So I learned a weird lesson /g/
I have this big 4k samsung tv I got for a monitor, couldn't have been happier with it
But I came back home for the holidays and I'll be here for almost a month, so I brought my rig along.
Well I got here late and left the thing in my back seat in my car overnight, got damn cold. I plugged it in the next day and it was all sorts of fucked, screen flickering, picture fluctuating, lines, you name it.
Thought I hadn't secured it well enough, so I resigned I was going to have to open the damn thing to try and fix whatever the fuck I loosened in there myself. I thought maybe I even damaged the board so I might have to get a whole damn new one or order the part.
But I left it sitting around, and decided wtf when I got home today after hanging out with my bros and doing /tg/ shit.
Pictures fine and back to normal, absolutely nothing wrong. I'm pretty fascinated the temperature is what did it? That's what I assume.
>TLDR dont leave your electronics in a cold car
Your computer got so cold, ice crystals formed in your CPU tubes and was slowing down the electronic protons from moving around. Once your rig warmed up again, the ice melted and one you put power back on, the electricity instantly evaporated the water inside your CPU.
>>58254796
thanks m8, learned something new today.
Do you know if this might have negative effects on the tv in the future? Or if it could have been worse?
>>58254796
>>58254816
by the way this isn't true in the slightest
> electronic protons
>>58254816
>thanks m8, learned something new today.
not sure if troll
>>58254755
It could have been condensation that temporarily fucked it up.