Dude, just think about it for a secondfirst off, all air is is a bunch of hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen (mostly) molecules floating around, with trillions of molecules every single square centimeter, an "airflow" is just when all these molecules are moving in generally the same direction. Having these molecules moving around doesn't change its density by all that much, and certainly doesn't change their temperature. When molecules hit something they transfer some of their energy in the form of heat, so they'll slowly start to equalize out to eachother. The only other way things can lose heat is through radiation, but that happens extremely slowly and can only happen if it's in a near-perfect vacuum, which this certainly isn't.By the laws of physics alone, there is no way to cool it below ambient temperature if the thing that's doing the "cooling" is just a fan.
Ok, let's play a fun little game. Children, gather around, download Speccy, and lets see how many of you have sub-ambient temperatures on your computers!
i've gone around asking my friends and they all say they've seen it too
I live in Phoenix, that comes out to about 111F. It's 102F outside right now. Pretty ambient.
its so hot in my city i sweat through my nike shorts like gaddam i cant wait for hoodie season
but yet i've seen a lower than ambient temperature on multiple computers and i've gone around asking my friends and they all say they've seen it toodo you want to tell me ALL of our motherboards are broken?
I didn't know you lived in AZ, I'm in Tempe right now, its super forgetin hot outside, lol.
i wear my hoodie at school and never take it off
Tempe's a neat part of AZ, 'cuz it has tons of delicious food places and it also has Fujiya Market.