Psupaste
PC power connections are tight. When you plug in a modular cable, there is significant pressure. If you add paste into the mix, the hydraulic pressure has to go somewhere. The result? Paste squeezes out onto the surrounding motherboard or casing. If that paste is even slightly conductive, you risk shorting out your entire system.
One of the best use cases for psuPaste is moving saves between your physical console and the . By using tools like PS2 Save Builder , you can convert emulator saves into the .psu format, then use the psuPaste method to play your PC progress on a real PS2. Final Thoughts
Unlike dielectric grease, which is designed specifically to protect metal contacts, many CPU thermal pastes are not meant for friction-fit electrical contacts. Some compounds can react with the gold plating on pins over time, leading to oxidation and a permanently damaged PSU. psupaste
is a critical command within uLaunchELF (a popular PlayStation 2 homebrew file manager) used to perfectly preserve and transfer PS2 game save data. Unlike a standard "Paste" command, which only moves raw files, psuPaste handles the complex folder structures and metadata required by the PS2's original operating system. Why Use psuPaste?
To get started, you’ll need a PS2 equipped with a memory card and a USB flash drive formatted to FAT32 . 1. Backing Up a Save (Memory Card to USB) Launch uLaunchELF and enter the FileBrowser . Navigate to mc0:/ (Slot 1) or mc1:/ (Slot 2). PC power connections are tight
forums.ps2dev.org :: View topic - Saved Games to PS2 - Lukasz.dk
Here is a blog post about the fictional phenomenon of "Psupaste." The result
If you’ve spent any time on PC building forums or r/pcmasterrace in the last few weeks, you’ve probably seen the term thrown around: .
While the theory of reducing resistance is sound, the application inside a PC case is fraught with peril. Most modern PSUs have tight enough tolerances that the benefits would be negligible at best, and catastrophic at worst.