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Brick rigs xbox one
Brick rigs xbox one






brick rigs xbox one
  1. #Brick rigs xbox one manual
  2. #Brick rigs xbox one full
  3. #Brick rigs xbox one software
  4. #Brick rigs xbox one Pc
  5. #Brick rigs xbox one professional

I learned to drive a manual vehicle the same way actually. I looked at loop theory and what might need to change with such a small loop vs a more traditional one. Then I went to online forums, Reddit, Facebook groups, you name it. I’ve watched channels on YouTube like JayzTwoCents for years, and he’s always kind of been known for having water cooled builds so I looked through some of his videos. How did you learn to build a custom water cooling loop?Ī LOT of research actually. Some friends were definitely pushing me to do it and were wanting me to do custom loops for their systems as well, so I just jumped right in on that idea to get experience. Looking around the internet back in 2018 when I started this project, there was no AIO option for something using a 50mm radiator, dual 50, or triple 50 like would fit in the chassis. What got me wanting to do this particular build as water cooling, was because my last one was air cooled - I thought I’d try my hand and see what could be done in an Xbox chassis with water. This was actually my first water cooled build! I’ve been wanting to jump into the art for a while now, but never really had a reason to. How many water cooled rigs have you made? What got you into water cooling?

brick rigs xbox one

#Brick rigs xbox one professional

In the past 8 or so years I’ve built nearly five to six hundred systems either for professional use at work, personal use, or for friends and family.

#Brick rigs xbox one Pc

I’ve since turned into doing commissioned PC builds for various locals looking for one-off unique systems. Just the thrill of getting your hands on something early and getting to play with it, and push its limits, is always a fun time. Eventually I became a hardware reviewer for a few years, and I do miss that job sometimes actually. I then became addicted to PC hardware, building systems just for the fun of it to see how it would perform, tearing it down and then going and buying more hardware. I took a decent long hiatus from hardware until I was actually in my mid-20s around 2013. I got started with PC’s at around 12, and built a few with my stepdad, but eventually branched off into coding and visual effects / 3d modeling. If I find myself unable to play something in particular with the 4700G’s internal GPU, the motherboard has a TB3 port, and I have a Razer Core v2 to hook up a graphics card externally to the system if I ever need to.

#Brick rigs xbox one software

It’s a Threadripper paired with an RTX 3070, and yet Conan Exiles won’t even launch properly on it due to some software complication that I haven’t bothered to track down yet. My main computer is primarily a workstation, so it has applications, drivers, and various tweaks to its system for productivity, server management, and the like - that some games just DON'T get along with. Occasionally I’ll use the system at home to game on also. I live near Portland, Oregon and every year there’s multiple LAN parties near me (at least pre-pandemic there was), PDXLAN was the main one I take my machines to, but there are also smaller ones such as GNW Lan around. It’s my LAN rig for when I go more mobile with my gaming. What do you primarily use the Ex-Box for? Maybe someday I’ll come up with a more anthropomorphic name for the computer. I forget where the name exactly originates with my old build, but someone made a comment about it being an ex-Xbox or ex-box or something, either on Facebook or Reddit, and I was like “OH! YES! THAT!” and I just kind of ran with it. Yes! I call it the Ex-Box One S PC, which the ‘Ex-Box’ part came from my previous LAN rig I had built, which was the same rough concept of this, but was air cooled, and was in an Xbox 360 actually. To my eye this looks like the end result of an incredible amount of work and patience, and it shows! Thanks for sharing your creation with us Aaron! I’m a fan of big cases myself, and this project of yours reminds me why. I was able to talk with Aaron about his build at length. Custom water cooling with the help of a Bitspower monoblock and one of Alphacool’s odd-sized radiators and tiny ceramic pumps really sets this machine apart. Built inside the chassis of an Xbox One S console, this PC is packed in tight but still manages to look amazing. Tubing: EKWB EK-DuraClear Soft Tubing, 10/13mm (3/8" ID, 1/2" OD)įittings: Bitspower G1/4" to 3/8" Barb Fitting, 90° RotaryĪaron’s choice of case is inspired, and his execution is incredible. Pump: Alphacool DC-LT 2600 Ceramic 12V Pump

#Brick rigs xbox one full

Radiator: Alphacool NexXxoS XT45 Full Copper 50mm Dual Radiatorįans: GELID Solutions Silent5 FN-SX05-40 50mm RAM: G.Skill Trident Z Neo 8GB 4800MHz x2ĬPU Block: Bitspower ASRock X570 ITX/TB3 Monoblock Motherboard: ASRock Phantom Gaming X570 ITX/TB3 Aaron has managed to pack an entire liquid-cooled PC inside what was once a gaming console, and it looks awesome! This time around we have an amazing rig from Redditor Aaron Howe (/u/Draelren). Titan Rig’s fourth Featured Rig has arrived!








Brick rigs xbox one