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<< If you were seriously devoted, you could rig up a system consisting of a CRAY liquid immersion chiller filled with 3M FC-70/FC-77 Fluorinert pumped to a Fluorinert-to-liquid N2 heat exchanger whose contents are pumped to a huge (and I mean huge, huge paired with titanically powerful) compressor.
I think I'm missing something though. 🙁 >>
I thought Flourinert turned solid as it approached LN2 temperatures. >>
It does, unfortunately. My use for flourinert would be to cool parts of the computer that are not around the CPU, as I don't want them to burn, either. Please, I do not want these "practical" solutions, as the main purpose of this is to break the world overclocking record. So essentially, only the most powerful cooling (clearly revolving around liquid helium) will do.