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Australian modder solves PC in a freezer conundrum with sheer size, socks filled with silica gel power — condensation conquered and minimal overclocking gains on display at minus 28C

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TrashBench, a hardware enthusiast and YouTuber that we've covered in the past, has a specific talent for clever-but-chaotic PC experiments. In his latest video, he's managed something that has tripped up far bigger channels before him: he successfully ran a desktop PC at –28°C inside a household freezer, benchmarked it, overclocked it, and pulled the hardware out afterward cold and bone-dry.

The concept of the freezer PC is obviously not a new idea. Plenty of creators, including Linus Tech Tips, have tried putting PCs in freezers, only to be defeated by condensation, thermal instability, or both. TrashBench's twist was realizing that the freezer itself was the limiting factor, and that solving the problem wasn't about exotic coatings, or insane insulation, or extreme temperatures, but instead, size and patience.

The exotic cooling enthusiast didn't risk modern flagship silicon here, and that restraint was probably a factor in the experiment's success. The setup consisted of an ASUS ROG Maximus XI Apex motherboard, an Intel Core i7-9700KF, an ASUS ROG GeForce GTX 1070 (despite charts briefly claiming GTX 1060; chalk that up to beer, not malice), a Thermalright Phantom Spirit air cooler, some G.SKILL Trident Z RGB memory, and a SilverStone Strider 750 EF power supply. Everything except the PSU went into the freezer.

Note the ratchet strap required to hold the freezer shut after the application of extra foam insulation around the lid's lip to accommodate the cables passing through. (Image credit: Trashbench)

By 2026 standards, this is firmly 'old hardware,' but that's exactly the point. If something went catastrophically wrong, the loss was survivable, and just as importantly, these parts draw far less power than modern high-end CPUs and GPUs. Lower heat output matters when your 'cooling system' is a household freezer with a compressor designed to deal with groceries, not a 600 W load spike.

Instead of resting components on shelves or freezer walls, TrashBench completely emptied the freezer and instead suspended them in mid-air using flexible straps. Cables were carefully routed and sealed to minimize moisture ingress from outside air. At the bottom of the chest freezer, he placed silica gel packed into breathable socks, acting as an active desiccant system. That combination of large freezer volume, minimal airflow turbulence, and aggressive moisture control is what allowed the system to stabilize instead of instantly fogging up and dying.

TrashBench tested performance before freezing, inside the freezer at stock clocks, and again after manual GPU overclocking. The benchmarks included 3DMark Time Spy, 3DMark Fire Strike, Cyberpunk 2077, Far Cry 6, and Shadow of the Tomb Raider, all venerable tests well-suited to the 2016-vintage hardware. Simply placing the PC components into the –28 °C freezer resulted in very marginal performance improvements. In most cases, the difference was within the noise; the only clear hardware-level gain was a 51 MHz increase in sustained GPU clock, thanks to lower operating temperatures.

Just putting the hardware in the freezer didn't do much on its own, despite drastically reduced temperatures. (Image credit: Trashbench)

Manual GPU overclocking of around +240 MHz on the core produced more noticeable gains, albeit still nothing earth-shattering. The largest uplift was in Shadow of the Tomb Raider, which gained about 8% (102 FPS to 110 FPS), and then 3DMark Fire Strike improved about 7%. Other tests showed smaller improvements, and TrashBench didn't specify exact in-game settings, so the results should be taken as directional rather than definitive. In other words: freezing your PC won't magically turn a GTX 1070 into a monster.

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