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4001  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: [Guide] Dogie's Comprehensive Bitmain Antminer S3 Setup [HD] on: November 06, 2014, 08:06:41 AM
On the miner status screen what does discarded shares mean? Should that number be high?

Discarded shares mean nothing, that stat shouldn't really be shown. So yes, it will be high.
4002  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 06, 2014, 06:30:34 AM
I opened  today the   last C1 package, and what a surprise. bitmain sent to me miner with the coolant and it had leaked out.

Are you saying coolant was inside the miner? Or they sent like a supply of coolant?

Because they're leak tested and then drained there is a small amount of coolant already in the blocks. There are two end caps which seal it up, so if you have any information as to what went wrong that would be great.

And which (and where) the fitting which leaked.
4003  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 06, 2014, 06:29:01 AM
I really don't know why BitMain moved away from the the controller board they used in the S1 and S3 (well I guess I do...the answer is cost).

Old board was less powerful than new one, and this architecture is quicker to program.
4004  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: [ANN] Spondoolies-Tech - carrier grade, data center ready mining rigs on: November 06, 2014, 05:04:07 AM
why the fuck would you make a DC in bangkok! where is 28 degrees Centigrade at 9AM, right now!!! WHY!!!
...


Miners don't particularly mind hot ambient, and because you're not running AC neither do you particularly. Instead of replacing the air with an infinite amount of 20C air, you're replacing it with an infinite amount of 30C air.

Now why would you want that? An increase in temperature means a decrease in GH/s.

Why would europeans move to a place with a hot climate and expensive electricity to start a mining operation?

It's a bit strange considering they could have hosted the hardware at Verne Global for half the cost of electricity in Thailand and that includes ~30C cooler air + an actual datacenter with fire suppression/security systems.

Cost of employees, cost of electricity, cost of buildout, electrical capacity. Who knows.
4005  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: [ANN] Spondoolies-Tech - carrier grade, data center ready mining rigs on: November 06, 2014, 04:44:54 AM
You guys probably never thought of this but i bet the fire started from the collapse of those shelves.

I'm not sure how it would start a fire. Any units with decreased airflow would throttle down before totally giving up mining [I believe], so where is the ignition source? Doesn't seem to be anything which would readily burn nearby them even if burning hot SP30s were scattered everywhere.

But anyway, we can ignore that as a possibility because we can see the majority of the shelves are in tact. If that picture was the epicentre of the fire then things wouldn't look at nice. Probably their huge supply melting/shorting.
4006  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: [ANN] Spondoolies-Tech - carrier grade, data center ready mining rigs on: November 06, 2014, 04:41:07 AM
why the fuck would you make a DC in bangkok! where is 28 degrees Centigrade at 9AM, right now!!! WHY!!!
...


Miners don't particularly mind hot ambient, and because you're not running AC neither do you particularly. Instead of replacing the air with an infinite amount of 20C air, you're replacing it with an infinite amount of 30C air.
4007  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 05, 2014, 07:50:54 PM
Can 2 power source units be plugged into one card?

One miner, yes, one PCB, no.
4008  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: XBTec Pacific V3 3.2Th, 0.8W/Gh on: November 05, 2014, 07:43:33 PM
blah blah blah

Are you.... are you honestly trying to argue that the USA's for bitcoin mining?

This is the hardware subforum of a forum called bitcointalk.org, not "you're all getting mind melded by EM radiation.org". I was referring specifically to BITCOIN MINING, as I said in my last post.
4009  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: [Guide] Dogie's Comprehensive Bitmain Antminer S3 Setup [HD] on: November 05, 2014, 07:40:36 PM
Hi can someone please help.

im doing all this

Alternative Subnet Change:
•Unplug your computer from all internet sources.
•Plug in an ethernet cable from the AntMiner to your computer.
•Navigate to Control Panel -> Network and Sharing Centre -> Change Adapter Settings.
•Right click on your ethernet adapter -> Properties.
•Click on "Internet Protocol Version 4" and click properties.
•Select "Use the following IP address" and enter the following:
•IP Address: 192.168.1.1, Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0, Default Gateway: 192.168.1.99.
•Plug in an ethernet cable from the AntMiner to you router.
•Restart the configuration instructions as above.

Then I go to the next part and plug the asic into my router, sign into the rig and change the dhcp setting and save.

I then have no connection to my internet or router.

Why is this? I cant perform the next steps. Please help im totally lost now


EDIT I got it working wirelessly sitting it righ next to my router.

Still not got a clue how to get it working on a wired connection  Sad

At •Plug in an ethernet cable from the AntMiner to you router. you reset your internet settings to normal.
4010  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: ANTMINER S4 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 05, 2014, 02:36:15 PM
A Wifi plug should be able to allow power flow while "on" and stop power from the outlet when "off", it would have the same effect as unplugging / plugging the unit back in.

It does not help. You need to press the button.
My mistake, not the best feature to have a button during large scale deployments if you want to be able to remotely cycle units.

Has anyone checked the behaviour if you tape down that button? Then additionally during a mains power cycle? I would but I'm away from my unit at the moment.
4011  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 05, 2014, 12:23:06 PM
I have two and winter air for cooling.   One is hitting 1050 and 1030.   Had problem with bad sd on one.  But once flashed with good it works great.

Used rm-1000 on both.  Working great.

Love RM1000s, I've got 3 now. 16AWG, 8 PCI-E, 1KW (likely 1.1+), has no problems with 40-50C ambient.
4012  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 05, 2014, 12:20:15 PM
URL:http://youtu.be/WuuiWfjs9bY.    For your time and effort we are very sorry about that,we have tried our best to solve the issue.The problem is the terminal and wire are easily separated,so the harness will not work.That can not damage your C1 boards,if your board is fried,there must be other problems.You could email  us,and we will help you as much as we can.

This is what happened on my two cables, hence its now getting fixed. Instead of soldering I bought some more PCB crimp connectors and remade the end.
4013  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 05, 2014, 12:19:26 PM
It can be run without Miner C1 start not water cooler?

No, must have watercooling
4014  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 05, 2014, 12:19:12 PM
Yup... I got boned really hard by that  (not because of the repost, I ordered them previously so I could get up and going the day they got delivered) ... 

I'm not sure if I was more upset about the $50 I'll never see again (figured it out after opening them) or the fact that I don't have any quick disconnects on my miner.

Shakes fist angrily at whomever made that post in the first place..   (jk dogie, shit happens life goes on. )

I cried myself to sleep, but then I remembered there isn't any crying allowed in bitcoin mining..  Grin  could you imagine?  Cheesy

Yeah my bad, the original specs were going to use 6mm ID but it changed on release [and I didn't recheck]. I too have a set of quick disconnects I cant use, but they're more like $120 worth.
4015  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 04, 2014, 08:01:35 PM
Are you DHCP'ed or static?
4016  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: XBTec Announce. New ASIC manufacturer. on: November 04, 2014, 05:37:12 PM
They have said you stole it and are calling you liars...

Do remember though that there's a pretty significant interest for BA in that. If BA did sell it then they're in breach of their own privacy policy and will get sued / fined to hell. By accusing a theft they muddy the waters and potentially anyone going after them. While retaining the cash / benefit of the transaction.
4017  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Announcement: Bitmain launches AntMiner solution, 0.68 J/GH on chip on: November 04, 2014, 05:34:32 PM
Dogie's comprehensive setup guide in super HD!

 
4018  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Bitcoin Powered Heating System on: November 04, 2014, 05:20:12 PM
The expensive / hard bit is getting waterblocks made that will fit miners, and then getting new ones every 3-6 months as you change your miners. You're probably better off with some form of ducting and moving air about.
4019  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Liquid Cooled Miner C1 Discussion and Support Thread on: November 04, 2014, 05:18:13 PM
Dogie's comprehensive setup guide in super HD!

 
4020  Bitcoin / Hardware / [Guide] Dogie's Comprehensive Bitmain Antminer C1 Setup [HD] on: November 04, 2014, 04:36:45 PM
Dogie's Miner Setup Guides:
  ASICMiner Blade
ASICMiner Cube
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SpondooliesTech SP10
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SpondooliesTech SP35
Technobit HEX16B
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Bitmain AntMiner S2
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Bitmain AntMiner S4
Bitmain AntMiner S4+
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Bitmain AntMiner C1
Bitmain AntMiner U3
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Bitmine Coincraft Desk V2
HashRatio Tsunami
XBTech Pacific 1250
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Black Arrow Prospero X1
AMT 1.25TH
C-Scape HexFury USB
C-Scape BiFury USB
MoonlightMiner NanoFury II USB
   Gigampz PSU breakout board


   Guide meta thread
   DefaultTrust Visualisation
   Power Supply analysis guide
   Manufacturer trustworthiness guide
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


Nicely formatted version available at dogiecoin.com!



Contents:
0a) What to Expect
0b) What You Need
1) Powering
2a) Cooling
2b) Cooling Assembly
3) Case
4) Configuration
5) Troubleshooting
6) Where to buy


0a) What to Expect (top)
Bitmain's AntMiner C1 combines two Antminer S3's into the same compact case of the S3. This is made possible by the addition of watercooling
[purchased separately] which significantly lowers temperatures and noise levels. 64 BM1382 chips are spread across four hashing boards with each
waterblock cooling two boards in a sandwich. C1s require assembly but do not require an external controller.

Chips64x Bitmain BM1382 Gen2
Hashrate~1TH
Rated Voltage12V
Rated Current68A
Power.Consumption820W

 

     
 
     

 

 


0b) What You Need (top)
You will need a few accessories and a power supply to get started. *You will also need the custom C1 watercooling kit from here.


                             Click your flag to find everything* you need to get started at Amazon!              
                    
                                        


1) Powering (top)
C1's do not come with a power supply, and you will need a typical computer PSU with 8xPCI-E 6 pin power connectors. Strictly only 4 PCI-E connectors
are required at stock speeds, however it will reduce cable temperatures by utilising all 8. We also need to tell the PSU to always be on, as there isn't a
motherboard to do this. Cut a paper clip into a U and insert it into the green wire and either black wire to the side of the green wire. Tape it up for safety.
The power supply will now be controlled by its switch on the rear socket.

     


2a) Cooling (top)
The C1 requires external watercooling in order to be run. A customised $50+$30 kit is available to purchase from here.  This includes a pump, radiator,
fans, fittings, tubing, cables and screws, but you will require 1L of coolant. A single 120mm Weili WD1202512SH fan cools the PCBs while three 120mm JSL
JDH1238B fans cool the 360mm radiator.  

Each pair of hashing boards sandwiches an aluminium waterblock with an 8mm inner diameter. The front of the chips are covered by an aluminium heatsink
using compressive springs to avoid potential chip damage. Please be careful when handling these heatsinks, they are extremely sharp.

     
 
     

     


2b) Cooling Assembly (top)
Assembly of the cooling system takes about 20 minutes per miner and consists of 10 major stages. Please make sure you've completed each stage before
you move on, and reread the instructions before proceeding to make sure you're not going to damage your Tube. These instructions assume you have
purchased the customised $50+$30 kit from here, as well as 1L of watercooling coolant.  

 

Step 1
We are going to start by preparing the radiator. This is a high density, 360mm aluminium radiator with three 120mm fans installed already. Locate the two
plastic radiator stands, and slide them until the indicator on the top reads ~51mm. Screw the two screws in to hold the 51mm in place, being careful not
to damage the plastic threads.

     

     
 
 
Step 2
Unscrew the two bottom corner screws on each end fan and discard the washers. Place the radiator stands between the fan grill and radiator on each
side. Use the same screws as you removed to screw through the fan grill, radiator stand and into the radiator. Locate the two short, silver screws and
screw in the other side of the radiator stand into the radiator.

     

     

 
Step 3
Next we will prepare the pump. This is a 15W pump with 3m of head pressure and 450 litres per hour of flowrate. Locate two fittings and screw them into
the brass inserts. You'll need to tighten them slightly more than hand tight to prevent leaks occurring or the tube turning the fittings.

     

     
 

Step 4
Locate the tubing and cut three pieces from it, two of 70cm length and one of 40cm length. You can do this with standard scissors but try and make the
ends flat.

 
Step 5
The C1 is next to be prepared.
  • First open the case by unscrewing the 5 screws on each side.
  • Locate the cable harness and plug in the 3 pin fan header to the header closest to the end with the fan.
  • Place the cable through the nook in the case where the fan's cable lays and replace the case.
  • Unscrew the two black caps from the C1. A small amount of fluid may leak when you unscrew these caps.

There are then various different ways to do the next stage depending on what type of fittings you have.

     

     


Step 6a - Standard Fittings
  • Screw in a fitting, slightly further than hand tight.
  • Place a spring clamp on the 40cm length of tubing, and work it 10cm down the tube so it is out of the way.
  • Then push the tube over the end of the fitting until the tube hits the end of the fitting. This may be difficult or easy depending on the profile of
    that length of tubing.
  • Slide the spring clamp over the fitting until it is squeezing the tubing over the smooth section of the fittings.
  • Repeat for the other side using one of the longer sections of tubing.

     
 
     


Step 6b - 1/4" BSP Quick Release Fittings
  • Screw in the half of the pair which has a thread into the C1's threads, slightly further than hand tight.
  • Join the other half of the quick release connector to mate the pair.
  • Place a spring clamp on the 40cm length of tubing, and work it 10cm down the tube so it is out of the way.
  • Then push the tube over the end of the fitting until the tube hits the end of the fitting. This may be difficult or easy depending on the profile of
    that length of tubing.
  • Slide the spring clamp over the fitting until it is squeezing the tubing over the smooth section of the fittings.
  • Repeat for the other side using one of the longer sections of tubing.

     

     
 
 


Step 6c - Quick Release Barb Fittings
  • Follow Step 6)a above but using two 8cm lengths of tubing instead
  • Place a spring clamp over the exposed length of tube and work it down out of the way.  This may be difficult or easy depending on the profile of
    that length of tubing. Slide the spring clamp over the fitting until it is squeezing the tubing over the smooth section of the fittings.
  • Push one end of the quick release fitting into the tube.
  • Slide the spring clamp over the fitting until it is squeezing the tubing over the smooth section of the fittings.
  • Join the other half of the quick release connector to mate the pair.
  • Place a spring clamp on the 40cm length of tubing, and work it 10cm down the tube so it is out of the way.
  • Then push the tube over the end of the fitting until the tube hits the end of the fitting.
  • Slide the spring clamp over the fitting until it is squeezing the tubing over the smooth section of the fittings.
  • Repeat for the other side using one of the longer sections of tubing.

     

     


Step 7
Connect the short tube from the C1 to the outlet [the bottom, black fitting] on the pump using the process in Step 6)a. Connect the third long tube to
the other port on the pump using the process in Step 6)a.

 
Step 8
Connect the long tube coming from the C1 to whichever fitting on the radiator is the lowest. Connect the higher one to the pump. We have now
completed the circuit so double check all spring clamps are in place and that the tubing is at or near to the end of the fitting.

 
 

Step 9
Plug in a PCI-E cable into the PCB you plugged the fan cable into, and then the pump into the only connector it fits into on the fan cable. DO NOT TURN
YOUR PSU ON YET. Do the paper clip mod to your PSU as detailed in section 1.

 
 

Step 10
  • Unscrew the cap on the top of the pump and fill it with coolant.
  • Lift the pump up so the coolant drains into the tubing.
  • Refill the pump and then turn on the PSU (and the pump). You can either quickly keep filling the pump as it flows out (you need to be fast) or keep
    your finger on the power supply's switch to turn it off when it gets close to empty. Do NOT allow the pump to spin with no fluid in the pump as this
    will damage it or cause it to fail. Remember the pump takes approximately 3 seconds to stop spinning once the power is removed.
  • Continue until there are no more bubbles in the system, and the pump is refilled to full. Turn the radiator upside down once or twice to help remove
    trapped air.

     

     

 

 


Step 11 (optional)
You can also purchase anti kink coils to prevent the tubing from kinking and getting blocked when placed at an angle or being twisted. They also look
great under UV light.

 




3) Case (top)
The C1 is entirely enclosed in an extremely strong shroud that is not going to be damaged at all. The internal frame is minimal but solid and well designed.
All fans have grills to complete what is possibly the most child and pet friendly miner on the market. C1's are stackable when placed on their side due to
the top access required for the PCI-E cables.

A shipped C1 weighs 6kg and the unit measures 320 mm x 155 mm x 167 mm without watercooling installed.

     

     

     


4) Configuration (top)
The C1 is standalone and does not require an external controller.

Wiring:
  • Prepare the paper clip for the PSU's 24 pin connector.
  • Prepare the watercooling for the miner.
  • Plug in the eight PCI-E cables to the miner.
  • Plug in an ethernet cable from the AntMiner to you router.

Configuration:
  • Power on the power supply using its switch at the back.
  • Make sure that your router's subnet is 1, ie 192.168.1.x. If not then change it to 1, this is just temporary. ***If this is not possible, see below***
  • Using a browser, navigate to 192.168.1.99 - this goes to the C1's configuration page.
  • Login using "root" as both the username and password.
  • Navigate to Network -> Interfaces -> WAN -> Edit.
  • Change protocol to DHCP and click "Save & Apply".
  • Using a browser, navigate to your router and find the IP it has assigned the C1 and navigate to that IP.
  • Navigate to the page Status -> Miner Configuration. Enter your pool information in the below format.
  • Select "Beeper ringing" to "false" and click "Save & Apply".
  • Navigate to the page "Miner Status" to check mining has started.
  • You can then change your router subnet back to whatever you are used to using.

Alternative Subnet Change:
  • Unplug your computer from all internet sources.
  • Plug in an ethernet cable from the AntMiner to your computer.
  • Navigate to Control Panel -> Network and Sharing Centre -> Change Adapter Settings.
  • Right click on your ethernet adapter -> Properties.
  • Click on "Internet Protocol Version 4" and click properties.
  • Select "Use the following IP address" and enter the following:
  • IP Address: 192.168.1.1, Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0, Default Gateway: 192.168.1.99.
  • Plug in an ethernet cable from the AntMiner to you router.
  • Restart the configuration instructions as above.

Antpool Register!
Code:
Servers : stratum+tcp://stratum.antpool.com:3333
User    : username.worker or username_worker - auto creates workers!
Password: anypassword
BTCGuild Register!
Code:
Servers : stratum+tcp://stratum.btcguild.com:3333
User    : username_worker
Password: anypassword
GHash IO Register!
Code:
Servers : stratum+tcp://us1.ghash.io:3333
User    : username.worker  - auto creates workers!
Password: anypassword




5) Troubleshooting (top)

ProblemSolution
"x".in.a.row.on.miner.configuration.page- There is a faulty chip - nothing we can do. Hash rate will be affected by ~1.5%.
Almost all "x" on one row of "Chips"- A hashing board may be mispowered or faulty. Recheck your cabling and PSU.
How do I change the login password?- Navigate to System -> Administration. Enter the current password and enter your new one twice.
What is the SSH login?- Username is "root", password is "admin".
Can I turn the beeping off when the miner stops mining?- Navigate to Miner configuration and turn "Beeper Ringing" to false.
I can connect to the AntMiner but its not hashing?- Set the protocol to DHCP via Navigate to Network -> Interfaces -> WAN -> Edit. If you
don't want to use DHCP, navigate to Network -> Settings and make sure "Gateway" is set to the
IP of your router.
What temperatures should I aim for?- Try and achieve <50 for best hash rates, and <60 for long lifetimes. Temperatures should not
be let to rise above 70C.
Where can I get the latest firmware?- Download from Bitmain's site.
How can I tell what firmware version I have now?- Navigate to System -> Overview and look at "File System Version".
How do I install the latest firmware?- Download firmware as above. Navigate to System -> Upgrade and click "browse". Select the
downloaded file and click "Flash image". Do NOT interrupt this process or you will brick the unit.
How do I reset settings to default?- Use a paper clip to press the reset button - located next to the ethernet connector - down
for 5-10 seconds. The miner will then reset with stock settings.
My.power.supply's.cables.are.braided.or.aren't.color.coded!- See below diagram for pin-outs.

     


Legal disclaimer: This information is for general guidance and does not constitute expert advice. We are not responsible if you, your property or a third
party is injured or damaged as a result of any interaction with this information, and no warranty is provided. All text and images are covered by copyright.

6) Where to buy (top)

                    
                                        
            

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