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1481  Economy / Computer hardware / [sold!] [EU] Bitmain Antminer A3 Siacoin (Blake 2b algo) ASIC miner on: March 22, 2018, 05:25:51 PM
Hi,

I'm selling one Antminer A3 without psu and cables (power, ethernet, ..).

Machine is in good condition and about five months of Bitmain warranty time still left.

Price: 0.15BTC incl. shipping

Location: Finland (EU area)

No need to pay VAT taxes in EU area, I've already paid it.

I accept btc payment or an equivalent amount with other cryptos.
You can pay me directly or use an escrow service like OgNasty for example.



Edit (March 23, 2018):
This is now sold to username Tupsu.

The thread is now locked.
1482  Economy / Computer hardware / Re: [WTS] [EU] Hotmine X5 3.4 Th/s Bitcoin ASIC miner, low noise unit, including PSU on: March 22, 2018, 01:28:09 AM
You still have this?
Replied your pm.
1483  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Avalon A7 announced on: March 22, 2018, 12:31:40 AM
You can access the miner configuration page when you are in the same local area network with your computer, laptop, smartphone, etc.

If you mean remote access, one quick option is to install TeamViewer in a PC located in the same local area network as your miner controller and access that PC by using the TeamViewer app with your smartphone.
1484  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Mining (Altcoins) / Re: [NEW] Bitmain Announces Antminer A3 on: March 21, 2018, 11:42:58 PM
I ran my A3 overclocked at 930 Gh/s average for over one month with (low hardware errors under 2k/day per board)


I used 120V power on APW3++ and it worked like a charm!
Temperatures averaged around 62-65C for boards and outside room temps were between 60F-80F

I would say bitmain's PSU is stronger than it seems and does work well!

This is a dangerous example, since overloading the power supply may end up breaking it.

The input circuit in the APW3++ is designed to be able to handle max. 1200W at 110-120V and max. 1600W at 220-240V mains voltage.

I've also been running miner around 900-930 Gh/s (Overclocked from 600-650) and the power doesn't go above 1200W, it stays around 1180W on my A3's. Temps on boards are around 88C-93C with good air circulation and before at room temperature the miners would run stock at 80C-85C. After talking to Bitmain support the boards can run up to 115C before overheat protection kicks in but I would not like for the boards to get above 95C.

Ok if that's the case, then I stand corrected.

But it is close to the max. limit which the input circuit can withstand.
1485  Economy / Computer hardware / [sold!] Hotmine X5 3.4 Th/s Bitcoin ASIC miner, low noise unit, including PSU on: March 21, 2018, 11:36:25 PM
EDIT:
This is now sold to Zerinoff. The thread is locked.


Hello ladies and gents, I'm selling following hardware..

Hotmine X5 3.4 Th/s Bitcoin ASIC miner, low noise unit, including PSU
This includes one unit Hotmine X5 miner with a 1000 W (80 Plus Gold efficiency level) ATX power supply unit.

No cables (power, ethernet..) are included.

This unit hashing stable at about 3.4 Th/s hash rate.
Power consumption is roughly 450 W.
Power efficiency is 0.13 J / Ghs.

Noise level is pretty low, I would compare this to the Antminer S1 or S3 when it comes to the noise level.

Available now.

Price (incl. shipping): 0.07 BTC


Location: Finland (EU area)

No need to pay taxes in the EU area, VAT is already paid.

You can pay me directly with BTC or we can use a escrow service (philipma1957 or OgNasty for example).
Escrow fee is at buyer's expense.

See my review for more technical info about the Hotmine X5:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1857129


Check out this Imgur.com photo album for photos:
https://imgur.com/a/TROL8

If you are interested, you can contact me by sending me a PM here at the forum.  
Smiley
1486  Bitcoin / Mining / Re: Notes from my journey to Beijing & visiting Canaan Creative in March 10-15, 2018 on: March 21, 2018, 11:08:53 PM
We have been in good communication with mods and
after some discussion I've asked if they can locate this thread in the top-level Mining section,
as I was told this doesn't fit in any of the Mining area subforums.

This thread subject is about my journey & visit,
I will open a separate thread for AvalonMiner troubleshooting, repair guide, etc.  later on.  Smiley
And same thing applies for the upcoming A841 review.
1487  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Who likes pod miners? on: March 21, 2018, 10:53:48 PM
Can you explain Bitfury chip vs Bitmain BM1384 chip?  Is Bitfury chips more energy efficient, so higher hashrates for less watts?

Yes.

Bitfury BF16BTC8162
Link: http://bitfury.com/products#16nm-asic
1488  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Mining (Altcoins) / Re: [NEW] Bitmain Announces Antminer A3 on: March 21, 2018, 09:47:36 PM
I ran my A3 overclocked at 930 Gh/s average for over one month with (low hardware errors under 2k/day per board)


I used 120V power on APW3++ and it worked like a charm!
Temperatures averaged around 62-65C for boards and outside room temps were between 60F-80F

I would say bitmain's PSU is stronger than it seems and does work well!

This is a dangerous example, since overloading the power supply may end up breaking it.

The input circuit in the APW3++ is designed to be able to handle max. 1200W at 110-120V and max. 1600W at 220-240V mains voltage.
1489  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: (Review/Guide) AvalonMiner 821 11.0 Th/s, 1200W Bitcoin (SHA-256) ASIC miner on: March 21, 2018, 07:34:34 AM
I have received a A841 sample unit from Canaan and I'm working on the review for it.  Smiley



Moderator's note: This post was edited by frodocooper to remove an off-topic portion of the post.
1490  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: DragonMint 16TH/S halongmining.com on: March 20, 2018, 10:52:44 PM
After all these posts and weird things in this thread,
I will be so happy when people actually start receiving these units.
1491  Bitcoin / Mining / Re: Notes from my journey to Beijing & visiting Canaan Creative in March 10-15, 2018 on: March 20, 2018, 09:53:22 PM
Little question, is the 761 test model essentially just a 741 but with a PSU attached to it, similar to the 841? I wasn't able to find much information on it. I love your review style, especially this small documentary of your visit to Canaan. It's not often you get to see how miners are made, especially with most manufacturers being extremely closed-off.

I didn't do a full scale disassembly for the A761 unit, but my understanding is that the control board,
PMU board, hash board design etc. is similar to the A741, but there are more A3212 chips in the A761
and it has a built-in power supply unit with thick wires connected directly from the PSU to the PMU boards.
And steel tube case design is ofc different compared to the A741.
1492  Bitcoin / Mining / Re: Notes from my journey to Beijing & visiting Canaan Creative in March 10-15, 2018 on: March 20, 2018, 08:52:26 PM
Reserved for questions, answers, etc.

Question 1

Little question, is the 761 test model essentially just a 741 but with a PSU attached to it, similar to the 841? I wasn't able to find much information on it. I love your review style, especially this small documentary of your visit to Canaan. It's not often you get to see how miners are made, especially with most manufacturers being extremely closed-off.

I didn't do a full scale disassembly for the A761 unit, but my understanding is that the control board,
PMU board, hash board design etc. is similar to the A741, but there are more A3212 chips in the A761
and it has a built-in power supply unit with thick wires connected directly from the PSU to the PMU boards.
And steel tube case design is ofc different compared to the A741.
1493  Bitcoin / Mining / Notes from my journey to Beijing & visiting Canaan Creative in March 10-15, 2018 on: March 20, 2018, 08:52:07 PM
Notes from my journey to Beijing & visiting Canaan Creative in March 10-15, 2018

Me posing at the SMT factory visit.   (c) Lily Han

1) Chapter One – The Beginning
2) Chapter Two – Thoughts about miner troubleshooting and repair
3) Chapter Three – Some quick planning
4) Chapter Four – Visiting the SMT factory
5) Chapter Five – The assembly line and training
6) Chapter Six – Time to say farewell

Date published: March 20, 2018.

Steemit blogging website:
https://steemit.com/avalonminer/@hagssfin/notes-from-my-journey-to-beijing-and-visiting-canaan-creative-in-march-10-15-2018

Nicely formatted PDF document version is available for download here (Mega.nz cloud service):
https://mega.nz/#!hpMS2TaA!uo5AvO4oQ7bqLVo85r6BvLsyEJWXnxWaJwqvanq8CEw

1) Chapter One – The Beginning

So, this all started after I did the review for the AvalonMiner 821.

Steven Mosher, the Head of Sales & Marketing at Canaan Creative,
said that he was really impressed with the A841 review and user guide.

He asked if I have ever been in China. I said 'no I have not', and
he then responded by inviting me to visit Canaan Creative in Beijing, China
with my expenses covered by them.
This was an very exciting offer and I was really happy to accept his invitation
as I had space in my calendar during my fourth and last year studying in the university of applied sciences.

I travelled to Beijing in March 10 and travelled back home in March 15.

The main goals during this visit was to improve the documentation and for me to learn thoroughly how to troubleshoot and repair AvalonMiners.

The documentation would include unpacking, setting up, running the miner, tear down, troubleshooting and repair guide.


Finnair Airbus A350-900 jet airliner.

2) Chapter Two – Thoughts about miner troubleshooting and repair

Most of the miner issues are easy to fix yourself, if you have good instructions.

Canaan would prefer sending a spare part in case of a hardware issue,
instead of customer sending the faulty miner back for repair service.

Sending spare parts and replacing the faulty part by yourself also saves the
customer's money since there will be a shorter down time.

The training for me to learn repair methods and troubleshooting
had a goal for me becoming the first certified Avalon technician outside
the Canaan Creative company. The basic idea is to train technicians,
who will then pass on the knowledge by teaching other people interested and
this way share the knowledge forward. So after I know how to do it,
I could teach other people how to do it and also offer consultation services for those who need it.

I think growing a network of people with knowledge how to repair the miner
is actually quite refreshing idea, instead of sending the machine to a repair location and having a long down time.

In my opinion owning a miner means that you should get some knowledge on how to use it and also how to maintain it.


Ongoing disassembly for an AvalonMiner 821 unit.

3) Chapter Three – Some quick planning

We started by meeting with Steven in the hotel lobby and planning out the schedule for the visit.

In the next day it was time to go and visit the Canaan office,
where we went through the details with Steven Mosher and Lily Han,
who both work in the global sales team.

The idea was to create same kind of documentation as I did with the A821 review,
but improve it and also add chapters for troubleshooting and repair.

The troubleshooting guide was planned to do with first presenting the problem
and after that presenting the possible solution for this problem.

Repair guide was planned to begin with a thorough tear down,
which shows the user how to do a full disassemble for the miner.

This helps the user on how to change a faulty part to fix the miner.

So in case the user needs to change a cooling fan or a hash board,
he knows how to go through the disassembling and assembling the miner.

With AvalonMiner all this can be done by using one Phillips head screwdriver.


AvalonMiner 841 engineering sample unit.

4) Chapter Four – Visiting the SMT factory

We also discussed about the idea to train certified technicians to share the knowledge forward.

I was invited as a test subject so to speak, and based on the experience
the training would be improved and extended to involve more people.

I was free to document my visit and also write a report card to critizize my visit pros and cons to improve next sessions.

We talked about localizing the knowledge by inviting people from different areas, say like the US, Europe, Russia and so on.

Steven was thinking out loud about inviting Philipma1957 as the US representative if he is interested
and also few other guys from different regions for the next training session which was also planned to be held in Beijing.

The idea was also in this way to gather feedback from customer representatives
directly to the engineering team in case they have some ideas to further improve
both hardware and/or software based on their AvalonMiner usage experiences.

After these discussions, Steven needed to go for a meeting and we continued the visit with Lily.
It was planned that I do two factory visits with him to look how the AvalonMiners
are manufactured and tested from the very beginning to the finished product.

First we went to see the SMT (Surface mount technology) factory, where the AvalonMiner PCB boards were made.

Both A821 and A841 boards were made at the facility, but the main focus in the production was the A841 boards.
The A841 uses the same ASIC chip as the A821 did (A3210 chip), but the design is improved
and for example the power efficiency is better than with the A821.

I was really impressed to see these manufacturing methods as this was my first time visiting a SMT factory.


Panasonic SMT machine working.   (c) Lily Han



Ongoing PMU board testing.


Lots of AvalonMiner 8 series PMU boards.


AvalonMiner 821 hash boards.


AvalonMiner 841 hash boards.


Inside a machine.

5) Chapter Five – The assembly line and training

The day after that we did a second visit to another factory, where the assembly was done.

There we could see how the PCB boards, heatsinks, steel tube casing,
fan etc. comes together resulting in a finished product.

This was also the same location where we started our training to learn thoroughly
how to troubleshoot miner issues and how to fix those issues.


AvalonMiner assembly line.


AvalonMiner assembly line.


Fresh batch of AvalonMiner 841 units going to the burn-in test room.


AvalonMiner 841 technical specs label.


Finished and tested pallets of AvalonMiner units ready to be labeled, packed and then shipped.

We started the training by having a look at a fully working A821 unit.

The second miner was a faulty A821 unit.
This one had one faulty PMU board (the left one).
We noticed quite easily by looking at the Cgminer API log.

To see if a PMU board if faulty, you want to look at the Vi (voltage in) and Vo (voltage out) values.
If you see an odd value, like zero for the Vi or Vo, you have a faulty PMU board.
We disassembled the control board (MM board) and then the PMU board.
Then we had a new PMU board and we assembled it all back together.

The third A821 unit we tested had one hash board damaged.
This hash board had one ASIC chip overheating at around 114 Celsius temperature.
We recognized which hash board it was by looking at the Cgminer API log.
In the log we can see chip temperatures for each hash board.
After we knew which hash board it was, we disassembled and removed the bad hash board.
And then we had a new hash board, silicon grease and assembled it all back together.

We stayed at a hotel nearby, and continued this training in the following day.
In the second day at the assembly factory we went to the burn-in test room,
where the finished miners are tested thoroughly before they are packed and sold forward.

Lily had set us a good practice setup.
There was a setup of twenty AvalonMiner 821 miners, and five of them had somekind of an issue.
There was me and four Korean gentlemen, and we each had one miner to fix.

My unit kept overheating and restarting over and over again.
I looked at the Cgminer API log and noticed that temperature values didn't make any sense
with three hash board, as the log said that some of the chip temperatures were in the -40 Celsius area.


PMU board replacement.

So that got me thinking, that most likely there aren't three faulty hash boards,
but instead the control board (MM board) might be faulty.
And that is why I first replaced the control board.
After the control board was replaced, I tested the miner.
Now the control board issue was fixed, but there was one hash board with one ASIC chip overheating.
Each hash board has own number and it makes it easy to recognize which of the four hash boards is the faulty one.
So it was time to change a new hash board.
Unfortunately we had such a tight schedule and I couldn't test the miner

I was also able to have a look at one AvalonMiner 761 unit, as the Koreans had some amount of PSU issues
and so they brought one unit with them. The A761 has a built-in power supply unit and
it was only sold in mainland China and South Korea.
Lily mentioned that it is a test product for future AvalonMiner development.


AvalonMiner 761 with the steel case top is removed.

6) Chapter Six – Time to say farewell

After the training we went back to the office.

We had some discussions and I started working on my notes for the documentation.

From the very beginning it was planned that the documentation wouldn't be needed
to get finished during my visit in Beijing and I would finish it when I get back home in Finland.

I was given one A841 unit to help making the review and other documentation,
and then it was time to say farewell, as my plane would leave Beijing early in the following day, March 15.

When I started mining back in 2014, I never thought that I could get to see and visit like this.
I'm so thankful for Canaan Creative being interested to have me visit them and it has been great working together with them so far.

I think the documentation and other work we started here will benefit both Canaan and the miner community.

The fault rate for AvalonMiner hardware is quite low already and
there should be less need in future to send faulty machines to repair service,
when the user can fix it themself with a new spare part Canaan sends
after you have troubleshoot which part it is that you need to replace.

It takes far less time if only sending a new spare part to the user is needed.

I would like to thank Steven Mosher, Lily Han, Mr. Xiangfu Liu and rest of the Canaan team for this great visit!


Beijing Capital International Airport.

If you any questions, feel free to drop them in this thread.  Smiley

I will continue my work on the documentation and try to get the A841 review/guide ready as soon as possible.
1494  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: Cryptouniverse - Official Canaan Distributor on: March 20, 2018, 01:54:46 PM
I got the shipping notice for two A741 units (used unit) today, thank you.  Smiley

I received the A741 units in great condition and they've been mining nice and stable so far. Smiley
1495  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Pangolinminer & Whatsminer FAQs on: March 19, 2018, 02:12:42 PM
I ordered 2 M3's 2 weeks ago, received last week, they are averaging 11.75-12 TH and using ALOT of power lol

These are noisy AF, the power supply especially, I've muffled them effectively and they run 75-85 C

A little bird told me 16nm pangolin is supposed to be coming out this summer, I'll be interested in those

Hi, I've just received my M3 today too!

And yes, the PSU is noisy as fcuk. You mentioned that you are able to muffle the noise?

Care to share how you did it?

For me, I use the plastic cooler box lined with egg cartons and 5 inches air-hose (for both inlet & outlet) for the miner itself, and the PSU just siting on top of the cooler box.


You might want to have a look at this project that philipma1957 did earlier  --> https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2245487.0
1496  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: Anyone know the Avalon 741 molex connector and how to repair it? on: March 19, 2018, 12:54:49 PM
Uhh, that's badly burned.  Undecided

See my post here --> https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=3121002.msg32670392#msg32670392
1497  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: Avalon 741 keeps on restarting and no GHz on: March 19, 2018, 12:50:02 PM
Ok. I suggest you contact lightfoot here at the forum and ask him how much it would cost to repair your machine.

You need the right tools, skills and supplies for the repair and lightfoot has them all.
1498  Bitcoin / Mining speculation / Re: Orion Miner - New Manufacturer - Up to 20 TH/s - Real? on: March 18, 2018, 12:37:26 PM
Orion - To the moon!!  Cheesy



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_(spacecraft)

Honestly I don't see any signs for this being a legit company and a legit product.

I would be careful.
1499  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Antminer V9 4TH on: March 17, 2018, 08:24:22 PM
Wow, that's bad engineering if setting a static IP address can actually brick the machine.
1500  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: Avalon 741 keeps on restarting and no GHz on: March 17, 2018, 02:53:33 PM
@itzazkrit

From what I understood after reading OP's posts, he is only running two of the total four hash boards.

So that is why it shows only 44 chips.
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