You're going to fetch a higher price on ebay, some where in the $10 range, maybe a few bucks more if you include the power supply and usb cable (complete kit). Here though, scrypt gear was going for about $4 or $5 per MH at it's low. I wouldn't pay any more than that shipped with power supply. just my 2 cents.
|
|
|
Looking for a breakout board (or two) from Cointerra, ideally from someone who no longer has a need for the breakout board (the PSUs I have are fine - the board's negative lead fell off). Might be interested in the PSU as well, but would need a good price on it since I already have 2.
Card is marked as COIN-501-048 REV 1 | COIN-500-048 REV A
If you have one available, let me know how much you want for it. Shipped to 53005.
|
|
|
A few pics with name/date would be great - but can you also confirm if it comes with PSU?
|
|
|
Bump...
Make offer, just cleaning my shelves
|
|
|
I've got 15 or so powered risers still in anti-static wrap, never used. These are the pcie 1x to 16x risers.
$8/ea
I don't have pics right this moment, but can add them later if someone feels it necessary.
Escrow is fine as long as you pay for it.
Check my rep and trust, ask any question you feel relevant.
|
|
|
Not sure how tigerfree is being marked as scammer. I bought two of the raspberry pi units previously, they showed up NIB from Amazon if I remember correctly. If in doubt, feel free to use escrow, but I'd buy again from tigerfree if I needed more.
|
|
|
Worked out a deal with VirosaGITS for all his boards and currently waiting on shipment. Great communication.
|
|
|
bought 2 from tigerfree - both arrived just now. 2nd transaction with OP and just as smooth.
thanks bud -baldpope
|
|
|
What are the differences between the 1.0 and 2.0 controllers?
|
|
|
I bought more units then I can currently run at my house. I am running about 70Th in my garage and have been trying to find my own building for 6-8 weeks and when I find one it ends up not having enough power and costs more than I am currently willing to spend.
Having said that, I have 4 Avalon6 BNIB as they were received from BlockC that I am looking to sell. I would prefer to sell to one person and will include a RasPi along with all the cables etc needed to run all 4.
I am asking $5500 shipped CONUS in BTC.
I will post pics up shortly.
Thanks in advance
EDIT- Escrow accepted using OgNasty
Does this include power supplies and do you have some pics online?
|
|
|
Have bought a few things from DaveF. The first time everything went very smoothly, in the middle of a 2nd transaction and so far all is well.
|
|
|
At one time I was running 22 of these. Solid little units, and reliable too.
Worst problem I had was with them getting beat up during shipping. The ones with the extra metal bracing along the top fared much better...
Protip, unplug the USB cables from the hashing boards if yours doesn't have the metal bracing, will keep the top from flexing and popping the miniusb connections straight off of the hashing boards. The buyer can easily just plug them back in when they get it.
I bought 4 from quakefiend420 - all 4 have been hashing great (Still running). one tip though, I unplugged the usb and re-connected them to my PC. The internal pi miner seemed flaky and would often reboot. Running from an old dell p4 has given much more stability
|
|
|
Ya, I did some research on these, you're right on the power draw. For reference, these are essentially a pair of black widows in a single case. Each of my widow boards pull about 250 watts at 120v. When I first got mine, I found the fan pulling air from the back of the unit which, in my opinion, seems wrong. One of the first things I did was flip the fan on the chassis, blowing hot air back into my hot aisle the way it was intended. I also found the wire to be rather thin, and I replaced with 14awg with crimped terminals. You're wiring options will vary based on your psu. One thing I learned for sure it's that it's better to power each board separately than using two ends from the same lead coming from the psu, just too much draw. I'm looking at you EVGA. Those blade center psu, or the ones from quakefiend420, I keep seeing on here would be great for powering these, with replaced wiring into the chassis. If I had the available power in my mine, I'd pick up a few of these. They are solid miners, even if a bit power hungry. For those that are ltc mining, keep an eye on the pending block reward halving as part of your ROI calculation. baldpope
|
|
|
So these need a power supply and controller (Raspberry Pi) to run them?
If so, what's the recommended power supply wattage?
I think 1200watt Is Probably Recommended. I have 1 rpi that i could throw in for free. That might be what you're running, but what is it pulling? 1200 seems really high for that miner
|
|
|
slightly confused - was there just the one available or do you have more?
|
|
|
at $13/MH it's a bit much. People please pay attention to the fact that the ltc reward halving is approaching fast. For the right price, this is an attractive unit. http://www.litecoinblockhalf.com/
|
|
|
Well then you are sticking it to the network for their failure to upgrade to a reliable DDOS protected service. Isn't it how that works by threatening to leave and taking your business elsewhere unless they fix it. Truthfully speaking you must of seen a drop in customer base since after all these coin changes. Then it should of picked up with newbies.
Simmer down notabeliever, pjcltd is not talking about the fees he's incurring from his hosting provider, he's talking about straight fees owed to the coin network for transfers. You know, the .001 traditionally of a given coin for transferring. I've been following (at least partially) the DDOS of Paul's site and as a network admin there is little that can be done some times without the proper tools in place - and sometimes even then it's not enough for a dedicated attacker. The attacker in this case is wreaking havoc and it would appear that pjcltd is doing the best he can with what he's got. Take pjcltd's advice and if you want your coins off the exchange get them off now. otherwise you may have to deal with asking pjcltd to remove them manually at some point in the future - which could be a night-mare like the loss of mintpal. good luck pjcltd
|
|
|
I had a problem when I set up a band I got band payments but no stakes. If you have a band that might be the problem. I deleted the band and stakes came rolling in after the 4 hour hold period.
If you have a band, try running 2 separate wallet - send coin not in band to second wallet for staking.
Woody is right here. You cannot stake and run a gorillaband in the same wallet - you must run a 2nd wallet with the excess funds. When doing so, make sure to run the 2nd wallet on a different port.
|
|
|
curl --data-binary '{"jsonrpc": "1.0", "id":"curltest", "method": "walletpassphrase", "params": ["<yourwalletpassword>", 99999, true] }' -H 'content-type: text/plain;' http://<rpcuser>:<rpcpassword>@127.0.0.1:3333
Ran from the cmd prompt so I can test easily.
instead of 127.0.0.1 try using 'localhost' so http://user:pass@localhost:3333also - is port 3333 what the service is listening on?No, its custom port set in conf. Trying now. Nope, same errors even with localhost set. curl: (6) Could not resolve host: 1.0, curl: (6) Could not resolve host: id curl: (6) Could not resolve host: method curl: (6) Could not resolve host: walletpassphrase, curl: (6) Could not resolve host: params curl: (3) [globbing] bad range in column 6 curl: (6) Could not resolve host: 99999, curl: (3) [globbing] unmatched close brace/bracket in column 5 curl: (3) [globbing] unmatched close brace/bracket in column 1 curl: (6) Could not resolve host: text {"result":null,"error":{"code":-32700,"message":"Parse error"},"id":null} wait - is your json statement correct? it's complaing about not being able to connect on each of those fields - 1.0, id, etc. i don't know what you're trying to do, but it doesn't look like the json is good.
|
|
|
curl --data-binary '{"jsonrpc": "1.0", "id":"curltest", "method": "walletpassphrase", "params": ["<yourwalletpassword>", 99999, true] }' -H 'content-type: text/plain;' http://<rpcuser>:<rpcpassword>@127.0.0.1:3333
Ran from the cmd prompt so I can test easily.
instead of 127.0.0.1 try using 'localhost' so http://user:pass@localhost:3333also - is port 3333 what the service is listening on?
|
|
|
|