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1  Bitcoin / Mining support / Best Practices for changing ANTMINER/ASIC frequencies? on: August 04, 2018, 12:44:37 AM
I've got a few old Antminer S7's that I made some water cooling blocks for and I wanted to test overclocking and changing the voltage. I don't want to do anything stupid so I wanted to ask you guys about what the best practices are for tuning frequency and voltage. I know the S7's aren't profitable and what not, but this is more for proof of concept for other ASICs. Are there any pitfalls or common mistakes people make? Can I just choose any frequency in increments and then observe chip temperatures? Any advice?
2  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Mining (Altcoins) / Re: Bitmain E3 Ethash Miner ASIC (Shipping:16-31 July. $800 USD) on: April 03, 2018, 10:05:17 PM
It's cheap but the power efficiency is everything long term and better for density. Electrical infrastructure is a bottleneck.  My rx 470s and 1070s outperform this substantially. Plus this is terrible for home mining if it sounds anything like my S9s. A GPU is made to be quiet. It is also nice that if I ever want to resell my cards I can get a little money. I can see how this can seem like a good idea but my Bitmain stuff needs constant attention. My GPU stuff I sometimes forget about because of the stability and ability to stay cleaner. I haven't bought GPU in over a year but I remember seeing mining specific cards in bulk for 200 each. Rx 470s. Prices are relatively close.
3  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: Are there 240v surge protectors and watt meters for American miners? on: April 02, 2018, 08:14:11 PM
I feel your pain man. The solution I came up with for surge protection is to use a whole house surge protector. There are different models depending on if you are using 3 phase or single phase. Here is an example:

https://www.homedepot.com/b/Electrical-Power-Distribution-Whole-House-Surge-Protectors/N-5yc1vZbm05

Another option is to use tripplite Euro-50. It works with 50 and 60 Hz, but it only works for like 10 amps or something so you can probably get away with 2 miners for each unit:

https://www.tripplite.com/isobar-4-outlet-200-240v-surge-protector-2m-cord-680-joules~EURO4

As for amps, just use a clamp ammeter on the line. It is pretty consistent if you can keep your temps regulated and your miners clean.

https://www.kleintools.com/catalog/clamp-meters/digital-clamp-meter-acdc-auto-ranging

4  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: What causes chain scission of chips? on: April 02, 2018, 06:54:34 AM
Thanks man. Yeah, I tried flashing the firmware and that didn't work so clearly the board broke. I just wanted to make sure that I can prevent it in the future.  Wink
5  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: (Review/Guide) AvalonMiner 841 13.0 Th/s, 1290W Bitcoin (SHA-256) ASIC miner on: April 02, 2018, 02:22:03 AM
Great review. What is the average and max CFM of the 841 if you don't mind me asking.
6  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: What causes chain scission of chips? on: April 01, 2018, 08:24:05 AM
Okay, that makes sense. Do you know specifically what can cause it? Chips too hot? I also didn't have that machine on a surge protector, but the PSU is fine so I'm curious if that caused it.
7  Bitcoin / Mining support / What causes chain scission of chips? on: March 31, 2018, 11:05:56 PM
Hello everyone, I just diagnosed an Antminer S9 of mine and it has something called "Chain Scission of chips". I couldn't find a lot of information on what causes that to happen. I have a couple other machines and I want to make sure they don't end up with the same problem.
8  Bitcoin / Mining support / Wanted to get some advice about 277v and power supplies on: March 22, 2018, 09:44:04 PM
Hey everyone. Wanted to reach out to see what you guys think about using 277v for mining. I currently am using a step-down transformer to 240v, but I wanted to build out a little section for testing some machines at 277v. I know HP makes some power supplies for 277v and I am going to give those a shot with some breakout boards, but I wanted to see if anyone has had any success with other power supplies.

IBM 2880 Bladecenter
I have seen a discussion from 2015 here that talks about different power supplies that run at 277v and on that list is the IBM 2880. Link: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1206101.0

I bought a couple of them and tried it on 277v for about an hour and it ran great. I was curious if anyone has tried it long term. Also, why does this power supply work for 277v compared to other power supplies rated for 240v?

Bitmain APW3++ or Avalonminer Sorcerer PSU
Has anyone tried these power supplies with 277v? The sorcerer says it is rated for up to 264v so I am curious if either of these will run at 277v long term. Anyone had any success?

Anyone know of other PSU's that work at 277v safely?
9  Economy / Computer hardware / Re: IBM Bladecenter 2880W Breakout! on: March 03, 2018, 01:37:49 AM
Wanted to see if these are still available. Probably would need a bunch.  Cheesy
10  Bitcoin / Mining support / Re: How do you distribute power to hundreds of miners? on: December 15, 2017, 10:51:03 PM
Just treat each phase individually. Most cost effective way is 6-20r dual receptacles with 6-20p to c13 y splitter cables. Cost will be about $70 to power 4. Just keep all 3 phases balanced.

This is what I was looking for. I guess I thought you had to use PDU's for some reason. I think I got caught up reading too many datacenter posts about 3-phase density.

Do I need to worry about setting up a system wide surge protection then?
11  Bitcoin / Mining support / How do you distribute power to hundreds of miners? on: December 11, 2017, 12:41:51 AM
I'm having a terrible time understanding how to distribute power to a bunch of miners. I have a few hundred Antminer S9 to put in my warehouse. It has 480v 3-phase power so I have a few transformers to bring in the 208v 3-phase power. The question is, what is the best way to power a whole bunch of miners? If I use 3 phase PDU's they are crazy expensive and the biggest 208v PDU I can find is 17.3KVA, so about 12 Antminer S9. Basically, each 70 inch shelf is going to need like 6 of these massive PDU's that cost 1000s of dollars each and are around 80 inches long! The female ports alone are $300! How do large-scale operations deal with this? I feel like a giant power bar is unnecessary since each Antminer uses a pretty set load.

I have been scratching my head for a while over this so if anyone has some insight I would really appreciate it.  Smiley
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