card validation

Originally posted by matrix:<br /><strong>You didn't by any chance overclock the first pump did yer. You seem to clock everything else.</strong><hr></blockquote>

This place is full of pissing comedians
 
Chill Junglist, it has been a very humorous post m8. <img src="cool.gif" border="0">
 
dont worry about it junglist, experimenting is fine, where would we be if no one experimented, and to all the doubters, i hope you all try this, put a sealed twelve volt battery in your bathtub fully submerged, and try connecting the positive and negative to an external (out of the water) 12v lamp or anything that runs off twelve volts, now will it work, yes it will, but please don't try this with houshold power suply, you will blow yourselves s** high, high voltage is very dangerous, water is not the great conductor we all thought, 12 volts is not enough to short the terminals, now i can visualize the doubters getting p*ss wet, trying to prove me wrong, well, dry yourselves off, and say sorry to junglist, you have just done similar to what he has done, experimented, good and fun ain't it <img src="wink.gif" border="0">

W
 
i think everyone has strayed of the original question (does anyone know whats happened to the 'card validation' as of 4th nov)
 
i read in the mag edge that some sort of water/liquid cooling system is used in the sega dreamcast

cheers andy
 
Originally posted by andy74:<br /><strong>i read in the mag edge that some sort of water/liquid cooling system is used in the sega dreamcast

cheers andy</strong><hr></blockquote>

<br />Yeah, it was the first revison Japanese dreamcasts, they had a liquid cooled CPU and graphics card. A good few of thm leaked though so they moved to air cooling.
 
Back
Top