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Author Topic: Avoiding moist in your mining farms  (Read 807 times)
AniceInovation (OP)
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November 05, 2017, 10:59:11 AM
 #1

Greetings all

Winter is coming, and with it rain and bad weather. And moist/fog air.
Had these problems in the past, and having them now. Miners get air from the outside, but air is loaded with moist and it gets the miners wet, and that corrodes/destroy them with time.

How do you guys avoid it? Is there a filter for that, or is my only solution to use dehumidifiers?

Thanks for the ideas.
Dibblah
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November 05, 2017, 03:40:39 PM
 #2

You don't need that much cold air in the winter. Recirculate most, vent some. Stay above dew point for your humidity and you'll be fine.

Once you heat the air, it's capacity to hold water rises - so you don't get condensation. It's a bit trickier to actually calculate due to the high static pressure inside the miner body, but just keep away from the high differentials and you'll be fine.

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November 05, 2017, 08:52:38 PM
 #3

See how much humidity is actually in your mining space and then if it is too high get a dehumidifier. They're not incredibly expensive for protecting miners but they're generally not really needed unless you live in a jungle. Just keep airflow moving and make sure there is no condensation- this absolutely kills miners and computers alike.
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November 05, 2017, 10:05:18 PM
 #4

My miners are located in a pretty big building, and I don't reallu need any air from outside of the building for cooling of miners. In the winter I will even need some heater to make temperture comfortable for people in here, but now my miners heat air for temperature of 24 Celsium degree
erre
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November 05, 2017, 10:14:13 PM
 #5

You can use an energy recovery ventilator to prevent moisture to enter:

https://www.energyvanguard.com/blog/76792/An-Energy-Recovery-Ventilator-Is-NOT-a-Dehumidifier

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AniceInovation (OP)
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November 06, 2017, 02:23:34 AM
 #6

I considered a solution kinda like that erre. Using a water chiller, get a cold radiator in the input to cool the air and grab some of that water before entering them.
I realize now that the best to do is to regulate the air input to keep tha air at the same temperature like Dibblah is saying.

Thanks for the suggestions.
nicendrine
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November 06, 2017, 07:42:41 AM
 #7

Humidity plays a crucial part in the room where you have your mining rigs running. Make sure that the humidity is in proper level.

Too cold or too hot in the room will pose a problem.
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November 06, 2017, 09:25:37 AM
 #8

get a dehumidifier.. and a bunch of dessicants (silica gels) and place them near your miners.

If your miners are running, it will hardly get any moisture because of the heat it produce
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November 07, 2017, 07:21:51 PM
 #9

I'd recommend setting the miners so they exhaust outside, like a whole-house fan. They will pull in cool air from the rest of the house, heat it, then expel it. Should fix problem.
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November 07, 2017, 10:07:44 PM
 #10

Greetings all

Winter is coming, and with it rain and bad weather. And moist/fog air.
Had these problems in the past, and having them now. Miners get air from the outside, but air is loaded with moist and it gets the miners wet, and that corrodes/destroy them with time.

How do you guys avoid it? Is there a filter for that, or is my only solution to use dehumidifiers?

Thanks for the ideas.

 Given how much heat my miners generate, I have LOW HUMIDITY level issues in the winter, not high.

 You don't get condensation in an operating miner - condensation happens when air that is moist hits something that is COLDER than the air - exact OPPOSITE of what happens with a miner which is trying to DUMP HEAT into the air in large quantities.


 If your miners are getting wet, you need to do something to keep the rain from entering the room - louvers or some such item in the window(s).





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AniceInovation (OP)
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November 08, 2017, 02:41:53 AM
 #11

So after some dilligence ( i dont have the miners close to me) the reason for the moisture was the PSU was shutting down, after some hours the miners were getting cooler and getting moist.
Fixed the PSUs and all is fine now.

Still learned a bit from you guys Cheesy
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November 08, 2017, 04:15:50 AM
 #12

You can use an energy recovery ventilator to prevent moisture to enter:

https://www.energyvanguard.com/blog/76792/An-Energy-Recovery-Ventilator-Is-NOT-a-Dehumidifier
do u use it ? if room square is around 130m2, will fit ?
AniceInovation (OP)
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November 23, 2017, 11:53:00 AM
 #13

Been searching for some time for a Fan Speed Temperature Controller, something that regulates a fan faster or slower accordingly to the temperature in the room, with something like a speed ramp.
There are many solutions for 12V fans, but i am looking to control 220v ones.

Found a few with 2 speeds, either slow and fast, or stopped and full speed.
Found another one wich did what i was looking for, but costs over 100 pounds.

You guys happen to know where to buy something like this?
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