Okay, what does it consist of?
Electric Paint
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conductive materials and a bonding agent
Conductive paint... How thick would it need to be to take a amp?
its got electrolytes in it
das rite mang
Graphite
That's also what I think might be the case. Is there any source that confirms that?
use it as thermal paste: it has high conductivity, which is good, expecially if you delid. considering that it's black, you can safely put it on the whole surface to enhance cooling. it should give you something like 8-10 degrees less.
Mostly runs on electrolytes and tachyons.
Nah, electrical conductivity has nothing to do with thermal conductivity, even when sometimes it seems they are linked.
Example, most diamonds are extremely efficient thermal conductors, but electrical insulators.
>user tells me to put electric paint on a cpu
>i must tell to everyone to not do it, it can be dangerous
It's no more dangerous than liquid metal, but it's just not as thermally conductive.
I smell mustard gas...
Graphite, silver, gold, depends on how much it costs
trap bath water
>silver, gold
>conductive paint
Not unless you live in Saudi Arabia
Gold & silver aren't that expensive if used sparely.
Yeah if we're talking about gold for decorating a cake or something sure, but if you want to use gold as a conductive agent in paint you are looking at some cost to put it lightly.
Conductive glue has silver in it.
it has what electrical engineers crave
You can't use a material sparingly if you want it to conduct any meaningful electrical current for any meaningful period of time. Sure you can use "cheap" metal foil or wool to conduct electricity, but any significant current will simply burn it up in a fraction of a second.
Conductive bonding agents have a relatively high resistance, so you have to use a highly conductive filler, and a ton of it. Gold would absolutely bankrupt you in this application.
check the label
If only we were dealing with a standardized product with something like a Material Safety Data Sheet publicly available... oh wait.
bareconductive.com
>diamonds are extremely efficient thermal conductors
That's actually really interesting, I didn't know that.
Still, I understand why they aren't advertising the MSDS too much, getting hipsters to pay $25 for 50ml of magic conductive paint would be probably a bit harder if you told them it's just pasted pencils in a fancy tin.
>expecting Jow Forumstards to know what a Material Safety Data Sheet
Are you new to this board or do you just inexplicably still have hope left?
I constantly keep forgetting Jow Forums stands for Consumer Electronics.
I sometimes forget that too. I don't even know why I bother coming here every now and then.
It contains electrons.
It's a cool way to check if a diamond is real. You can blow air on it with your mouth to make condensation, like you'd do to clean glasses. Since it conducts heat so well, thw diamond won't stay fogged where a fake one will.
Don't know if I'm clear.