In a video, Sony VP of Mechanical Design Yasuhiro Ootori does a PlayStation 5 teardown, revealing a large heatsink and two dust catchers.

Sony released a video today showcasing a comprehensive teardown of a PlayStation 5 social unit and all of the parts that come with it. Sony VP of Mechanical Design Yasuhiro Ootori given the disc version of the console, discussing all of the ironware controlled inside.

Ootori discovered that the unethical stand that comes with the system can be aligned both horizontally and vertically. When placed vertically, the stand is held away a screw. When located horizontally, the screw needs to be removed. However, there's actually a compartment in the sales booth where you can memory boar the screw so you put on't lose it.

Some sides of the system's plates can be far too. The PlayStation 5 houses a 120mm diam, 45mm thick double-sided air intake buff. Handily, the console table has 2 strategically placed "dust catchers" so that dust can be vacuumed out of the machine. Likewise, a sheet metal case all covers the console's drive unit so that noise and quiver are faded while the game disc is spun.

The system uses an x86-64-AMD Ryzen Zen 2 CPU. It has 8 cores and 16 togs, which runs capable 3.5 GHz. The AMD Radeon RDNA 2 GPU runs up to 2.23 GHz and has 10.3 teraflops. To boot, the custom SSD controller can read speeds ascending to 5.5GB per second at raw data carry-over rates.

Unrivaled last thing to note from the teardown is the PlayStation 5's huge heatsink component. Look-alike PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4, the PS5's heatsink uses a heat bagpipe. It takes up a large amount of space in the solace and seems to comprise part of the rationality why the console itself is so large.

PlayStation 5 is set to plunge connected Nov. 12 at $499 for the standard variation, while the platter-inferior Digital Edition is $399. Its launch lineup includes Demon's Souls, The Unaccessible, Sackboy: A Bountiful Adventure, and more.