Title: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: Queentoshi on September 12, 2022, 09:04:07 PM Recognizing that the heat generated from mining equipment can become a intolerable, a discouragement and a challenge, it is in every miners benefit to find more beneficial uses for the heat energy from their equipment, rather than considering them totally as a waste. A forum member already has stated one use of the heat which can be recycled to heating homes (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5412448.0), which can be beneficial for people in very cold places like Canada where their home require heating to also cut cost, some other applications where the harnessed heat from mining machine can be used are;
(a)For heating water and food possibly. (b)for drying laundry and food that needs drying. Which other possible domestic use can you think of? Title: Re: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: BitMaxz on September 12, 2022, 10:11:49 PM I think if you have a garden and you love plants and lovers then you can also use the heat from ASIC miner to heat the room to keep the room of your garden warmer. we know cold places like Canada the plants can not survive in cold places so having an ASIC miner can help heat the garden and it can also cut your Electricity than having a normal heater which consumed the same as a miner.
And I saw more from this link below that you can recycle the heat and use it for other things like wood drying and also for water heating. - 5 ingenious ways Bitcoin miners are recycling heat from ASICs (https://medium.com/lumerin-blog/5-ingenious-ways-bitcoin-miners-are-recycling-heat-from-asics-cac1dc4e18b2) Title: Re: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: spectre71 on September 14, 2022, 03:49:29 PM We were going to use S19's to heat our greenhouses as we have super cheap power. But when we go to it the price of ASIC's tripled and not longer worked for us.
I'm excited about the new water cooled rigs, that can really make the heat energy useful. Floor / baseboard heating, water heater, pool heater ground heating in greenhouses Title: Re: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: DaveF on September 14, 2022, 04:03:43 PM The issue with greenhouses is they tend to be humid, which is not good for miners. And during the hot summer months you need to get more heat and humidity out of the space.
Over the years there have been a lot of people with a lot of plans to do something with the waste heat. Using liquid cooling is fine, but do you want to have heated flooring during the summer? If not you have to have a 2nd water path to move the heat someplace else. Also, it adds complication. I have an air cooled miner I can put it anyplace where I can move enough air to keep it cool no though given to plumbing.... -Dave Title: Re: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: stompix on September 14, 2022, 06:01:42 PM The issue with greenhouses is they tend to be humid, which is not good for miners. And during the hot summer months you need to get more heat and humidity out of the space. This is the main problem with the heat, you need to get it out of the miner but at the same time you must be careful what air you get in also, so you will definitely need two circuits here, and then you have the distance if your greenhouse is like 50 meters from the room where you have the miners you need a lot of fans to push it, maybe dig a trench for the tubes so you don't lose that much heat but at the same time, you have to watch out if air goes above 30C not to ruin your plants, so another exhaust. A lot of pain in the ass if you're working on small-scale stuff, might be really enjoyable as a hobby if you like this stuff but probably at one point you will get bored playing around all day with settings and temps and fan speeds depending on how sunny is outside. Title: Re: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: spectre71 on September 15, 2022, 02:23:24 AM The issue with greenhouses is they tend to be humid, which is not good for miners. And during the hot summer months you need to get more heat and humidity out of the space. This is the main problem with the heat, you need to get it out of the miner but at the same time you must be careful what air you get in also, so you will definitely need two circuits here, and then you have the distance if your greenhouse is like 50 meters from the room where you have the miners you need a lot of fans to push it, maybe dig a trench for the tubes so you don't lose that much heat but at the same time, you have to watch out if air goes above 30C not to ruin your plants, so another exhaust. A lot of pain in the ass if you're working on small-scale stuff, might be really enjoyable as a hobby if you like this stuff but probably at one point you will get bored playing around all day with settings and temps and fan speeds depending on how sunny is outside. Our green houses are fully automated. Exhaust fans, intake fans, heat, humidity, CO2 generators, lights, water and nutrition. I was going to use the output of the dehumidifiers to drive the ASICs as it's filtered as well. Title: Re: Recycle uses of the heat from mining equipment. Post by: Daltonik on October 09, 2022, 09:48:35 AM The issue with greenhouses is they tend to be humid, which is not good for miners. And during the hot summer months you need to get more heat and humidity out of the space. Over the years there have been a lot of people with a lot of plans to do something with the waste heat. Using liquid cooling is fine, but do you want to have heated flooring during the summer? If not you have to have a 2nd water path to move the heat someplace else. Also, it adds complication. I have an air cooled miner I can put it anyplace where I can move enough air to keep it cool no though given to plumbing.... -Dave Yes, definitely take care that in the summer to dispose of heat, for example, having a small cooling tower or using such or such a fan heater installed outside the room to cool the immersion fluid, I think all this can be implemented. https://i.imgur.com/3kjT8kX.jpg |