F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Liquid Metal RAM could potentially be applied to the CPU!

Liquid Metal RAM could potentially be applied to the CPU!

Liquid Metal RAM could potentially be applied to the CPU!

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_Seykz
Junior Member
4
01-11-2026, 01:08 AM
#1
Thinking ThermalGrizzly can produce 64GB or even 128GB liquid metal? With cooling and RAM combined in one device? Check out the latest insights from TechRadar.
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_Seykz
01-11-2026, 01:08 AM #1

Thinking ThermalGrizzly can produce 64GB or even 128GB liquid metal? With cooling and RAM combined in one device? Check out the latest insights from TechRadar.

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masterpet09
Member
111
01-26-2026, 02:52 PM
#2
Status update completed, thank you for your message.
M
masterpet09
01-26-2026, 02:52 PM #2

Status update completed, thank you for your message.

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SpooderPiggey
Junior Member
6
01-26-2026, 04:52 PM
#3
It's a terrible name for this product. We previously used Liquid Metal RAM, which was the standard before integrated circuits and core memory. The article even refers to it as FlexRam, but search results now completely mislead about its history. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delay-line...elay_lines
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SpooderPiggey
01-26-2026, 04:52 PM #3

It's a terrible name for this product. We previously used Liquid Metal RAM, which was the standard before integrated circuits and core memory. The article even refers to it as FlexRam, but search results now completely mislead about its history. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delay-line...elay_lines

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Dragonxd07
Member
112
01-28-2026, 04:12 PM
#4
what
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Dragonxd07
01-28-2026, 04:12 PM #4

what

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trayson65
Member
143
02-03-2026, 06:56 AM
#5
Despite being used with mercury years ago, it's interesting to observe this idea coming back with a metal that causes fewer health issues. A minor worry remains regarding temperature—gallium melts at a higher point than mercury and stays solid at room temperature. It begins to turn liquid around 85°F, which could affect performance. FlexRAM would likely need constant heating to keep working properly. In its solid state, gallium isn't very strong or flexible either; if it were bent below 85°F, it would break easily and lose your data.
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trayson65
02-03-2026, 06:56 AM #5

Despite being used with mercury years ago, it's interesting to observe this idea coming back with a metal that causes fewer health issues. A minor worry remains regarding temperature—gallium melts at a higher point than mercury and stays solid at room temperature. It begins to turn liquid around 85°F, which could affect performance. FlexRAM would likely need constant heating to keep working properly. In its solid state, gallium isn't very strong or flexible either; if it were bent below 85°F, it would break easily and lose your data.