The Worst Part of the Job...
**The Behind-the-Scenes of PC Builds**
As I sat down to disassemble my latest computer build, I couldn't help but feel a mix of emotions. On one hand, I was excited to get started on this new project, but on the other hand, I knew that the process would be tedious and repetitive. Taking apart my own work, especially when it comes to custom loop builds, can be a bit depressing for me. Seeing all the hard work pay off only to undo it all again is a bittersweet feeling.
I remember when I first started building computers, just like any other enthusiast, I would eagerly await the moment when I could finally assemble my system and see everything come together. It was like flipping a coin - would I flip it for 50 bucks or 100? The excitement of buying all the parts in a parts list, clicking "order", and waiting anxiously to see what the system looked like when it was all assembled is still there, but it's nowhere near as strong as it used to be. With time, everything becomes a bit boring, and I think that's especially true when it comes to PC builds.
One of the things that really gets me is when you have to disassemble something that you've grown attached to. As someone who loves tech in general, I try to find ways to spice up my builds and make them more interesting. That's why we started our little mini series where we buy super crazy weird cases that nobody's ever purchased or reviewed before and build on those. It adds a new layer of excitement to an otherwise repetitive process.
As I worked on disassembling the radiator fin stacks, I couldn't help but think about how it was just another part of the job. The blocks had been flushed, and we'd reassembled each of the fittings - they're ready to go for a new build. Okay, so maybe that wasn't so bad after all.
But despite my initial thoughts, taking apart my own work is not without its downsides. I often find myself complaining just to complain, even when there's no real reason to do so. It's almost as if I'm trying to convince myself that it's okay. One of the things I hate about this job is that it can be a bit soulless at times. When you're doing something over and over again, it starts to lose its luster.
Despite my reservations, I've come to realize that PC builds are what I love, and I'll continue to do them for as long as I'm passionate about it. So, if you're excited about the next Pixal-flop in our series of PCs, don't worry - one is coming up very soon! We get our schedules all screwed up sometimes, but that's just part of the fun.
If you live in and around Orlando, Florida, and you're interested in getting your hands on a Leo 11 Mini (Snow Edition), leave a comment below. I'll be giving one away to whoever I pick, randomly selected from those who reach out to me. It has served its purpose well, and it's time for it to move on to a new home.
**A Note to Our Viewers**
Most of you sign off before we even start talking about the topic at hand, so I'll say this now: most of you might be confused by all the comments asking for that Leo 11 Mini. It's just been converted into a full-time job, and everything becomes a bit boring over time. That's why I'm trying to mix it up with our little mini series and other fun projects. Thanks for watching, and I'll catch you in the next one!
"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: eni have a pretty good job i really can't complain i mean i get to be my own boss i'm the sole determiner of my fate more or less how much effort i put into it is basically how much reward i get out of it and and that's something that you really can't say for a lot of jobs out there they're very streamlined they're very mundane for lack of a better word very repetitive and i mean that could be me right now if i if i'd been using my college degrees i'd be on some oil rig somewhere or i'd be pushing papers in an office a lot of people work jobs like that and i'm grateful that they do especially on the service side of things the reason why we have what we have is because of the work that they do in this space i am somewhat of an entertainer i still do provide services for folks but i mean ultimately my my primary source of income on youtube is through videos and without the videos i really can't do the other things you know i can't perform the other services i provide and and one of the one of the more i don't know lackluster sides of being a tech youtuber in particular is the cleaning process now you're thinking of cleaning your office that's nothing what are you filming this for well we also have to clean up builds and no this isn't a pcdc video although i will show you this build this is well kind of dirty although the dust filters did save the day for the most part disassembling pcs is just it's it's like a weekly if not daily occurrence here on the channel and you guys don't get to see it because well most of the time it really does nothing to do with fixing computers or cleaning them or i don't know building elaborate systems and crazy cases or what have you but in this video i want to show you some of the pains and aches involved with disassembling a custom loop like this one here which we built around nine or so months ago so you can see this thing is well it's an eye catcher it's pink white and black and that's just a very weird color combination for a pc but that was why i was so excited to build this to begin with i haven't built really anything like this before especially with this color combo i found these custom cables online they were pretty cheap and i decided to try to match coolant as close as i could to it problem is when you let a system run for nine months straight right you get some some issues uh there's been some fluid evaporating i noticed that the level in the reservoir has been slowly depleting that might just be the result of air bubbles slowly working their way out of radiators and such but we do i mean after nine months of running non-stop you should probably do a bit of maintenance on a custom loop especially if it's using opaque coolant like this so i'm curious to see what the build up is like especially in the cpu block and we'll also see if there's any staining in the tubing and in the distro block up front from ek pretty much this entire build uh was uh supported by ek waterboxx i want to thank them for that again the case is a lienly 011 mini the snow white edition and we have this graphics card in here from gigabyte which a few people were disappointed about because we didn't custom cool it i wanted just an air cooled card it's very simple um but i can understand the complaints because yes the distro does support gpu custom cooling and i just uh omitted it because i just wanted to be able to slide a card in and call it a day but all that to say taking apart systems it kind of sucks right it's like disassembling your hard work it's it's undoing all the hard work you just did but along the way i'm also very curious about the state of the loop again i want to check specifically the cpu block and see if we have any clogging in there you know when you have opaque cooling like this it's it's possible and um i'm curious i hope you are too stick with me be quiet not you guys the company their new light wings fans offer impressive lighting and superior cooling all while maintaining a low noise profile with high grade rifle bearing technology and pwm support up to 20 individually addressable leds are baked into a large ring diffuser and you'll experience some of the cleanest rgb lighting around controlled by your motherboard with the help of a splitter included in the triple packs choose between either 120 or 140 ml counterparts as well as standard or high rpm variants for the ideal config in your build learn more about be quiet at lightwings fans by clicking the link below now to kick things off with cleanliness i'm surprised actually that lane leo 11 mini maintained its cleanliness as long as it did especially seeing as though the top of this dust filter is caked in small little pellets of dust and that's because the panel on top of this has small holes so the dust settled in those but it didn't make its way through the dust filter which is great you can see i'll just swipe my hand across here yeah so uh i'm glad this is not all in the system just be one more step you know there was a lot about this case that i really liked at the time and uh just reflecting on it the leon lee 11 mini is just an incredible chassis it's very versatile very flexible you can customize pcie slot layout you could fit up to atx motherboards in here i believe although we have an itx config as is you can fit so many radiators in here so many fans i mean a full on custom loop for pete's sake so if you're interested check this thing out i'll have a link below it is one of the cases i recommend in this form factor leave it to gigabyte to throw on the chunkiest cooler for an rtx 3060. this thing is freaking huge ah you can see a bit of dust made its way into the fence stack but uh not very much i mean considering it's been running for nine months straight again this isn't bad i can't complain i just hate you know again part of the uh just part of the package of being a youtuber having to see all your hard work just get destroyed take it all apart the next thing i'm going to do is probably drain the loop because i mean removing anything else is going to require that anyway it doesn't make sense to try to take the fans out etc when we could just remove the entire assembly once a loop is detached now there's a jank way to remove this fluid and there's um a non-jank way we're going with the jank way because why not i'm just gonna crack open the the drain port here at the bottom i've got a freaking bowl that's been used for painting at one point uh where all this fluid is gonna pour in hopefully and we're just gonna let it rip it's gonna get pretty messy yep that's not even remotely making its way in i can tilt it that's still not working well we're just going to sit here for a minute and hope that this doesn't go everywhere right so that was a that was messy the non-jank way to do this by the way in case you're wondering would be to flip this entire case like front side downward and then just crack the fill port and let it drain into a bowl or something i decided to do it standing up because it would seem to be much easier to film and i kind of backfired but at least it didn't get on the carpet i see this it's so much easier but i insist on over complicating it for whatever reason yeah much smoother go and start removing some of these cables now get the power supply sorted once all that's taken care of then we can remove the fans and the top radiator since most of the water's drained out of the top and then we'll take the bottom radiator out and then we can remove the distro block with the cpu block kind of as one big piece just saves on the spillage later on you can see though for all the effort we put into assembling this custom loop again nine or so months ago you have to spend that much time again to disassemble it the only difference is there's no real reward at the end of this because there's no final product you can't just like kind of sit back and admire the hard work it's just it's just disassembly you know you're just storing stuff for later again one of the reasons why uh it's not my favorite part of this job just realize we have a ton of daisy chain cables i do not remember that the first time around come with me if you want to lose well that was just awful so we're going to loosen the two remaining screws holding this radiator up and now we've got to undo these fittings the way i had to install this was a bit finicky because there wasn't enough space to kind of wedge these tiny little pipes in so we'll undo these fittings here at the top and then we have to pull this entire assembly back see so it snaps out of out of place there all right and then we'll remove the two remaining screws gotta hold up the radiator to do this okay and we'll very carefully slide it all out all right we'll do the exact same thing here for the bottom right you can see all the fluid is out of these two pipes but there is some fluid in the radiator and of course there's some fluid here in these top tubes you can see barely on camera so uh we need to be a bit careful of course spilling is not a huge deal now we're taking the system apart but it just keeps the cleaning process a bit more straightforward later easy does it nice this stuff looks like melted strawberry ice cream we're gonna get rid of it though there's no sense in repurposing it because we have plenty more fluid for future custom loops last few pieces here for the cp runs these uh are a bit longer so they're easier just to kind of wiggle out flip this up and then pull out from this side easy does it we'll prep the motherboard for removal we'll get the type c port is connected usb 3.2 disconnected and a few more screws but what it's worth this was a really solid platform a little intel really never got a lot of love and i think it was justified it wasn't really the best value platform out there i mean it wasn't a a huge shift from 10th gen performance but now that alder lake is out i mean these 1100ks are kind of uh yeah just kind of pointless i wouldn't recommend buying one of these today that's for sure now it's time to wash everything out and this is the part that sucks the most because it just takes a long time you have to disassemble quite a bit and you can see all the fittings all of the caps the fittings the cpu block the distro i've already washed out the radiators but those are pretty gross as well you can flush with vinegar or something else to get any of the uh clog stuff out of these small little channels like the the coolant actually held up quite well i don't see too much staining here but it is important we clean this stuff because if we don't long term definitely will start to see some purple staining along the inside of the distro and the cpu block and we don't want that because these components are really expensive hot water helps and uh yeah we just let it rip oh look at all of that pink just exploded from the channels in the cpu vlog that was pretty gross another reason why we want to clean this stuff and uh already just from running it underwater for a few seconds that block looks so much better now the best way to do this is to completely disassemble the block you get under the channels and start scrubbing those with a toothbrush or something just to get all of the potentially clogged gunk out of there but uh it looks pretty good here again i'm surprised that the coolant held up this well pretty pretty impressive for opaque stuff from ek so yeah this block looks almost brand new already just with water really good stuff these fittings all need to be taken care of the extensions god this water is freaking toasty and lastly the distro this one's going to take a while because it is so large and there are so many channels i'll try to see if i can fill it up here it's really awkward with this like de facto bathroom sink and after about 30 more minutes of that we have a clean case it is now just yeah it's just bare empty like it would look if you pulled it out of the box for the first time a bit sad seeing as though the way we started this uh it had a full custom loop in it and here is most of that gear apart from the tubes which i tossed because we won't need these for whatever custom loop we assemble later on the radiator fin stacks still need to be scrubbed a bit i will tackle that after the fact but the insides of them the channels and everything have been flushed the blocks look a lot better and we've reassembled each of these fittings they are ready to go for a new build okay uh maybe that wasn't so bad you know i mean like come on greg we just complaining just to complain what the heck it is if i'm being honest one of the things that i hate the most about this job and it's not like i hate it that much it's not a huge deal in the grand scheme of things but taking apart my own work my own artwork i would go so far as to say especially with the custom loop side of things can be a bit depressing um you know seeing all the hard work pay off is one thing but then to undo all of that and sort of go backwards it it it cuts a bit deep and you know every time i build a new system i always know in the back of my head that eventually it will be taken apart and i i guess sort of being in this position has kind of ruined that surprise for me um when i first started building computers just kind of repetitively i would i would flip them for 50 bucks or 100 profit something like that when i was in college i was always so excited to put it together do you get all the parts in a parts list and then click order and then to see everything show up and just be so anxious to see what the system looked like when it was all assembled and i still have that passion but it's it's nowhere near as strong as it used to be and i think it's because this has kind of been converted into a full-time job of mine and um i guess you know everything with time more or less does become a bit boring and uh i think the the peak of that is when you have to then disassemble the thing that you're slightly losing passion about i'm certainly not losing passion for tech in general and i make that very clear the reason why i continue doing what i'm doing is because i freaking love it uh but when it comes to pc builds specifically i mean i always try to go to spice things up a bit i don't want us to you know do the same thing over and over the same just sticking with the status quo gets very old and there are so many channels that do that um that's why we started the little mini series where we will buy like super crazy weird cases that nobody's ever purchased or reviewed before and we'll build on those because that just adds another layer of excitement to an otherwise repetitive and boring pc build so i'm trying to do things like that again i just wanted to give you a little behind the scenes action and uh talk a bit about yeah just kind of my internal thought process it wasn't meant to be a super popular video or anything like that but i do appreciate you watching this far into this one and if you're excited about the next pixar flop in the next pcdc don't worry my friends one is coming up very very soon actually many are but uh one should be coming up right after this video if i'm not mistaken i get my schedules all screwed up sometimes i'm like weeks ahead sometimes i'm weeks behind i don't i gotta look at the calendar anyway if you enjoyed this one click the subscribe button i'd appreciate that click the thumbs up button leave a comment down below and i will catch you in the next one oh also i almost ended the video without mentioning this if you live in and around orlando florida and you want yourself a leon leo 11 mini this is again the snow edition um yeah maybe leave a comment and i will meet whoever i pick it's just going to be random and yeah just i'll just give you the case for free because i don't really need it anymore it has served its purpose it's a fantastic case and i'd like to see it move on to a new home so leave a comment down below let me know um where you live you can just be general you know city kind of where you live in and around orlando and if you'd be willing to meet and i will reply to your comment and then from there um we'll uh yeah we'll arrange to meet up so again thanks for watching this for another video i wanted to say this for very last because most of you sign off before we even start talking about this stuff so uh maybe folks are gonna be confused why are there so many comments of people asking for that 011 minute that's really strange but anyway that's our little inside scoop thanks for watching i'll catch you next time my name is greg thanks for disassembling a pc with mei have a pretty good job i really can't complain i mean i get to be my own boss i'm the sole determiner of my fate more or less how much effort i put into it is basically how much reward i get out of it and and that's something that you really can't say for a lot of jobs out there they're very streamlined they're very mundane for lack of a better word very repetitive and i mean that could be me right now if i if i'd been using my college degrees i'd be on some oil rig somewhere or i'd be pushing papers in an office a lot of people work jobs like that and i'm grateful that they do especially on the service side of things the reason why we have what we have is because of the work that they do in this space i am somewhat of an entertainer i still do provide services for folks but i mean ultimately my my primary source of income on youtube is through videos and without the videos i really can't do the other things you know i can't perform the other services i provide and and one of the one of the more i don't know lackluster sides of being a tech youtuber in particular is the cleaning process now you're thinking of cleaning your office that's nothing what are you filming this for well we also have to clean up builds and no this isn't a pcdc video although i will show you this build this is well kind of dirty although the dust filters did save the day for the most part disassembling pcs is just it's it's like a weekly if not daily occurrence here on the channel and you guys don't get to see it because well most of the time it really does nothing to do with fixing computers or cleaning them or i don't know building elaborate systems and crazy cases or what have you but in this video i want to show you some of the pains and aches involved with disassembling a custom loop like this one here which we built around nine or so months ago so you can see this thing is well it's an eye catcher it's pink white and black and that's just a very weird color combination for a pc but that was why i was so excited to build this to begin with i haven't built really anything like this before especially with this color combo i found these custom cables online they were pretty cheap and i decided to try to match coolant as close as i could to it problem is when you let a system run for nine months straight right you get some some issues uh there's been some fluid evaporating i noticed that the level in the reservoir has been slowly depleting that might just be the result of air bubbles slowly working their way out of radiators and such but we do i mean after nine months of running non-stop you should probably do a bit of maintenance on a custom loop especially if it's using opaque coolant like this so i'm curious to see what the build up is like especially in the cpu block and we'll also see if there's any staining in the tubing and in the distro block up front from ek pretty much this entire build uh was uh supported by ek waterboxx i want to thank them for that again the case is a lienly 011 mini the snow white edition and we have this graphics card in here from gigabyte which a few people were disappointed about because we didn't custom cool it i wanted just an air cooled card it's very simple um but i can understand the complaints because yes the distro does support gpu custom cooling and i just uh omitted it because i just wanted to be able to slide a card in and call it a day but all that to say taking apart systems it kind of sucks right it's like disassembling your hard work it's it's undoing all the hard work you just did but along the way i'm also very curious about the state of the loop again i want to check specifically the cpu block and see if we have any clogging in there you know when you have opaque cooling like this it's it's possible and um i'm curious i hope you are too stick with me be quiet not you guys the company their new light wings fans offer impressive lighting and superior cooling all while maintaining a low noise profile with high grade rifle bearing technology and pwm support up to 20 individually addressable leds are baked into a large ring diffuser and you'll experience some of the cleanest rgb lighting around controlled by your motherboard with the help of a splitter included in the triple packs choose between either 120 or 140 ml counterparts as well as standard or high rpm variants for the ideal config in your build learn more about be quiet at lightwings fans by clicking the link below now to kick things off with cleanliness i'm surprised actually that lane leo 11 mini maintained its cleanliness as long as it did especially seeing as though the top of this dust filter is caked in small little pellets of dust and that's because the panel on top of this has small holes so the dust settled in those but it didn't make its way through the dust filter which is great you can see i'll just swipe my hand across here yeah so uh i'm glad this is not all in the system just be one more step you know there was a lot about this case that i really liked at the time and uh just reflecting on it the leon lee 11 mini is just an incredible chassis it's very versatile very flexible you can customize pcie slot layout you could fit up to atx motherboards in here i believe although we have an itx config as is you can fit so many radiators in here so many fans i mean a full on custom loop for pete's sake so if you're interested check this thing out i'll have a link below it is one of the cases i recommend in this form factor leave it to gigabyte to throw on the chunkiest cooler for an rtx 3060. this thing is freaking huge ah you can see a bit of dust made its way into the fence stack but uh not very much i mean considering it's been running for nine months straight again this isn't bad i can't complain i just hate you know again part of the uh just part of the package of being a youtuber having to see all your hard work just get destroyed take it all apart the next thing i'm going to do is probably drain the loop because i mean removing anything else is going to require that anyway it doesn't make sense to try to take the fans out etc when we could just remove the entire assembly once a loop is detached now there's a jank way to remove this fluid and there's um a non-jank way we're going with the jank way because why not i'm just gonna crack open the the drain port here at the bottom i've got a freaking bowl that's been used for painting at one point uh where all this fluid is gonna pour in hopefully and we're just gonna let it rip it's gonna get pretty messy yep that's not even remotely making its way in i can tilt it that's still not working well we're just going to sit here for a minute and hope that this doesn't go everywhere right so that was a that was messy the non-jank way to do this by the way in case you're wondering would be to flip this entire case like front side downward and then just crack the fill port and let it drain into a bowl or something i decided to do it standing up because it would seem to be much easier to film and i kind of backfired but at least it didn't get on the carpet i see this it's so much easier but i insist on over complicating it for whatever reason yeah much smoother go and start removing some of these cables now get the power supply sorted once all that's taken care of then we can remove the fans and the top radiator since most of the water's drained out of the top and then we'll take the bottom radiator out and then we can remove the distro block with the cpu block kind of as one big piece just saves on the spillage later on you can see though for all the effort we put into assembling this custom loop again nine or so months ago you have to spend that much time again to disassemble it the only difference is there's no real reward at the end of this because there's no final product you can't just like kind of sit back and admire the hard work it's just it's just disassembly you know you're just storing stuff for later again one of the reasons why uh it's not my favorite part of this job just realize we have a ton of daisy chain cables i do not remember that the first time around come with me if you want to lose well that was just awful so we're going to loosen the two remaining screws holding this radiator up and now we've got to undo these fittings the way i had to install this was a bit finicky because there wasn't enough space to kind of wedge these tiny little pipes in so we'll undo these fittings here at the top and then we have to pull this entire assembly back see so it snaps out of out of place there all right and then we'll remove the two remaining screws gotta hold up the radiator to do this okay and we'll very carefully slide it all out all right we'll do the exact same thing here for the bottom right you can see all the fluid is out of these two pipes but there is some fluid in the radiator and of course there's some fluid here in these top tubes you can see barely on camera so uh we need to be a bit careful of course spilling is not a huge deal now we're taking the system apart but it just keeps the cleaning process a bit more straightforward later easy does it nice this stuff looks like melted strawberry ice cream we're gonna get rid of it though there's no sense in repurposing it because we have plenty more fluid for future custom loops last few pieces here for the cp runs these uh are a bit longer so they're easier just to kind of wiggle out flip this up and then pull out from this side easy does it we'll prep the motherboard for removal we'll get the type c port is connected usb 3.2 disconnected and a few more screws but what it's worth this was a really solid platform a little intel really never got a lot of love and i think it was justified it wasn't really the best value platform out there i mean it wasn't a a huge shift from 10th gen performance but now that alder lake is out i mean these 1100ks are kind of uh yeah just kind of pointless i wouldn't recommend buying one of these today that's for sure now it's time to wash everything out and this is the part that sucks the most because it just takes a long time you have to disassemble quite a bit and you can see all the fittings all of the caps the fittings the cpu block the distro i've already washed out the radiators but those are pretty gross as well you can flush with vinegar or something else to get any of the uh clog stuff out of these small little channels like the the coolant actually held up quite well i don't see too much staining here but it is important we clean this stuff because if we don't long term definitely will start to see some purple staining along the inside of the distro and the cpu block and we don't want that because these components are really expensive hot water helps and uh yeah we just let it rip oh look at all of that pink just exploded from the channels in the cpu vlog that was pretty gross another reason why we want to clean this stuff and uh already just from running it underwater for a few seconds that block looks so much better now the best way to do this is to completely disassemble the block you get under the channels and start scrubbing those with a toothbrush or something just to get all of the potentially clogged gunk out of there but uh it looks pretty good here again i'm surprised that the coolant held up this well pretty pretty impressive for opaque stuff from ek so yeah this block looks almost brand new already just with water really good stuff these fittings all need to be taken care of the extensions god this water is freaking toasty and lastly the distro this one's going to take a while because it is so large and there are so many channels i'll try to see if i can fill it up here it's really awkward with this like de facto bathroom sink and after about 30 more minutes of that we have a clean case it is now just yeah it's just bare empty like it would look if you pulled it out of the box for the first time a bit sad seeing as though the way we started this uh it had a full custom loop in it and here is most of that gear apart from the tubes which i tossed because we won't need these for whatever custom loop we assemble later on the radiator fin stacks still need to be scrubbed a bit i will tackle that after the fact but the insides of them the channels and everything have been flushed the blocks look a lot better and we've reassembled each of these fittings they are ready to go for a new build okay uh maybe that wasn't so bad you know i mean like come on greg we just complaining just to complain what the heck it is if i'm being honest one of the things that i hate the most about this job and it's not like i hate it that much it's not a huge deal in the grand scheme of things but taking apart my own work my own artwork i would go so far as to say especially with the custom loop side of things can be a bit depressing um you know seeing all the hard work pay off is one thing but then to undo all of that and sort of go backwards it it it cuts a bit deep and you know every time i build a new system i always know in the back of my head that eventually it will be taken apart and i i guess sort of being in this position has kind of ruined that surprise for me um when i first started building computers just kind of repetitively i would i would flip them for 50 bucks or 100 profit something like that when i was in college i was always so excited to put it together do you get all the parts in a parts list and then click order and then to see everything show up and just be so anxious to see what the system looked like when it was all assembled and i still have that passion but it's it's nowhere near as strong as it used to be and i think it's because this has kind of been converted into a full-time job of mine and um i guess you know everything with time more or less does become a bit boring and uh i think the the peak of that is when you have to then disassemble the thing that you're slightly losing passion about i'm certainly not losing passion for tech in general and i make that very clear the reason why i continue doing what i'm doing is because i freaking love it uh but when it comes to pc builds specifically i mean i always try to go to spice things up a bit i don't want us to you know do the same thing over and over the same just sticking with the status quo gets very old and there are so many channels that do that um that's why we started the little mini series where we will buy like super crazy weird cases that nobody's ever purchased or reviewed before and we'll build on those because that just adds another layer of excitement to an otherwise repetitive and boring pc build so i'm trying to do things like that again i just wanted to give you a little behind the scenes action and uh talk a bit about yeah just kind of my internal thought process it wasn't meant to be a super popular video or anything like that but i do appreciate you watching this far into this one and if you're excited about the next pixar flop in the next pcdc don't worry my friends one is coming up very very soon actually many are but uh one should be coming up right after this video if i'm not mistaken i get my schedules all screwed up sometimes i'm like weeks ahead sometimes i'm weeks behind i don't i gotta look at the calendar anyway if you enjoyed this one click the subscribe button i'd appreciate that click the thumbs up button leave a comment down below and i will catch you in the next one oh also i almost ended the video without mentioning this if you live in and around orlando florida and you want yourself a leon leo 11 mini this is again the snow edition um yeah maybe leave a comment and i will meet whoever i pick it's just going to be random and yeah just i'll just give you the case for free because i don't really need it anymore it has served its purpose it's a fantastic case and i'd like to see it move on to a new home so leave a comment down below let me know um where you live you can just be general you know city kind of where you live in and around orlando and if you'd be willing to meet and i will reply to your comment and then from there um we'll uh yeah we'll arrange to meet up so again thanks for watching this for another video i wanted to say this for very last because most of you sign off before we even start talking about this stuff so uh maybe folks are gonna be confused why are there so many comments of people asking for that 011 minute that's really strange but anyway that's our little inside scoop thanks for watching i'll catch you next time my name is greg thanks for disassembling a pc with me\n"