while i had an Xbox and a monitor i would put on the dash. Poor monitor vibrated so much against the front seat i made a hole through the screen. I can't wait for the steam deck tho, that thing will be AWESOME for us trucker/gamers.
@_tuxedocat2 жыл бұрын
I literally just disconnected my dual PC's to redo my desk and cable management. Hopefully I get some good JANKY ideas! 😸
@thatonedog8192 жыл бұрын
Lol this video is reminding me of my first car. The hydrolics in the trunk was broken (hatch back) so I had to hold it up anytime I wanted to use it. The antenna broke off so I had no radio. I had to use a fork to move the ac/heat slide. It always froze shut in the winter. I had an after market radio which wasn't terrible. If it got too cold, I couldn't roll up the window and all winter long I had to physically grab the window to help it close. But by far, the worst part was when I couldn't put my car in park so I spent months each time it happened putting my car in neutral and throwing on the ebreak. But because it wasn't on park, I couldn't remove the key so I left the key in and had to take the radio out so it wouldn't kill my battery each time I left my car. All that said, I loved that car. She handled perfectly well in the winter, even better than any truck or suv I've driven and leagues better than my current car. Her name was Brandi and I still miss her.
@ftyhbv1234562 жыл бұрын
that copper water block is from laser water cooling system. Back on the day you could buy cheap laser water cooling components. I've build custom dual loop with two pumps two radiators two water blocks on GPU and one on one on cpu with one common res for just over 100 bucks. And it worked way better than my current 360 aio that I bought for the same price.
@opoxious15922 жыл бұрын
This is my favorite topic. I can watch this all day long!!
@PullingWrenches2 жыл бұрын
Haha got a full dose of Phil cracking up in the background today, always gets me laughing.
@TheRealPDizzle2 жыл бұрын
Unhinged Systems' 2001 setup is my favorite. Take me back to those good old days. The best days. What's really crazy is I had that exact same sound system. Looking at that picture is like time traveling, man. Wow.
@Capt4Edwards2 жыл бұрын
Phil is half the reason why I watch JayzTwoCents. I hope he's paid well and if he's not, GIVE THAT MAN A RAISE!!!!!
@americansmark2 жыл бұрын
When I was a long haul trucker, I had a similar setup. I had an Xbox 1 in my rig with a 20" TV and satellite TV. It was a good time.
@DantesGrill2 жыл бұрын
Speaking of 8:10, my brother did that when he used my computer as a kid. He came running, yelling about how my garbage PC had broken down when he had accidentally turned off the power. He also had the same kind of office chair for his own PC later on. It also snapped and he flopped to the ground. That's a pretty funny coincidence.
@thatotherguy1862 жыл бұрын
9:20 That PVC one is actually kinda cool. Also, I know MANY technicians that have beater cars. It has more to do with, we know it still runs and we don't need to do the work right this minute, lol. That small oil leak is no big deal just throw in another quart ill fix it later. When you do it all day, ya know.
@hyzenthlay71512 жыл бұрын
Oh I've done the dual PSU build, with the PSU primary rails soldered together so they would work from a single mains cable, and a car relay switch to make one PSU turn on the other, by grounding pin 13 of the secondary PSU when 12V went through the relay from the primary PSU. I found it the best solution back then as I was using several Seagate Cheetah SCSI drives.
@Michplay2 жыл бұрын
13:20 credits for this joke👌🏻👍🏻 good one
@runejonassen38932 жыл бұрын
8:50 been there, done that... As a wake-up call, it's unbeatable! The bump on the head was just a bonus.
@CaptainPhatt2 жыл бұрын
LOL that was awesome. My Jankiest build was back in 2001 when I built a working PC from a bunch of thrown out PC parts that a friend of mine, who was a digital video editor, that worked for the company that would produce copies of movies to be sent out to the cinemas, brought to my place one Saturday morning early in 2001. He actually scavenged through a dumpster full of PC's parts that the Tech guys had thrown out and brought them to my place and said "Do you think you can build a working PC from all of this crap?". So we set about testing all of the parts to find out which ones still worked and then with a couple of my own spare parts managed to build a PC that could actually run WIN 98se rather well. Then in typical Aussie fashion we had a BBQ and got drunk to celebrate a successful DIY PC build, and the best part was that the PC we built continued working for several years being used as a server to host a MechWarrior 4 dedicated server.
@DMF4112 жыл бұрын
The little black tabs for the fans are rubber anti vibration mounts, they are impressive for something so simple.
@RPGBnB2 жыл бұрын
I want to see a version of this where people tried to build the normal way, it failed, then they did a jank rig of it and it somehow worked. Like having to zip tie fans into a case because the screw holes to install them caused clearance issues or stuff like that.
@mukaheyoh2 жыл бұрын
15:00 I literally went to my door to see who was knocking, haha. Love the jank, suddenly I don't feel so bad about my setup. Thanks Jay & crew!
@sahhull2 жыл бұрын
I've got a car radiator, a pond pump and a home made water block on my Ryzen 9. It works great.
@woodworkerroyer84972 жыл бұрын
8:49 Maybe Josh is a werewolf and chews on the chair when the moon is out....
@jvmbatista2 жыл бұрын
I can't... The moment Jay got the joke and the jay.exe stop responding moment after is just priceless...
@rmiller00312 жыл бұрын
1976 chevette heater core. That was a popular one for water-cooling back in the day. Welded on my own barbs. That's what I used for single 120 rads. I sold them as a side gig for awhile.
@spuds76772 жыл бұрын
Years ago, I used a Danger Den water block, with an aquarium submersible pump, in a 5 gallon aquarium with an oil cooler for the rad, that was about 8"x10". I had the cooler laying flat onto of the aquarium with 2x 90mm case fans mounted to the rad. It was a pretty small setup for the day for sure. I built like 4 or 5 of those setups for my buddies. My PC at the time, was an Athlon 750 over clocked to a 1000 with a Voodoo 5 5500 Video card... That system was awesome for the time. I still have the Voodoo and water block some where in my boxes of old parts.
@IAmTheDerg2 жыл бұрын
14:10 I believe that's a Behringer UMC404HD Interface. Mix and Headphones on top and the bottom knob is the volume for the main outs for studio monitors. Great little interface!
@SmallTownSpells2 жыл бұрын
"you HAVE to have good air flow" me: *sweating nervously as I looked at my almost decade old pc that has somehow lasted with a single case fan* ...yes I knew that...
@bewing77 Жыл бұрын
Old video, just have to add; one of my old builds, circa 1999 had hardcore OC and similarly hardcore cooling to cope with this; back then, fans tended to be much smaller than today, with 80 mm being the most common chassis fan, and CPU fans was commonly even smaller. The one on my CPU cooler was a 40 mm "Delta" fan which was pretty legendary at its time for it's cooling capability. Problem was, it achieved this by spinning at like 12k RPM and it sounded like an industrial vacuum cleaner. To make it even more effective I had this idea that it was a bad idea to use the already hot air inside the chassis, so I took a Dremel to the side panel of the beige case and cut a hole, then made a sort of duct down to the CPU fan, so that it sucked in air from the outside. This setup actually did work really well, but you almost had to wear ear protection to be able to stand it. Over the next couple of years, as the market for DIY computers emerged and computer cases went from a selection between small, medium or large beige box to black becoming an option without having to spray it yourself and more enthusiast features popping up, I saw quite a few repeat the idea with a hole in the side panel, however it commonly had a fan in it and not my amazing ducts. Sadly, this was before digital photography was a mainstream thing and it seems I didn't think the computer was something worthy of wasting a frame of film on, so there are no images.
@poemanx72972 жыл бұрын
The pvc build is awesome, not janky at all 9:35
@starrims2 жыл бұрын
Thanks you :)
@elliothunter25792 жыл бұрын
I love the "I gotchu - Phil" with the conversion - always refreshing to see bits of his silly humour in the edits :)
@johndododoe14112 жыл бұрын
Still using two 50cm wide IKEA cabinets as a rack, with hand made brackets to hold the rails at precisely 19" width. Clamped together with various IKEA extra parts from other cabinet models.
@BradfordGuy2 жыл бұрын
The whole desktop, not just the PC at 13:33 hands-down takes the 1st place blue ribbon, followed by the 4:28, (hold the cheese) *"Triple Meat Treat" Peter Piper laptop! LMFAO!* The IT guy for the blue ribbon PC definitely needs to take a course in cable management! The PC at 1:27 is totally awesome! *The design of his jig really look nice! If the final build turns out as good as this, it will be a true showpiece!* Hell, I'd take some good glue, some nice real walnut veneer and finish it as is!
@oriolgonzalez93282 жыл бұрын
13:15 Because you could do with a shortcut to the moment Phil out-dad-jokes Jay
@scottschmidt92922 жыл бұрын
Great video. I'd love to see a techtuber version of junkyard wars now.
@wzrdcleave2 жыл бұрын
please, pleaaaase go to the junk yard and make a build / video on it! I would love to see content like that! Keep up the great work. Love what you do!
@michaleiso68952 жыл бұрын
Perfect video guys !! some of those "jank"" rigs took me way back to my childhood when "VOODOO" was a badass GPU :) omg I´m old :D !! LOVE YOU GUYS !!
@Adrian-sw3nv2 жыл бұрын
The first pc, with MDF, the fan brackets look like brackets used to mount server racks together. APC server cabinets to be specific, I’ve had those laying around everywhere in the datacenters at work.
@bb555555552 жыл бұрын
Jay you won me over with this video. this was a fun video to watch
@jpteknoman2 жыл бұрын
since you mentioned it, the laws about truck drivers are the same all over the world. safety regulations are very strict on this job because if the driver is tired he could cause an accident that could do a lot of damage both to property and people, not to mention losing the cargo (which is the most important issue for the company).
@Synthetic-Chicken2 жыл бұрын
The OG Gameboy not color @8:34 sold it for me. Thats some nostalgia.
@able7242 жыл бұрын
I'd watch a video on old school water cooling. Some others of us would as well I'm sure. Always good to get the history of where it came from.
@gucky47172 жыл бұрын
The most Jank i have is a 92mm FAN strapped on the outside of my NR200P to cool the M.2 on the backside of the Board. It is mounted with the rubber doodads from Noctua through the mesh Panel. The cable if routed through the Vertical GPU Slot on the back, which is a 3D-Printed part to replace the Vertical GPU Slots. And no the 3DPart doesn't have a hole for the cable, it is bent creating a gap...
@Laggyness2 жыл бұрын
Back in 2006. I remember watercooling my cpu with a thermaltake gpu waterblock that I had ziptied to the cpu. Connected the loop together with some clear hose from home depot, a 12"x 18" transmission cooler from Napa, and a fountain waterpump that I placed in a plastic peanut container from Costco. I was close enough to the window with my setup so In the winter time I could just crack open the window a little but and the temps would sit around 40F on the cpu. Ambient temps outside in the winter were about 8F. It was so cool but so unnecessary at the same time.🤣
@RadosawUlatowski2 жыл бұрын
1:55 I don't know if they are plastic or sillicon. I'm using those ones: 'AABCOOLING Anti Vibration Rubber Screws' and I would love to see comparision between them and normal screws with/without sillicon rings :)
@ZeusTheIrritable2 жыл бұрын
I always enjoy seeing what truckers come up with to keep themselves busy in their down time. Not sure why. I don't know any truckers...
@winceton2 жыл бұрын
The rubber tabs on the first build come with bequiet fans. You can use them instead of screws. supposed to help with vibrations to keep the fan a bit quieter.
@cjm50022 жыл бұрын
Jay, when you do the salvage diy water cool build just do what old guys like us did back then. The process hasnt changed a bit so do exactly what you did before to source parts. The old pumps and fridge condenser combo is still the same, but the parts are better now. I encourage that video just so the kiddies these days can really see the meaning of 'jenk'!
@w4hid2 жыл бұрын
13:01 I think that guy broke his tampered glass side panel and had to improvise
@W1nt3rFox2 жыл бұрын
I would absolutely love an old jank style video, it may well get more engagement thatn you expect
@WizardNumberNext2 жыл бұрын
The most hard disk drives I ever had in the computer for storage (not just testing) were 12. The problem was I couldn't even touch this computer as the balance of power was "touchy". You touch it, and some drive instantly started to have power issues. And this was very hard to resolve. I am so happy that molex is a connector of by gone era
@ACXR62 жыл бұрын
Phil has the best laugh in existence! Makes my day everytime I hear it! Never change Phil! =D
@NuclearHeadshot Жыл бұрын
14:15 yes, Jay, that's the typical mechanics car. Not even joking, they're competent enough to know you can leave issues until they have to be fixed, and have no real interest in putting in the work for their daily without getting paid.
@richardhockey84422 жыл бұрын
14:36 - the cover for the seat - mine is doing the same thing, it just dissolves over time (cheap fake leather, might be related to the fact I've basically spent the bulk of the last two years sitting in it working from home) and peels off the seat and arm rests
@hernan95452 жыл бұрын
Open Build should go next, and maybe you can borrow ideas for your personal build.
@guido114502 жыл бұрын
8:22 I've had that happen to me. The way the chair broke, I was on my back, arms still on the armrests, legs up on the seat. I went from sitting normally to sitting laying down. lol
@saintapoc40312 жыл бұрын
the jenkyness of the retro gaming guy is the heavy ass computer on top of a bowing bookshelf you blind guy! love your content btw
@twintarbos2 жыл бұрын
I've had jankier setups than most of these, I used the same pc case from 2005 until 2019, lost every panel on it over the years and eventually I bought an AIO that I just held onto the front of the case with a shoe string, I also discovered in 2012 or so that if you bend a graphics card just ever so slightly it will still work, and you'll also have room for another hard drive in your case(the same one with the shoe-string budget radiator)
@Midcon772 жыл бұрын
I love this videos! I actually get inspired to do my case with things like this. Thanks Team JayzTwoCents!
@justinmcwilliams67592 жыл бұрын
I used a Danger Den ceramic pump, Peltier unit, and a transmission cooler with two 120mm fans for a chill water cooling unit on an LGA775 rig once. I also put an AMD ATX build in an original Xbox shell, complete with an ATI GPU. I had to cut an L shaped slot in the top of the shell to allow the GPU to fit.
@BiohazardRecords2 жыл бұрын
17:35 really nice old skool aquarium water pomp next to an power brick
@jerradlwells2 жыл бұрын
I had the same radio as the guy he was showing at 10:36. remember getting it for christmas in 2000.
@BenLJackson2 жыл бұрын
I missed the widow but I have a PC case I made out of stained wood for my Minecraft Server. Looks professional. Laser cut side panels, hinged door, 4x120mm fans, 10TB storage, and HVAC air filters, in less than a cubic foot. Why? The cost of materials was half the cost of a metal PC case and the results were stunning.
@emilymarriott59272 жыл бұрын
Our first computer was an old Windows 98 Packard Bell computer. We had added a Voodoo 3 card, a CD burner, and an extra hard drive to it. The thing is, the case didn't have space for a second hard drive and the power supply didn't have an extra plug for that hard drive. We ended up using the metal grate that had blocked off the 5.25" bay as a way to mount the hard drive below the existing drive bays, and we spliced an extra plug into the power supply. Somehow, the power supply never had any issue powering everything through the whole life of that computer.
@shawnsheppard14472 жыл бұрын
Would love to see a video of you showing us those old school water-cooling techniques. I have a couple Dell XPS computers circa 2006 that I would love to modify for the purpose of experimentation.