@@envidygaming3990 36°C is way to hot, the body just thermal throtels. Get that temp down as far as possible, unless you got nand storage, it likes to stay warm for optimal performance. A good way to cool down while it's Winter is the local duck pond. Just Chuck the Bad boy in and see the temps fall
@@Speedy2222 same lol The first thing I thought when seeing the "edge finder on the cnc router" idea was "it's gonna blow up" 10 seconds later "it blew up immediately" lmao
There is more to it then just guessing. use a machinery hand guide. It has all the information you need to calculate the proper speed and feed for the material and bit you are using. Don't just guess. www.amazon.com/Machinerys-Handbook-29th-Erik-Oberg/dp/083112900X
@@steven51278616 Well the Video right here is Part 2. Part 1 is taking the camera apart. Then there is the reassembly Livestream. Part 2. Is the construction of the Waterblocks etc. Part 3 is assembly and testing
Yeah that really needed a Part 1 in the title. I get it's a long project and might take multiple parts to do it justice, and I'm fine with that. But you need to make your intentions clear.
Right sure, because you have to be an engineer to not do math. I swear, internet engineers say some of the least intelligent things you will ever read. As a UA-cam comment engineer, I don't approve.
And he was using the "up side" of the sander too instead of the down side....anyone who is professional tool user like myself must be cringe watching LTT videos....I know I do whenever they use tools
I think this is entirely why we haven’t gotten a lot of it. Between everything else Alex does, he’s likely been occupied with it for ages. Now that it’s done, hopefully we’ll get a lot more.
PBMS123 Yeah but like actually teaching someone to know what they’re doing takes money, time, and other useless things LTT can’t be bothered to actually do. It takes away from the sweet, sweet ad revenue.
Please don't. They way there are handling these machines means that if they keep using them, we are gonna see videos with fingers and other body parts missing.
Linus: Gets mad when staff buys a item to review that is $5 more expensive due to the color Also Linus: Build a manufacturing plant to water cool a super expensive camera.
Hey it means that with this heavier modification, the camera operator will have the ability to haul about the heavier mass for longer periods without the red flashing heat warnings and shutting down like it's known to do with lengthier shoots
they're not terribly big to begin with, and really also not too heavy either. And as other homie said, these things are known to give you a good ol warning that it has overheated and you gotta wait a while... if this can keep you from having to switch cameras or stop production and save time, I would take that over it dying every 40 minutes or so on a warm day.
As @@producerevan88 said they don't weigh as much as you think, the riging, lightighting, lenses, add-ons to support the weight of said lenses with motorised controls, and supplementary Batteries, that's where the weight is, with one of there "backpack" back mounts a camera operator really won't mind the extra 1.5kg at most
Some recommendations from a apprentice machinist 3:01 Using a sanding belt on a block to do what a grinding wheel would be INFINITELY better (and cheaper) at? 6:00 If chips are a concern just setup an air blast to keep the project space clear 8:00 The bridgeport wouldn't been a far better tool to use for the task, you're over engineering it with the router. It's much better to do all that by hand and mechanical stops. 12:00 Remove the handle before you hit that damn button I've had a few experiences with handles flying off the machine (since they're designed to be removable) 13:40 You cutting WAY too deep. You want to cut shallow so you have less wear on the bit. Less wear means less heat build up, which means your project stays cooler and warp, less. You also go through a lot less bits that way 15:45 What did I mention earlier? 16:20 Welcome to being an school machinist 18:50 Yep that's an engineer at work
@@nikolahajdic8952 Thank you very much! I was so confused with what they say all the time. Actually I ended up thinking it was an inside joke that I just don’t get because I’m late to the show.
I know that some people might not appreciate how this channel has developed, from the more consumer-centric, everyday tech review channel, to become a channel that has a more playful, silly and simply 'just because' approach to tech in general - but I've really come to love it. Channels such as this are the reason why my tech interest grew some 8 or 9 years ago, and they're the more likely than not the driving force to why I decided to study engineering in the first place.
IR camera trick, when dealing with shiny surfaces. You can add a light coat of satin black paint. This raises the emissivity of the material. The IR camera then can see it more accurately.
@@Sgtpeterenis Short answer, technically yes. With heat pipes you wouldn't want to cover the points that make contact with cpu heat spreader or heatsink/water block. IR is light (even though we can't see it with our eyes). So when you point a thermal *Camera* at a reflective surface. Not only are you see the IR light it's emitting bit your also seeing IR light from the room reflecting off of the surface thus skewing your readings.
@@Marzec309 oh yes, I'm aware why shiny things and ir cameras don't work together that well. I was just wondering whether paint would have a big impact on heat pipes, though I guess you could just remove it again anyway. And I just remembered that laptop heat pipes are almost always black, so evidently it's fine
Alex: "this is mission critical so I'm not gonna mess about doing it fast, and I'm just gonna file it down" Also Alex: *_messes about doing it fast and cracks a heatpipe_*
Filing would have taken an hour and it would have been done. Also, if you're using a sandpaper and move the object instead of the tool, you might be faster and more accurate.
Taran said, that he is almost never in the comment section, so here I go: When speeding up scenes, it is really cool to let us now how much faster that goes. Please do that next time :)
useless gaming pricks, throwing their money away to degrade and dry off their fucking brains plus making the gaming industry a stable money pumping machine
13:09 FYI, that's a reamer bit, used to ream holes (create a 45 degree relief cut in round holes to break the sharp edge and facilitate a nice "funnel" for any tool or screw you might wish to insert in the hole after). You need a center bit. The stubby fat bit that you'll likely find in the tail stock kit for your lathe. I'm impressed, either way. Far less cringy than i figured this might be...if you ignore the potential for injury, as the adage goes, safety third.
I really hope they just rented this shit they probably won't use a lot and have no idea on how to operate properly. I love their content, but the way these people throw around resources is just becoming obscene.
@@danielschroedinger2090 Nope. It's all their hardware now. But it clearly makes them money. At the very least their other projects cover the fun things they want to do.
And every technician will hate you for not doing the math and screwing up. But we will also hate the engineers for trusting the math and not checking themselves so...
As much as LMG do some daft things from time to time and as much as some people criticise them for a lot of things, you've got admit that some of the stuff they do is damn impressive.
Yeah some of their stuff might be ridiculous and exorbitantly expensive, but at least it's original unlike some channels like jays2cents and paulshardware that just do repetitive PC builds every two weeks.
yeah, when you say that, i don't think you need a ctrl f for life, what you need is an embedded AR solution with with full history. You look at a desk "your phone was here 432 days ago." Select 'phone'. Seach 'current location'.
Awww - the little heatsink at 2:00 minutes is soooo cute. Look at the tiny thing with it's two heatpipes. I want this to be an aftermarket solution for X570 chipsets and VRMs.
Next time on ltt, Watercoling my staff to increase work productivity and also watercooling my wife cause she get hot when she's mad at me sponsor by ek
I've been looking forward to this for a while! Man the things you can do with machining and the right tools, seeing stuff like this makes me want to get into it. :D
"measuring this would be a nightmare" literally only needs a machinist square and calipers. And a depth micrometer if you're really worried about the heights. Considering the amount of money spent on machining tools, having some basic measuring tools doesnt seem too much :D
I know right. I facpalmed when he said he didn´t have a way to measure depth while holding the indicator dial. They have a full machine shop and the thing still looks like a ghetto rigged PC mod. It would almost have been easier to machine the whole thing as one piece instead of attaching it to the original and would have had much better heat transfer performance. Would really only have needed a caliper with depth needle on the back. Or could have painted the part with transfer paint and done a print onto some paper. Scan the paper and let the computer convert it to a 3d part by setting the thickness and depths of the hollow spaces etc. routing those fittings through the side of the water block would also be smarter.
@@excitedbox5705 It's not about the tools. It's about someone who knows what he does. Not to put Alex down but this is nothing you just pick up in few hours.
@@PBMS123 Is not cringe if you know even less about. It worked at the end, so I dont get all this comments about people getting mad cuz he is not using it "properly"
@@nicolaswinter8578 A mill does not care that your face is in front of the machine or if your arm is next to a part. It is critical that you at LEAST read the manual, which the obviously didn't do, either. Breaking tools is expensive and power tapping at such high speeds is plain stupid. Before I got my mill I watched hours of videos and read as many resources that I can. Heck, I haven't even used the mill and I can point out all the unsafe and dumb things that they did. Also, the part the killed that wasn't level, (flat as they called it, it's probably very flat just not level) isn't because they didn't properly secure it to the CNC router. You can see this because the parallel is wobbling like it's at a dance party - obviously didn't tap down their part. All were saying is that they should educate themselves before they break more tools or worse a part flies out and hits one of them. Oh and one more thing, they got climb milling and conv. milling wrong. It wouldn't through the part out to the side and you should never have a set up that throws a part to the side, the force should always go into the hard jaw - another saftey hazard. Just watch a few more tutorials on mill basics and they could have avoided these safety hazards
@@girraiffe How should that even work? "The force should always go into the hard jaw." What if I want to mill the sides all the way around? The force vector is pointing in four different directions then.
@@girraiffe I absolutely agree. It really hurts in my hearth to see such a beautiful bridgeport mill beeing used so carelessly. "Sounds about right" is a recipe for disaster. They should've looked up the proper speeds and feeds/doc for the material and cutter. Manual feeding is somewhat acceptable, but just cranking it because its fun can be very dangerous as well. Parts/the end mill can go flying and so on. I'm a trained carpenter, not a machinist, but I do have a beautiful old Lathe and worked with different metalworking machines in the past. If I had that bridgeport, I would probably tuck in in to sleep every night. Beautiful machine.
Alex: "I'm not a machinist" As a machinist, I agree. Quality content as usual, but the maker videos always make me cringe a bit... lol. Btw, you could've used your chuck for tapping. Without using the chuck key, if you only hand tighten, it will spin around the tap if there is too much resistance (assuming you've hand tightened a proper amount) but will otherwise tap flawlessly. Just make sure you put it in low gear and release your quill lock. Also, keep the quill as close to the top as possible because the spring to bring it back to the top will increase in resistance the further it moves from 0. Also, you can chuck up that fine thread tap. Just put your spindle in neutral (after putting the tap in and running in high speed for a second to make sure it's running true) and then use your hand to rotate the spindle/chuck while lightly applying downward force on the Z-axis handle. The tap will naturally pull you into the part as it cuts, and your tap can't go out of square while tapping. Edit for content.
had to wait a whole year to see alex use the shop! throw in some footage when he makes stuff for other projects, will you? its much more interesting than reviewing phones
@@AluminumHaste thanks and you can tell the difference in a moment if the person gone through one or the other. Especially in the skill fields and triads.
As mechanical engineer I had an internship supporting an electrical engineer making test equipment. The plus for the company, a BS level ME doesn't understand PHD level electrical so I could steal secrets. Basically had to self teach machining. It was ugly to start lol. Helped alot in future classes though. Learn a lot in class but experience helps you use it.
I am so so so so happy to see Alex in the shop! After the shop equipment purchase video it seemed like Linus never mentioned in-house fabrication again, Alex didn't seem to be showing up in videos, and in fact they had a few videos like the Hack Pro in a Mac G5 case where they seemed to have outside fabrication. I was really worried the shop got scrapped or Alex quit or something, so I'm so happy to see him working in the shop and to find out that this has been going on for the past year.
@@RCP-1136 not the age or brand. Taps are hard and brittle. A tapmatic or floating head gives some wiggle so the tap isn't forced to flex etc. For a tiny tap and a few holes hand tap and use the quill to square it up and provide a little down force.
14:38 speed seems waaaay to high. You need to slow it down and use a Jacobs-style chuck, your tap probably wouldn't have snapped since it can spin in the chuck.
When you need to tap 3 small to medium sized holes, there's no justification to do it on a mill, just do it manually, you can go quite fast with enough cutting oil.
@@Taz_Olson I did the same, my family burst out laughing when I realized I had been walking around the house screaming about my lost phone whilst it was in my hand. The human race does some of the funniest things despite being some of the smartest creatures.
Canada is metric, the reason it’s all imperial is that much of the older equipment that they have in their shop was produced In the states back maybe 20, 30, 40 years ago, when the US actually produced a lot of their own stuff and outsourcing was less of a thing lol.
@@DesignerMaker It's an older machine made in the US, so the units are in inches. The DRO (digital read out) showing the location is also in inches, although many can switch between US and metric units.
Another point is that so much oil field stuff was first made in imperial. Probably 80-90% of the stuff in Alberta is imperial and it's way easier to stick with the old system than to buy new tools, make new fixtures, swap machine dials/leadscrews/gears and the like. I prefer metric hands down but I've learned and mostly get to work on imperial anyways
Also, how many thousandths of an inch in 1/16 of an inch? Oh, _not_ a whole number? So actually I need to be accurate to _more_ than a thousandth if I'm going to be back-compatible?
I think it's kind of awesome how Alex taught himself how to use these machines though. It shows how today in the age of youtube tutorials, there really is no excuse anymore for anybody to say "I don't know how to do this".
Bigpumkin much much much slower lol. Small taps like that, I don’t even risk trying to power tap. Just put the tap in a drill chuck, mill in neutral and spin it by hand to keep it straight, then finish with a tap handle.
@@havefun123for I believe it's fine that he was relief winding quickly. They edited out all the cutting turns so you only saw him unturning the threader.
Now I can water cool my 8K red camera too, awesome. Me and my cnc mill, aswell all my other tools have been waiting for that a long time. Thank you Linus for appealing to a bigger audience.
@@tiagoviana263 it was a failed project, they tried cooling all of their workstations in a single custom watercooler that went around the house. This was before they had their own building I think.
As someone who sells second hand audio at a record store, not to make money, just to be able to play with it and make other people happen, I completely get your sentiment. I am also watching this while fixing up an old MSX computer, which helps. LTT without L is a bit like Top Gear without Clarkson, Hammond and May, or like DigitalRev without Kai and Lok. It would change the face of the product so drastically that it may not work. I am always happy to see Riley, Alex, Anthony, Dennis, James. But it's like you are the north and soundbridge keeping it all together. I hope you stay, but I definitely agree with the slow down idea. Starting now. You seem like a cool dad and partner to me and I think Yvonne and the kids deserve all the attention they can handle. So yes. Time for a change. Just not sure if UA-cam is a better place without your involvement, so I am happy you decide to not go too far away, yet. Congrats on TEN MILLION to all of you guys. So well deserved for consistent quality :) (High five on not doing something bad but getting kicked out of class all the time. My high score is 57 times between October 20th and Christmas holidays. You know damn well what that means; You outsmarted your teachers and they couldn't punish you, but they still wanted you gone. )
8:20 That feeling when you lick a piece of paper, stick it to your part, move your tool closer to your part, spin it with your hand and zero out when paper moves.
Just let me tell you: even if you need to file a metal parts for two hours in order to get it done, it's almost always a better idea than doing it the "oh, shit" way.
@@BenDover-zm1mr I'm not sure if that counts as water cooling. To my mind, the blood is the coolant and it carries sweat to the skin which is the rad. Sweat is just making the rad wet.
Alex, when doing power tapping on the mill you want to have some axial float. That's why when you see most machinists power tapping they have the tap in a special floating chuck that can stop if there is too much torque and allow the tap to float in and out. Putting a tap in a R8 collet is a no-no. You'll also see people use a "tap follower" it's just a spring loaded pusher you stick between the spindle and the tap handle so everything stays aligned. And remember, as a machinist, you only get experience after you needed it.
Check out the tools we used at OhCanadaSupply and enter to win a tool kit! at bit.ly/MWKGiveaway
Ok Boomer
nah
Absolute no one, no even one in the whole universe, lets water cool a red camera, but first lets buy a machina station for it
Stop grimacing you....
YAY!!!! Congrats new sponsor!
*Linus’s kid has a fever*
Linus: lets water cool him
Technically speaking we are already water cooled. I know it's a joke, just wanted to throw that fun fact in.
@@envidygaming3990 36°C is way to hot, the body just thermal throtels. Get that temp down as far as possible, unless you got nand storage, it likes to stay warm for optimal performance. A good way to cool down while it's Winter is the local duck pond. Just Chuck the Bad boy in and see the temps fall
clearly, a new sub that never saw whole room water cooling. actually now i feel old that i remember the moving into the old house
Use ice instead of coolant so its SUB ZERO
Kids waterproof, just chuck him into a dry ice pool.
Alex: "Have you ever used a mill before?"
Linus: "I haven't".........now lets water cool the f***k out of it.
Watercooled DRO next.
as a machinist it was very painful to watch this
@@Speedy2222 same lol
The first thing I thought when seeing the "edge finder on the cnc router" idea was "it's gonna blow up"
10 seconds later "it blew up immediately" lmao
There is more to it then just guessing. use a machinery hand guide. It has all the information you need to calculate the proper speed and feed for the material and bit you are using. Don't just guess.
www.amazon.com/Machinerys-Handbook-29th-Erik-Oberg/dp/083112900X
@@peniku8 I sent alex a pm on the forum months back asking if they needed help but " he didn't need any" at the time. i'd love to help them out.
"we water-cooled the RED"
LINUS: Time to retire
Lol. Good one Buck
Can't wait for "WE FINALLY DID IT PT. 2". That's some top notch bait right here.
ikr
Just wait it has a part 3....
In all fairness it did take a year too make. lol
@@steven51278616 Well the Video right here is Part 2. Part 1 is taking the camera apart. Then there is the reassembly Livestream. Part 2. Is the construction of the Waterblocks etc. Part 3 is assembly and testing
Yeah that really needed a Part 1 in the title. I get it's a long project and might take multiple parts to do it justice, and I'm fine with that. But you need to make your intentions clear.
1 year later: "So one of our $100k cameras stopped working"
Edit: *1 week later
I'm happy this finally happened!
Bruh
@@alil1294 It's been so long.....
Technically due to all the extra tools machinery etc it’s more like a $250k camera
ehh with the amount of hours they are being used wouldn't surprise me if one of them failed
"It's so tempting to just not do the math" as an electronics engineer can relate so much that I feel personally attacked
I feel it even just from engineering in school. Final projects was just taping the 2 pieces and making them at the same time from laziness
I can see why my engineer teacher told me I’ll lose my creativity
Same mauricio. It's more of a "feel" for things lol
Right sure, because you have to be an engineer to not do math. I swear, internet engineers say some of the least intelligent things you will ever read.
As a UA-cam comment engineer, I don't approve.
@@flyingtentacle7631 😑🙏
*boy*
Anything: hot
Linus: I'm gonna watercool this man whole career.
Stupid
Pro tip: Wearing gloves is a great way to get your hand pulled into a sander
- A Shop Supervisor
Read "a shop survivor". Kinda fits too
It's also a good way to get wrapped around a lathe or a mill ... do not recommend.
Yeah that made me cringe sooooo hard.
@@lucasimark7992 Same. I literally screamed and paused the video to look for the comment.
And he was using the "up side" of the sander too instead of the down side....anyone who is professional tool user like myself must be cringe watching LTT videos....I know I do whenever they use tools
Imagine being one of the 8k cameras recording this just being forces to watch their friend be ruthlessly mutilated then turned into a cyborg
What you call "ruthlessly mutilated" I call "Upgraded". 😁
The Keeper us humans would call what he said, a joke.
@Jason Bayer who is that in your picture?
the body they used to film this should be renamed to Camora
@@dirtymike69420 JC Denton, the player character and chief protagonist of Deus Ex.
Love the more maker-focused content. Honestly would love more content like this.
They bought what, $50k worth of shop supplies and machinery? Let's get genesis projects moving!
Yeah they should make separate channel for custom diy solutions
I think this is entirely why we haven’t gotten a lot of it. Between everything else Alex does, he’s likely been occupied with it for ages. Now that it’s done, hopefully we’ll get a lot more.
PBMS123 Yeah but like actually teaching someone to know what they’re doing takes money, time, and other useless things LTT can’t be bothered to actually do.
It takes away from the sweet, sweet ad revenue.
@@oyen9476 No. They already have to many channels. just watch if you like or not. No one is obligated to watch every single video or like it
"That was my nickname in college"
*pauses to rethink everything he knows about life*
WHAT 😧
"Final hole here"
I lost it then
This project is incredible, I can only imagine how much this costs in labor. Thanks for doing crazy projects like this that no other channel would.
I'm just going to go ahead and watch this a few times to encourage them to keep using the shop =)
They are going to keep using the shop...
They spent tons of money on it.
@@AG.Floats that's nothing when you are Linus 😂
I'm Bulking I mean it is something even when it’s Linus, he still doesn’t like throwing money away
Please don't. They way there are handling these machines means that if they keep using them, we are gonna see videos with fingers and other body parts missing.
Alex - "I wish that Life had Ctrl+F"
Agreed. I wish that Life had Ctrl+Z too.
Ctrl+Alt+Delete is all I need
Alt+F4 would be nice, too.
F5 and F9 would be nice.
That should go on a T-shirt though
i want to alt+f4 myself..
Linus, 2021: "Today we'll be straight up dunking our entire studio in coolant"
"Water cooling our cars!!"
That's the point.
ua-cam.com/video/b8bLtg9J1Oc/v-deo.html
AC?
@@kreisien If it's water cooled, than it's chiller AC
i mean i just watched him water cool air cooling so
Linus: Gets mad when staff buys a item to review that is $5 more expensive due to the color
Also Linus: Build a manufacturing plant to water cool a super expensive camera.
he did say at some point all of this was so they can build more watercooling/heat sinks
Having the supplies to do anything is quite usefull. They could use channel superfun as an art channel.
One wastes money, the other makes money. Business 101.
Can you please explain to me what functional purpose colors have?
@@EssenceofPureFlavor identification
Linus makes the RED bigger and heavier...
Camera operators...."Aw C'mon!!!!"
Hey it means that with this heavier modification, the camera operator will have the ability to haul about the heavier mass for longer periods without the red flashing heat warnings and shutting down like it's known to do with lengthier shoots
they're not terribly big to begin with, and really also not too heavy either. And as other homie said, these things are known to give you a good ol warning that it has overheated and you gotta wait a while... if this can keep you from having to switch cameras or stop production and save time, I would take that over it dying every 40 minutes or so on a warm day.
@@producerevan88 Or just use an Arri, they never overheat.
As @@producerevan88 said they don't weigh as much as you think, the riging, lightighting, lenses, add-ons to support the weight of said lenses with motorised controls, and supplementary Batteries, that's where the weight is, with one of there "backpack" back mounts a camera operator really won't mind the extra 1.5kg at most
and now they get fewer breaks to let the camera cool down.
Some recommendations from a apprentice machinist
3:01 Using a sanding belt on a block to do what a grinding wheel would be INFINITELY better (and cheaper) at?
6:00 If chips are a concern just setup an air blast to keep the project space clear
8:00 The bridgeport wouldn't been a far better tool to use for the task, you're over engineering it with the router. It's much better to do all that by hand and mechanical stops.
12:00 Remove the handle before you hit that damn button I've had a few experiences with handles flying off the machine (since they're designed to be removable)
13:40 You cutting WAY too deep. You want to cut shallow so you have less wear on the bit. Less wear means less heat build up, which means your project stays cooler and warp, less. You also go through a lot less bits that way
15:45 What did I mention earlier?
16:20 Welcome to being an school machinist
18:50 Yep that's an engineer at work
3:05 and I died laughing. So many shop class memories popped into my head over this.
"Uhh" - alex 2020 using what is one of the best segways to a sponsor ive seen.
@@nikolahajdic8952 i could change it, but i wont
@@gamemasterljr1 I respect that
Nikola Hajdić honestly never knew that, thanks 👍🏼
He has been my favorite besides riley
@@nikolahajdic8952 Thank you very much! I was so confused with what they say all the time. Actually I ended up thinking it was an inside joke that I just don’t get because I’m late to the show.
After all these years
I finally have water cooled them all.
Always.
Not the TI-84 yet
Linus at home: "Honey I'm gonna watercool you, then i'll watercool the kids for better performance"
No he will waterheat her😂
More like jayztwocents lol
Well, he did fill her with liquid...
I know that some people might not appreciate how this channel has developed, from the more consumer-centric, everyday tech review channel, to become a channel that has a more playful, silly and simply 'just because' approach to tech in general - but I've really come to love it.
Channels such as this are the reason why my tech interest grew some 8 or 9 years ago, and they're the more likely than not the driving force to why I decided to study engineering in the first place.
IR camera trick, when dealing with shiny surfaces. You can add a light coat of satin black paint. This raises the emissivity of the material. The IR camera then can see it more accurately.
Masking tape works too
Wouldn't painting a heat pipe mess with its thermal capabilities though?
@@Sgtpeterenis Short answer, technically yes. With heat pipes you wouldn't want to cover the points that make contact with cpu heat spreader or heatsink/water block. IR is light (even though we can't see it with our eyes). So when you point a thermal *Camera* at a reflective surface. Not only are you see the IR light it's emitting bit your also seeing IR light from the room reflecting off of the surface thus skewing your readings.
@@Marzec309 oh yes, I'm aware why shiny things and ir cameras don't work together that well. I was just wondering whether paint would have a big impact on heat pipes, though I guess you could just remove it again anyway. And I just remembered that laptop heat pipes are almost always black, so evidently it's fine
@@Sgtpeterenis laptop heatpipes are generally painted after they are mounted to the fins and coldplate
Watching Linus being a newbie at doing something I'm qualified to do makes me feel a bit smarter. Precision engineering is an art.
Until something seizes and your forced to bring out the hammer.
feel the same way when he has to get Bryan to do something because linus is scared of anything above 50v.
Until the mill catapults a part through the shop and someone ends up in hospital.
Okay fair enough, It's both a brutal and beautiful art,
Hey, classical music used cannon blasts to create sound. Classical music is art, so hammers are ok.
Linus: “We finally water cooled the RED camera!!!”
Me: Watches the video
Me: So that was a ******* lie!!!
He could have added part 1 at the end..
No. They did, they just not showing us... yet.
@@iamaduckquack If you think this is clickbait then you've never seen actual clickbait.
BS from LTT
Aika The Shiba Inu part 2
"I wish that life had Ctrl+F" big true there.
Alex: "this is mission critical so I'm not gonna mess about doing it fast, and I'm just gonna file it down"
Also Alex: *_messes about doing it fast and cracks a heatpipe_*
Facepalmed really hard at that one. There are so many good ways to remove these without any damage.
*gives up after three passes with the file*
@@marcoschwanenberger3127 good old angle grinder.
Filing would have taken an hour and it would have been done. Also, if you're using a sandpaper and move the object instead of the tool, you might be faster and more accurate.
And fake Dremel would make it an easy project without damaging anything, these guys have no hand-eye cordination or brains, just money/sponsors...
Alex is so great Infront of a camera, looking forward for more "dumb?" Stuff!
Taran said, that he is almost never in the comment section, so here I go: When speeding up scenes, it is really cool to let us now how much faster that goes. Please do that next time :)
Hollywood should be calling. 50-60k per camera conversion. Nice revenue stream. Great idea guys!
Next Ltt video: Water cooling a water cooling system.
water cooling a pump
Water cooling thermal paste
Oh wait
water cooling the water cooler of the water pump.
*Aight, it's big brain time*
U are a genius
Everyone: Reviews the 5600XT
Linus: "We water-cooled a camera!"
soo is the option still 1660 super?
5600XT is booring.
useless gaming pricks, throwing their money away to degrade and dry off their fucking brains plus making the gaming industry a stable money pumping machine
@@naufalap 5600 XT. It's basically a bit underclocked 5700
Correction: A $50000 camera*
Sound Engineer: Hey Linus! How much bass do you want me to EQ in Alex's voice record??
*LINUS: A S T H I C C A F*
They actually up the bass to make linus not sound like a screaming little girl
@@chaython hahahaha so true
..
13:09 FYI, that's a reamer bit, used to ream holes (create a 45 degree relief cut in round holes to break the sharp edge and facilitate a nice "funnel" for any tool or screw you might wish to insert in the hole after). You need a center bit. The stubby fat bit that you'll likely find in the tail stock kit for your lathe.
I'm impressed, either way. Far less cringy than i figured this might be...if you ignore the potential for injury, as the adage goes, safety third.
Linus really just bought an entire machine shop for a guy that hardly knows how to work them all. LMG is freaking nuts and i love em
Alex needed a home. Good move by LMG.
"hardly knows how to work them all" is honestly being a little generous lmao
thats pretty much what i am thinking everytime i see alex to stuff, he gets all the toys but dang he needs to take some courses XD
I really hope they just rented this shit they probably won't use a lot and have no idea on how to operate properly. I love their content, but the way these people throw around resources is just becoming obscene.
@@danielschroedinger2090 Nope. It's all their hardware now. But it clearly makes them money. At the very least their other projects cover the fun things they want to do.
"It's so tempting to not do the math..." The life of a true engineer
Lol 😂
How does the old saying go? Measure never and cut until it fits?
And every technician will hate you for not doing the math and screwing up.
But we will also hate the engineers for trusting the math and not checking themselves so...
Lars you must not be either because it was just a play on words. “Measure twice cut once.”
As much as LMG do some daft things from time to time and as much as some people criticise them for a lot of things, you've got admit that some of the stuff they do is damn impressive.
True
yup, they do stuff others woouldnt dare to do
Well yes, but their occasional fuck ups are kinda expensive.
@@obi-wankenobi9871 bookie just writes that off as expense
Yeah some of their stuff might be ridiculous and exorbitantly expensive, but at least it's original unlike some channels like jays2cents and paulshardware that just do repetitive PC builds every two weeks.
When you can't find your phone:
"I wish life had CTRL F"
vanok when you need to ctrl f for a job
yeah, when you say that, i don't think you need a ctrl f for life, what you need is an embedded AR solution with with full history. You look at a desk "your phone was here 432 days ago." Select 'phone'. Seach 'current location'.
@@mustpaike so basically ctrl f but what you would actually have to do
Well you have an F now you need control.
F
@@MaxCE :/
you bought an entire workshop just for this! i'm always amazed how much money is spent in youtube. well at least you have a nice bridgeport now
LTT 2020: water cooling an ssd card and 8k camera
LTT 2025: water cooling earth to prevent global warming
Hmm, 2025 is doable! The water is already there, but they're going to need a much bigger chiller.
Just need some giant heat pipes that go from a radiator in the ocean to a radiator in outer space. EZ PZ
@@phileurom5933 someone didnt do his physics homework
Or you just put reflective stuff on the ground and you're done
The earth will cool itself and heat itself how it pleases. It's a living organism
Linus to editors...."That's some pretty cool waterfall effects you added to our 8K footage"
Editors to Linus...."What waterfall effects?"
Awww - the little heatsink at 2:00 minutes is soooo cute. Look at the tiny thing with it's two heatpipes. I want this to be an aftermarket solution for X570 chipsets and VRMs.
Alex: "I wish the life had CTRL+F" - I felt that.
@No_Mercy CTRL+F is used to find items in for example webpage or document.
Not sure if you are trolling or serious btw
I wish life had a ctrl+z
I wish the life had Alt+F4
@@d4nyll it does though
I love how Alex said in the original teardown that "yeah. in 2020" when Linus said that we'd get a watercooled Red eventually.. :D Poetic
Next time on ltt, Watercoling my staff to increase work productivity and also watercooling my wife cause she get hot when she's mad at me sponsor by ek
but having a hot wife is the best kind
GraphicGore yeah but having a hot headed wife is bad too
I've been looking forward to this for a while! Man the things you can do with machining and the right tools, seeing stuff like this makes me want to get into it. :D
Shoulda called in AvE. He'd know how to have done this so long as you kept his face on the DL. Plus he's in BC
Might as well use his Haas CNC mill while we are at it
Linus and the ‘ol bumblefuck in one video would be a clash of personalities 😂
When I saw the Bridgeport in the shots, I thought that we were in for a treat especial.
EyeOnTheTV man of culture
@A. Miran. look up AvE, hes a very good, very vulgar machinist
"measuring this would be a nightmare" literally only needs a machinist square and calipers. And a depth micrometer if you're really worried about the heights. Considering the amount of money spent on machining tools, having some basic measuring tools doesnt seem too much :D
I know right. I facpalmed when he said he didn´t have a way to measure depth while holding the indicator dial. They have a full machine shop and the thing still looks like a ghetto rigged PC mod. It would almost have been easier to machine the whole thing as one piece instead of attaching it to the original and would have had much better heat transfer performance. Would really only have needed a caliper with depth needle on the back. Or could have painted the part with transfer paint and done a print onto some paper. Scan the paper and let the computer convert it to a 3d part by setting the thickness and depths of the hollow spaces etc. routing those fittings through the side of the water block would also be smarter.
@@excitedbox5705 It's not about the tools. It's about someone who knows what he does. Not to put Alex down but this is nothing you just pick up in few hours.
2020: water cooled 8k camera
2025: nitrogen cooled 16k camera
only liked the comment bc of ur username
14:02 Alex actually looks genuinely surprised
When I saw the thumbnail I thought Linus dropped the 8K Camera in water and destroyed it.
Tubnail?
Tubnail?
@@pheidolefan Yeah english isn't my native language, spelled it wrong, it's fixed now though :)
Tubnail?
Me too
"does it really matter how deep it goes in?"
"eh, doesn't really matter"
I think they like, just the tip. I go deep son.
@@RobertGoddard86 Mom said you can go very deep because you're smol
Maravillosa jugada!
"That sounds about right" Looks like they both haven't used a mill before 😂
Makes me want to donate my old Tool and Die making books to teach them about speeds and feeds.
@@PBMS123 Is not cringe if you know even less about. It worked at the end, so I dont get all this comments about people getting mad cuz he is not using it "properly"
@@nicolaswinter8578 A mill does not care that your face is in front of the machine or if your arm is next to a part. It is critical that you at LEAST read the manual, which the obviously didn't do, either. Breaking tools is expensive and power tapping at such high speeds is plain stupid. Before I got my mill I watched hours of videos and read as many resources that I can. Heck, I haven't even used the mill and I can point out all the unsafe and dumb things that they did. Also, the part the killed that wasn't level, (flat as they called it, it's probably very flat just not level) isn't because they didn't properly secure it to the CNC router. You can see this because the parallel is wobbling like it's at a dance party - obviously didn't tap down their part. All were saying is that they should educate themselves before they break more tools or worse a part flies out and hits one of them. Oh and one more thing, they got climb milling and conv. milling wrong. It wouldn't through the part out to the side and you should never have a set up that throws a part to the side, the force should always go into the hard jaw - another saftey hazard. Just watch a few more tutorials on mill basics and they could have avoided these safety hazards
@@girraiffe How should that even work? "The force should always go into the hard jaw." What if I want to mill the sides all the way around? The force vector is pointing in four different directions then.
@@girraiffe I absolutely agree. It really hurts in my hearth to see such a beautiful bridgeport mill beeing used so carelessly. "Sounds about right" is a recipe for disaster. They should've looked up the proper speeds and feeds/doc for the material and cutter. Manual feeding is somewhat acceptable, but just cranking it because its fun can be very dangerous as well. Parts/the end mill can go flying and so on.
I'm a trained carpenter, not a machinist, but I do have a beautiful old Lathe and worked with different metalworking machines in the past. If I had that bridgeport, I would probably tuck in in to sleep every night. Beautiful machine.
Alex is probably their MVP, literally. He could probably work anywhere he wants in the future after all these videos.
Alex: "I'm not a machinist"
As a machinist, I agree. Quality content as usual, but the maker videos always make me cringe a bit... lol. Btw, you could've used your chuck for tapping. Without using the chuck key, if you only hand tighten, it will spin around the tap if there is too much resistance (assuming you've hand tightened a proper amount) but will otherwise tap flawlessly. Just make sure you put it in low gear and release your quill lock. Also, keep the quill as close to the top as possible because the spring to bring it back to the top will increase in resistance the further it moves from 0. Also, you can chuck up that fine thread tap. Just put your spindle in neutral (after putting the tap in and running in high speed for a second to make sure it's running true) and then use your hand to rotate the spindle/chuck while lightly applying downward force on the Z-axis handle. The tap will naturally pull you into the part as it cuts, and your tap can't go out of square while tapping.
Edit for content.
For real lol. It's entertaining to watch but the "It sounds about right so I'll run this half inch endmill at 2500 RPM and go to town on this steel".
@@tylernorton2525 I think it was aluminium.
@@TheBackyardChemist definitely was aluminium. Just look at how easy it went without any need for additional cooling.
Spun a edgefinder at 7800 rpm too that part killed me 🤣
Im a fabricator and definitely not a machinist but that was still painful to watch. Still good content though
"I wish life had CTRL + F" - Alex
Same
As soon as I heard him saying that I was like "oh man same 100%".
I'd rather have ctrl + z
unfortunately we have CTRL +F4
Ctrl + Z is so much more powerful
some one need to watch some "Old Tony"
This.
@@Calibrumm This :)
but then this video would be completely dad jokes, and we've seen linus' dad jokes before.
I was gonna say this, ToT needs to be consulted in all things machining.
Gamex996 also some AvE
Alex knows everthing, he's machining, does electric work and makes projects in solidwork. A one man orchestra.
*breaks heat pipe “now I have a lot of work I didn’t wanna do” then remembers he works for LTT
I want to yell at him so badly
"DREMEL!!! dummy, you heard of it!?"
had to wait a whole year to see alex use the shop! throw in some footage when he makes stuff for other projects, will you? its much more interesting than reviewing phones
Reviews sucks the life out of him.
10:54 Linus straight up learned in 30 seconds what I've learned in 4 weeks in my mechanical engineering course
Training vs educating in a nutshell
@@Zenar5 Training is learning how to do something, educating is learning why it works the way it does.
@@AluminumHaste thanks and you can tell the difference in a moment if the person gone through one or the other. Especially in the skill fields and triads.
Bruh
As mechanical engineer I had an internship supporting an electrical engineer making test equipment. The plus for the company, a BS level ME doesn't understand PHD level electrical so I could steal secrets. Basically had to self teach machining. It was ugly to start lol. Helped alot in future classes though. Learn a lot in class but experience helps you use it.
Love this, way less scripted, Alex doesn't have to act so he just seems like him. A genius with all the tools he needs.
17:52 "I wish that life had Control+F" 🤣😂😂😂 soo true
So True Indeed!!!!
I think the same think every time I have to find a specific quote/info in a physical book.
i would rather have a ctrl + z
Alex always looks and sounds like there is someone in the background threatening him.
He does work at LMG
Linus’s kubrick stare
There is, it's Linus. Who paid for that workshop.
“We actually engineered this in house.”
..... it’s amazing it isn’t in shambles
I am so so so so happy to see Alex in the shop!
After the shop equipment purchase video it seemed like Linus never mentioned in-house fabrication again, Alex didn't seem to be showing up in videos, and in fact they had a few videos like the Hack Pro in a Mac G5 case where they seemed to have outside fabrication.
I was really worried the shop got scrapped or Alex quit or something, so I'm so happy to see him working in the shop and to find out that this has been going on for the past year.
This video was like watching an IT guy trying to explain machining.
The video was watching an IT guy trying to explain machining.
@@obi-wankenobi9871 🤣 the word like literary are overused
@@Thefreakyfreek literaly is like literaly so overused
@@obi-wankenobi9871 literally
@@Thefreakyfreek Are you ok?
Watches them chuck up a Tap in the Bridgeport.
Me: "Uhhh, I wouldn't do that."
Watches Tap snap in the work.
Me: "Told you."
is it generally a concern with older mills or just this specific brand? i had taps breaking on another old mill, but I do not remember its brand.
@@ManwithaCat anyone else read this with AVE's voice?
@@mattieuleveille At this point how can one not read it in his voice?
@@mattieuleveille yea, me!
@@RCP-1136 not the age or brand. Taps are hard and brittle. A tapmatic or floating head gives some wiggle so the tap isn't forced to flex etc. For a tiny tap and a few holes hand tap and use the quill to square it up and provide a little down force.
19:42 Linus dropping expensive and important things? That's expected...
I was kinda missing the old linus but it looks like he's back to his good o' self!
14:38 speed seems waaaay to high. You need to slow it down and use a Jacobs-style chuck, your tap probably wouldn't have snapped since it can spin in the chuck.
jelly72 exactly
When you need to tap 3 small to medium sized holes, there's no justification to do it on a mill, just do it manually, you can go quite fast with enough cutting oil.
Alex: ¨I wish life had ctrl+F¨
Me, who can´t even find my phone when it´s in my pocket: ¨Me too¨
"Better try calling it with the phone I have in my pocket... wait"
I've spent over an hour looking for something before, that was in my hand
@@Taz_Olson I did the same, my family burst out laughing when I realized I had been walking around the house screaming about my lost phone whilst it was in my hand. The human race does some of the funniest things despite being some of the smartest creatures.
Nah, I so need Ctrl-Z
Go to wallet, CTRL+A, CTRL+C ,spam CTRL+V, revenue agents HATE this one neat trick!
21st january 2020 : "we water cooling ssd"
22nd january 2020 : "we water cooling 8k camera"
23 january 2020 : "we water cooling samsung smart tv"
@GamerPunk TV Like a Ti-83+ graphing calculator
next week on linus tech tips: we water cooled a water cooler !
Soon: we installed geothermal heating in the building
20th January 2030: "We're watercooling the sun!"
24 january 2020: "we air cooling nuclear reactor"
Alex: "It's pretty crazy to think that tomorrow this thing is gonna be just... ready to go back together, hopefully"
*MANY MONTHS BEFORE*
LTT: "so how many thousandths of an inch is that?"
Everyone outside of America: "hey, have you heard about millimetres? You're gonna flip out"
Never sure why LTT in Canada always uses inches. I thought Canada was smart enough to have gone metric?!
Canada is metric, the reason it’s all imperial is that much of the older equipment that they have in their shop was produced In the states back maybe 20, 30, 40 years ago, when the US actually produced a lot of their own stuff and outsourcing was less of a thing lol.
@@DesignerMaker It's an older machine made in the US, so the units are in inches. The DRO (digital read out) showing the location is also in inches, although many can switch between US and metric units.
Another point is that so much oil field stuff was first made in imperial. Probably 80-90% of the stuff in Alberta is imperial and it's way easier to stick with the old system than to buy new tools, make new fixtures, swap machine dials/leadscrews/gears and the like. I prefer metric hands down but I've learned and mostly get to work on imperial anyways
Also, how many thousandths of an inch in 1/16 of an inch? Oh, _not_ a whole number? So actually I need to be accurate to _more_ than a thousandth if I'm going to be back-compatible?
"that's the lube smoking" - you know you're going hard when...
Linus Bankruptcy Tips : How to kill an employee by standing in the plane of rotation of milling equipment without protection edition
Patrick Burns Linus is incredibly cheap, what can I say?
STFU
This video is basically an osha training video waiting to happen
LMG is really now turning into a conglomerate, soon we'll see an engineering subsidiary 😂
Really looking forward to the cooking wing of the company. 'Watercooled PC sous vide'd steak'
LMG
Linus Mechatronics Group
15:43
"Ten one thousandths of an inch" Also known as 1 hundredth of an inch
That's like saying a decimeter instead of 10 centimeters. That's not how things are measured.
Math is hard
well inches aren't really a good form of measurement if you think about it
@@mrpostman6024 Yeah they really aren't
Well, you measure in thou
“I’m not a machinist”
As a career machinist, I can tell lol. You’re not terrible though. Seen far far worse.
I think it's kind of awesome how Alex taught himself how to use these machines though. It shows how today in the age of youtube tutorials, there really is no excuse anymore for anybody to say "I don't know how to do this".
I am trained in machinery, but it's been years. Am I remembering correctly that Alex should have been going way slower when he was using the tap?
Bigpumkin much much much slower lol. Small taps like that, I don’t even risk trying to power tap. Just put the tap in a drill chuck, mill in neutral and spin it by hand to keep it straight, then finish with a tap handle.
@@havefun123for I believe it's fine that he was relief winding quickly. They edited out all the cutting turns so you only saw him unturning the threader.
He did use the edge finder wrong though.
Now I can water cool my 8K red camera too, awesome.
Me and my cnc mill, aswell all my other tools have been waiting for that a long time.
Thank you Linus for appealing to a bigger audience.
It's cnc (computer numerical control)
*MKBHD* "So, in the two weeks I have been using this watercooled edition of Red camera"
17:56
Alex: *"I wish that life had Ctrl+F"*
Linus: *"But if I had to choose between that and Ctrl+Z..."*
I want to alt for my life
Future Linus: I've watercooled my internal organs and achieved true immortality.
Literally laughed out loud when the cooler flew right off the sander.. mission critical you say?
Next video: "we watercooled a watercooler!!!!"
Ysujy someone water cooled an aio with an aio... close enough?😂
@@dankbeast9013 That's basically It, I think😂
He did the watercooled house years ago
@@kenzieduckmoo watercooled house? How didnt I dee that?
@@tiagoviana263 it was a failed project, they tried cooling all of their workstations in a single custom watercooler that went around the house. This was before they had their own building I think.
As someone who sells second hand audio at a record store, not to make money, just to be able to play with it and make other people happen, I completely get your sentiment.
I am also watching this while fixing up an old MSX computer, which helps.
LTT without L is a bit like Top Gear without Clarkson, Hammond and May, or like DigitalRev without Kai and Lok. It would change the face of the product so drastically that it may not work.
I am always happy to see Riley, Alex, Anthony, Dennis, James. But it's like you are the north and soundbridge keeping it all together.
I hope you stay, but I definitely agree with the slow down idea. Starting now. You seem like a cool dad and partner to me and I think Yvonne and the kids deserve all the attention they can handle.
So yes. Time for a change. Just not sure if UA-cam is a better place without your involvement, so I am happy you decide to not go too far away, yet.
Congrats on TEN MILLION to all of you guys. So well deserved for consistent quality :)
(High five on not doing something bad but getting kicked out of class all the time. My high score is 57 times between October 20th and Christmas holidays.
You know damn well what that means; You outsmarted your teachers and they couldn't punish you, but they still wanted you gone. )
Watching the milling part made me appreciate This Old Tony so much more :)
this old tony is awesome i love that guy.
I waited so long for this. finally, my desire gets quenched.
Bad pun
8:20 That feeling when you lick a piece of paper, stick it to your part, move your tool closer to your part, spin it with your hand and zero out when paper moves.
Its going to be 10,000,000 subscribers day! Congratulations you work very hard and truly deserve it. Keep it up:)
2:49 I'm not gonna try to screw around and get this off fast...
A few moments later...
vVVVVRRRRRRRRRRR
3:18
...
Conductor of the polar Express:
"Are you challenging me?"
Linus Tech Engineering Services...
Where they drop test everything to MIL-STD-810-LTT
Just let me tell you: even if you need to file a metal parts for two hours in order to get it done, it's almost always a better idea than doing it the "oh, shit" way.
2020 Linus: Water Cooled all the techs that he has.
2040 Linus: Water Cooled all of his employees.
Edited: Need Subs xD
His employees are already blood-cooled. It's like water cooling but more BRUTAL.
2060 Linus: Water Cooled all of his water coolers,
technically humans are water cooled (sweating)
@@BenDover-zm1mr I'm not sure if that counts as water cooling. To my mind, the blood is the coolant and it carries sweat to the skin which is the rad. Sweat is just making the rad wet.
No one:
Linus: We water-cooled a gaming mouse!
Noone:
Not a single soul:
Linus: **I'VE WATERCOOLED A LAMP!**
He's gonna water cool a radiator
@@ItsLiterallyAsh actually...
Water-cool your gaming seat.
he's the new Phil swift
Scotty:
I added a headphone jack to iPhone 7
Linus:
Hold my RED...
while I get some tubing and radiators...
I added a 3.5mm headphone jack to my car charging port!
Alex, when doing power tapping on the mill you want to have some axial float. That's why when you see most machinists power tapping they have the tap in a special floating chuck that can stop if there is too much torque and allow the tap to float in and out. Putting a tap in a R8 collet is a no-no. You'll also see people use a "tap follower" it's just a spring loaded pusher you stick between the spindle and the tap handle so everything stays aligned. And remember, as a machinist, you only get experience after you needed it.