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Other => Off-topic => Topic started by: stcupp on February 26, 2012, 05:27:11 AM



Title: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: stcupp on February 26, 2012, 05:27:11 AM
http://www.butterflylabs.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/BFL-SHA256-A-Processors-300x217.png
http://www.butterflylabs.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/PCB-checkup-271x300.png
http://www.butterflylabs.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Ninja-work-268x300.png
http://www.butterflylabs.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Power-On-300x209.png

These pics are from the January update
Notice how there doesn't seem to be anything printed on the chips...

Also it uses 2 chips to get a little over 800 mh/s
Thats around 400 mh/s per chip
The spartan 6 chips that all the fpga projects are using get around 200 mh/s per chip and has around 150,000 logic cells

so I would guess you would need around 300,000 to get 400 mh/s per chip

any of the fpga's i've seen with around 300,000 logic cells are in the thousands of dollars range

Also on their FAQ page:
3. Is your system based on FPGA or ASIC technology?

The BitForce processor card is a proprietary implementation of both FPGA and ASIC technology.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Epoch on February 26, 2012, 06:27:24 AM
If you would take the time to go through the 2 original BFL threads, you'd realize this has already been dealt with ad nauseum. Of course they are using ASICs. The USB controller is an ASIC. Every FPGA miner is using ASICs if you want to be technically correct. ASIC = Application Specific Integrated Circuit.

As for the 2 large chips with the sanded heat spreader, the best candidate seems to be an Altera Stratix III. Either the EP3SL200 or the EP3SE260. Yes, both of these 'retail' for several thousand dollars. But no one buys these now, and certainly not for retail prices. They are essentially 'end of life' 65nm parts. 2 generations old already. No one uses these for new designs anymore. Why do you think BFLs W/Mhps ratio of twice as bad as anyone using Spartan 6? Because Spartan 6 is a 45nm part, and BFL is using older and power-hungry 65nm parts. But BFL got lucky and found source of cheap, old, last-gen high-end chips. Someone willing to dump them for a low cost. Perhaps from a cancelled project.

Anyway, pursuing this 'question' further is rather pointless. Technically, the answer is 'yes': BFL is using ASICs, but those 2 large chips aren't them. There isn't anything magical about those chips. They are old 65nm tech, but they are high-end. That is why they get the performance they do, but it is also why they use so much more power than any other current FPGA miner on a W/Mhps comparison.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Turbor on February 26, 2012, 10:51:02 AM
Two EP3SL340 should do the job. No idea how expensive they are today.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: stcupp on February 26, 2012, 12:11:08 PM
Two EP3SL340 should do the job. No idea how expensive they are today.

http://www.buyaltera.com/scripts/partsearch.dll

Around $11,000 from the manufacturer

Thats super over priced though I doubt anyone would ever pay that with the new chips out


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: friedcat on February 26, 2012, 01:46:25 PM
If you would take the time to go through the 2 original BFL threads, you'd realize this has already been dealt with ad nauseum. Of course they are using ASICs. The USB controller is an ASIC. Every FPGA miner is using ASICs if you want to be technically correct. ASIC = Application Specific Integrated Circuit.

As for the 2 large chips with the sanded heat spreader, the best candidate seems to be an Altera Stratix III. Either the EP3SL200 or the EP3SE260. Yes, both of these 'retail' for several thousand dollars. But no one buys these now, and certainly not for retail prices. They are essentially 'end of life' 65nm parts. 2 generations old already. No one uses these for new designs anymore. Why do you think BFLs W/Mhps ratio of twice as bad as anyone using Spartan 6? Because Spartan 6 is a 45nm part, and BFL is using older and power-hungry 65nm parts. But BFL got lucky and found source of cheap, old, last-gen high-end chips. Someone willing to dump them for a low cost. Perhaps from a cancelled project.

Anyway, pursuing this 'question' further is rather pointless. Technically, the answer is 'yes': BFL is using ASICs, but those 2 large chips aren't them. There isn't anything magical about those chips. They are old 65nm tech, but they are high-end. That is why they get the performance they do, but it is also why they use so much more power than any other current FPGA miner on a W/Mhps comparison.

This explanation is very reasonable to me.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: cypherdoc on February 26, 2012, 03:50:20 PM
If you would take the time to go through the 2 original BFL threads, you'd realize this has already been dealt with ad nauseum. Of course they are using ASICs. The USB controller is an ASIC. Every FPGA miner is using ASICs if you want to be technically correct. ASIC = Application Specific Integrated Circuit.

As for the 2 large chips with the sanded heat spreader, the best candidate seems to be an Altera Stratix III. Either the EP3SL200 or the EP3SE260. Yes, both of these 'retail' for several thousand dollars. But no one buys these now, and certainly not for retail prices. They are essentially 'end of life' 65nm parts. 2 generations old already. No one uses these for new designs anymore. Why do you think BFLs W/Mhps ratio of twice as bad as anyone using Spartan 6? Because Spartan 6 is a 45nm part, and BFL is using older and power-hungry 65nm parts. But BFL got lucky and found source of cheap, old, last-gen high-end chips. Someone willing to dump them for a low cost. Perhaps from a cancelled project.

Anyway, pursuing this 'question' further is rather pointless. Technically, the answer is 'yes': BFL is using ASICs, but those 2 large chips aren't them. There isn't anything magical about those chips. They are old 65nm tech, but they are high-end. That is why they get the performance they do, but it is also why they use so much more power than any other current FPGA miner on a W/Mhps comparison.

This explanation is very reasonable to me.

which means once they run out of this older asic supply the USD price per Mh should move in line with the Spartans.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: DeathAndTaxes on February 26, 2012, 04:16:34 PM
If you would take the time to go through the 2 original BFL threads, you'd realize this has already been dealt with ad nauseum. Of course they are using ASICs. The USB controller is an ASIC. Every FPGA miner is using ASICs if you want to be technically correct. ASIC = Application Specific Integrated Circuit.

As for the 2 large chips with the sanded heat spreader, the best candidate seems to be an Altera Stratix III. Either the EP3SL200 or the EP3SE260. Yes, both of these 'retail' for several thousand dollars. But no one buys these now, and certainly not for retail prices. They are essentially 'end of life' 65nm parts. 2 generations old already. No one uses these for new designs anymore. Why do you think BFLs W/Mhps ratio of twice as bad as anyone using Spartan 6? Because Spartan 6 is a 45nm part, and BFL is using older and power-hungry 65nm parts. But BFL got lucky and found source of cheap, old, last-gen high-end chips. Someone willing to dump them for a low cost. Perhaps from a cancelled project.

Anyway, pursuing this 'question' further is rather pointless. Technically, the answer is 'yes': BFL is using ASICs, but those 2 large chips aren't them. There isn't anything magical about those chips. They are old 65nm tech, but they are high-end. That is why they get the performance they do, but it is also why they use so much more power than any other current FPGA miner on a W/Mhps comparison.

This explanation is very reasonable to me.

which means once they run out of this older asic supply the USD price per Mh should move in line with the Spartans.

Those aren't ASICs.   An ASIC hashing processor wouldn't be using 2x the wattage (per MHs) as an FPGA.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: DeathAndTaxes on February 26, 2012, 04:19:55 PM
Simple version:
No.  The board layout, power draw, voltage, and presence of JTAG header are all inconsistent with either sASIC or custom ASIC chip.

The chipss are almost certainly last generation (65nm) FPGAs.  Granted a chip w/ 300K LUT tends to go for $1000 or more but if they leveraged prior business dealings they could have gotten a "sweatheart" deal on some end of life chips.  If you look on ebay you can find new but old CPU for sometimes 90% off.  $500 circa 2008 Xeon processors selling for an amazing $48.  The same thing can happen in FPGA world although it is rarely as public.

TL/DR version:
The voltage, power draw, JTAG header, and board layout would be consistent with a large LUT last generation FPGA.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Keninishna on February 27, 2012, 12:34:03 AM
Would BFL really do that? I mean use old fpgas? Who releases a product with a limited supply of fpgas.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: DeathAndTaxes on February 27, 2012, 12:37:15 AM
Would BFL really do that? I mean use old fpgas? Who releases a product with a limited supply of fpgas.

Why wouldn't you do it.  They are able to offer almost 2x the performance per $.  I mean when they run out and have say $100K in the bank to spend on 28nm development is that a "bad thing"?  I mean honestly if it was you and you could build "obsolete" boards based on limited supply and easily sell them for a substantial markup and under price every competitor on the market you wouldn't?  Why?  You don't like lots of money?  More orders than you can handle?  Rapid turn around on capital?  Necessary funding to make next gen boards?

I honestly don't get your question.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Keninishna on February 27, 2012, 01:05:35 AM
Are they really making that much of a profit from it? They are selling two chips per board, not to mention the rest of the cost of research and development and making the unit. I'd be surprised if they make 100$ profit from each one and their supply of fpgas can't be that great? I mean if they have 2k fpgas thats "only" 100k profit. My point being that's a lot of fpgas to find on the cheap but I guess possible.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: rjk on February 27, 2012, 01:08:44 AM
Are they really making that much of a profit from it? They are selling two chips per board, not to mention the rest of the cost of research and development and making the unit. I'd be surprised if they make 100$ profit from each one and their supply of fpgas can't be that great? I mean if they have 10k fpgas thats "only" 50k profit.
Ask them...

Some VC's might not need to see a wildly massive profit from a company's trial run before they will commit to lots more cash. (that was speculation btw)


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: DeathAndTaxes on February 27, 2012, 01:11:44 AM
Are they really making that much of a profit from it? They are selling two chips per board, not to mention the rest of the cost of research and development and making the unit. I'd be surprised if they make 100$ profit from each one and their supply of fpgas can't be that great? I mean if they have 10k fpgas thats "only" 50k profit.

They could sell the boards for more.  I have no idea how much profit they are making but given it is roughly half the $/MH compared to other boards the fact they are selling them for $600 would indicate to me they feel it is "enough".  My guess means that is >$100 per board.  But even if it is only $100 per board there margins would be worse not better using the same chips as everyone else.  Same chips = same performance = only competing on price.  To move 10K units would require cutting margins to nothing.

Would that be better?

As for the economic I have no idea how profitable they are.  Only BFL knows their supply cost and margins.  From a spec standpoint though the board as observed doesn't match an ASIC.  It has a JTAG header and flash loader which only make sense on FPGA.  It runs at 1.1V internal which doesn't match any 45nm FPGA or sASIC.  It gets 10MH/W which is "inferior" to any 45nm FPGA and an ASIC would be many multiple MORE efficient not less efficient.  So no it doesn't make sense that it is an ASIC or sASIC.

I assume they are making enough and if supply is limited they already know this and have planned on moving to another chip when supplies get low.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Keninishna on February 27, 2012, 01:19:21 AM
The downside is its a lot of work and somewhat of a gamble but I'm not one to say no to a profit either so I can't blame them for doing what they are doing. Its just one day they are gonna run out of fpgas and then they are gonna have to start over with a new process which may or may not be nearly as cost effective as what they are doing now.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: rjk on February 27, 2012, 01:20:46 AM
The downside is its a lot of work and somewhat of a gamble but I'm not one to say no to a profit either so I can't blame them for doing what they are doing. Its just one day they are gonna run out of fpgas and then they are gonna have to start over with a new process which may or may not be nearly as cost effective as what they are doing now.
Well seeing as they were able to design a completely new board layout in like month (since power issues cropped up), I would say that that is not likely to be a limitation.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: fitty on February 27, 2012, 01:39:34 AM
The downside is its a lot of work and somewhat of a gamble but I'm not one to say no to a profit either so I can't blame them for doing what they are doing. Its just one day they are gonna run out of fpgas and then they are gonna have to start over with a new process which may or may not be nearly as cost effective as what they are doing now.
Well seeing as they were able to design a completely new board layout in like month (since power issues cropped up), I would say that that is not likely to be a limitation.

Agreed. I doubt there's much gamble. I'm sure they are making a profit. If you forecast Bitcoin, along with mining, along with making money, even the most optimistic would hesitate to predict anything beyond 2 years. Things change so quickly no one really knows what will happen. No one is going to start a business just to get market share when the market might not even exist in a year. I'm pretty confident they're not selling at a loss.

If they put up pre-orders for a new board, they'd get a ton of orders assuming they produce/deliver on the current batch of Singles. I've seen quite a few "I've ordered X amount", factor in people who haven't posted, I'm sure the number of Singles ordered/pending right now is above 100, that's 60K up front. When people will pay and then wait for the product that's a great situation to be in.

I'd guess they can switch gears pretty quick. Assuming they deliver the 100s of orders pending, getting money up front in the future shouldn't be a problem. They managed to double the performance for the same purchase price, I'd lean towards them knowing what they are doing vs getting lucky.



Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: goxed on February 27, 2012, 02:50:45 AM
This looks like a Virtex II. Virtex 4 had a raised bump on the Heat spreader.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: 1l1l11ll1l on March 21, 2012, 05:31:05 PM
Note to self... When trying to remove the heatsink from you Butterfly Labs Single, Do not remove the chip...  ???

http://i44.tinypic.com/143qg06.jpg


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: rjk on March 21, 2012, 05:33:43 PM
Note to self... When trying to remove the heatsink from you Butterfly Labs Single, Do not remove the chip...  ???

http://i44.tinypic.com/143qg06.jpg

I knew this was going to happen eventually. Also,

ROFLMAO


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: DeepBit on March 21, 2012, 05:42:15 PM
Note to self... When trying to remove the heatsink from you Butterfly Labs Single, Do not remove the chip...  ???
Package edges are way too rounded.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: DeathAndTaxes on March 21, 2012, 05:43:19 PM
Good catch.  1l1l11ll1l post a pic of the damaged board.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Fefox on March 21, 2012, 06:15:04 PM
when talking with BFL the other day it was mentioned that the rig box was using the same boards but newer chips, and to make the 50Gh 34-36 boards would be required...

Maybe we will see a 1400Mh Single soon?

based on the guesses, is there a chip that would be a drop in replacement but faster?


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: 1l1l11ll1l on March 21, 2012, 07:19:09 PM
You'll never believe it! Rubbed off the epoxy, this is what they're using!

http://i44.tinypic.com/r02y2p.jpg

 :D


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: chungenhung on March 21, 2012, 07:30:13 PM
lol


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Cablez on March 21, 2012, 08:00:37 PM
That is unbelievable!!!!!!! :o :o :o :o

nice find  ;) ;D


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: Turbor on March 21, 2012, 08:29:22 PM
Looks like they made a 4-6 day blitz delivery to you :P


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: rjk on March 21, 2012, 08:41:03 PM
Hahaha, you got me!


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: 1l1l11ll1l on March 21, 2012, 11:36:56 PM
Just so you know, I sacrificed a perfectly good AMD CPU for that little joke! Well worth it!  :D

http://i40.tinypic.com/ornxqu.jpg


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: abeaulieu on March 23, 2012, 02:13:20 AM
Just so you know, I sacrificed a perfectly good AMD CPU for that little joke! Well worth it!  :D

lol. worth it


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: BlackPrapor on March 23, 2012, 07:25:28 AM
Two EP3SL340 should do the job. No idea how expensive they are today.

http://www.buyaltera.com/scripts/partsearch.dll

Around $11,000 from the manufacturer

Thats super over priced though I doubt anyone would ever pay that with the new chips out

http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: abeaulieu on March 23, 2012, 12:29:30 PM
Two EP3SL340 should do the job. No idea how expensive they are today.

http://www.buyaltera.com/scripts/partsearch.dll

Around $11,000 from the manufacturer

Thats super over priced though I doubt anyone would ever pay that with the new chips out

http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...
\

I've seen this website. Not sure how legit they are... anyone know? They seem to have pretty expensive electronics for absurdly low prices. I'm skeptical.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: BlackPrapor on March 23, 2012, 02:03:31 PM
Two EP3SL340 should do the job. No idea how expensive they are today.

http://www.buyaltera.com/scripts/partsearch.dll

Around $11,000 from the manufacturer

Thats super over priced though I doubt anyone would ever pay that with the new chips out

http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...
\

I've seen this website. Not sure how legit they are... anyone know? They seem to have pretty expensive electronics for absurdly low prices. I'm skeptical.

It's larger than eBay man =))). This is like eBay for B2B


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: makomk on March 23, 2012, 02:05:40 PM
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...
\

I've seen this website. Not sure how legit they are... anyone know? They seem to have pretty expensive electronics for absurdly low prices. I'm skeptical.
I suspect - based mostly on the vagueness of the descriptions and the prices - that they're full of BS. Alibaba.com is basically a marketplace where a whole bunch of different companies can list their products and services, it doesn't do that much in the way of checking, and some of them have most likely just grabbed a big list of components and created entries for them all regardless of whether they can actually obtain them in the hope that they can source them if someone is willing to pay them money. Then of course there's fake components (http://www.sparkfun.com/news/350) and outright scammers...


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: rjk on March 23, 2012, 02:08:02 PM
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...
\

I've seen this website. Not sure how legit they are... anyone know? They seem to have pretty expensive electronics for absurdly low prices. I'm skeptical.
I suspect - based mostly on the vagueness of the descriptions and the prices - that they're full of BS. Alibaba.com is basically a marketplace where a whole bunch of different companies can list their products and services, it doesn't do that much in the way of checking, and some of them have most likely just grabbed a big list of components and created entries for them all regardless of whether they can actually obtain them in the hope that they can source them if someone is willing to pay them money. Then of course there's fake components (http://www.sparkfun.com/news/350) and outright scammers...
Alibaba used to be rife with scammers and fraud, but they have worked hard to improve that, by validating sellers and offering built-in escrow via Escrow.com. However, just because something is listed does not mean that it is available, or even that it is available at that price. You can't buy anything directly like eBay, as far as i can tell, you must contact the seller to arrange it.


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: BlackPrapor on March 23, 2012, 02:14:06 PM
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...
\

I've seen this website. Not sure how legit they are... anyone know? They seem to have pretty expensive electronics for absurdly low prices. I'm skeptical.
I suspect - based mostly on the vagueness of the descriptions and the prices - that they're full of BS. Alibaba.com is basically a marketplace where a whole bunch of different companies can list their products and services, it doesn't do that much in the way of checking, and some of them have most likely just grabbed a big list of components and created entries for them all regardless of whether they can actually obtain them in the hope that they can source them if someone is willing to pay them money. Then of course there's fake components (http://www.sparkfun.com/news/350) and outright scammers...

$66B capitalisation company selling counterfeits  ::) ROFL


Title: Re: Is Butter Fly Labs using ASIC's?????
Post by: BlackPrapor on March 23, 2012, 02:20:08 PM
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/345918367/EP3SL340_ALTERA_IC_Integrated_Circuit.html This supplier sells it for $100 a piece and less. Just so you know...
\

I've seen this website. Not sure how legit they are... anyone know? They seem to have pretty expensive electronics for absurdly low prices. I'm skeptical.
I suspect - based mostly on the vagueness of the descriptions and the prices - that they're full of BS. Alibaba.com is basically a marketplace where a whole bunch of different companies can list their products and services, it doesn't do that much in the way of checking, and some of them have most likely just grabbed a big list of components and created entries for them all regardless of whether they can actually obtain them in the hope that they can source them if someone is willing to pay them money. Then of course there's fake components (http://www.sparkfun.com/news/350) and outright scammers...
Alibaba used to be rife with scammers and fraud, but they have worked hard to improve that, by validating sellers and offering built-in escrow via Escrow.com. However, just because something is listed does not mean that it is available, or even that it is available at that price. You can't buy anything directly like eBay, as far as i can tell, you must contact the seller to arrange it.

Not only arrange it, but get a brand holder's permission to sell their product in your country. I'm sure it should be easy to arrange, but you can't just import lets say 1k BMW's and screw with an official dealer and a distributor in your country. I've tried to get quotes for AMD Radeon 5850 and 5870's, but got a reply from Alibaba's supply manager that I have to get a brand owner's permission. Luckily I didn't go for it, as I discovered FPGA's