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Author Topic: Update Large review of Finksy/J4bbrwock server psus compared to ATXpsu-photos up  (Read 20900 times)
Prelude
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December 30, 2015, 06:13:17 PM
Last edit: December 30, 2015, 06:38:29 PM by Prelude
 #101

The 105 watts saved for each S7 I'm running adds up.

Seem like a big difference. It should be 2~% efficiency difference between Gold and Platinum. You're talking about an efficiency difference that sound more like Bronze vs Plat than Gold vs Plat.

You may be correct.  I'm not familiar with what percentage puts one in silver, gold, platinum and titanium.  Maybe I should not have used that terminology.  However, I believe if one looks at the actual numbers, they can see the logic behind the power savings which opens up more available power for more revenue.

EDIT:  By the way, Prelude, did say the 2880 is more in "silver" territory than gold or platinum.  I quoted him in my post above.

If the difference is actually 8%, then yes, thats pretty big. 86% efficiency at 8X% load would be silver efficiency and 91% would be platinum.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/80_Plus

It would be a good idea to double check what efficiency those PSU are supposed to make to make sure the watt difference is not a Fluke, because a 8% difference in efficiency is HUGE.

Look at the following link for the numbers on the 2980...  There are no numbers on the 2880 except for those done by members in the forums.  Prelude used a watt meter to check the efficiency at 50% load for the 2880.  He said it was more like 87% at 50% load.  Here is the link for the 2980:  http://www.plugloadsolutions.com/psu_reports/IBM_39Y7414_2980W_SO-188_%20Report.pdf

EDIT:  There is a possibility I'm off by 1%.  Even at 1% off on my figures, the 2980 is still very much worth getting IMHO if one is using MANY PSU's with MANY rigs.

What i'm thinking is the efficiency difference should be about 1%. A 8%, even 7% does not make sense. I'm not sure what's up with all that, maybe the 2880 tested were bad? I think this warrant more testing before throwing an extra 5-10k into 2980's.

I'm curious as to why you think there should only be a 1% difference? The 2880w models were put into production in ~2005. The 2980w models were put into production late 2010. A lot changed in the PSU manufacturing world in those 5 years. 80+ didn't even exist in 2005 I think.. The 7% difference in efficiency is very easy to believe.

Put it this way.... Look how far bitcoin miners have come in the last 5 years in terms of efficiency. Hell, even the last year alone. Now imagine where we'll be in 5 years. Only 1% more efficient? I don't think so.

I would also love to know the methods used to determine the 2880W PSU efficiency.  The 80+ program is more involved than just measuring input amps and output amps from what I gather.

Actually, that's exactly how efficiency is determined. AC input watts VS DC output watts. There is no other way to measure it. Ecova (The company behind the 80+ efficiency program) uses hardware that is worth 5 digits to do the testing, meanwhile I'm using a $200 watt meter and a $300 amp clamp to measure DC output. My results will of course be a little less accurate, but very close nonetheless. I regularly compare my efficiency testing to the 80+ results, and I'm always very close to their results.

Also, server PSU 80+ program is more stringent since they run on 230v. Don't confuse 80+ ATX number with 80+ server numbers:



I was wrong. 87% means the 2880W-ers are actually bronze rated, not silver.
Finksy
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December 30, 2015, 09:37:31 PM
 #102

I would also love to know the methods used to determine the 2880W PSU efficiency.  The 80+ program is more involved than just measuring input amps and output amps from what I gather.

Actually, that's exactly how efficiency is determined. AC input watts VS DC output watts. There is no other way to measure it. Ecova (The company behind the 80+ efficiency program) uses hardware that is worth 5 digits to do the testing, meanwhile I'm using a $200 watt meter and a $300 amp clamp to measure DC output. My results will of course be a little less accurate, but very close nonetheless. I regularly compare my efficiency testing to the 80+ results, and I'm always very close to their results.

Also, server PSU 80+ program is more stringent since they run on 230v. Don't confuse 80+ ATX number with 80+ server numbers:



I was wrong. 87% means the 2880W-ers are actually bronze rated, not silver.

Did you power the fans externally?

4.4.4      Fan Load Considerations

for Single-output Power Supplies
In typical single-output
power supplies (typically used in the
rack mount servers and blade server
applications) the fans are sized not only to remo
ve heat from the power supply but also the heat
from the system. In order to facilitate the system
designer’s use of different
 cooling strategies for
the system, the power consumed by the fan will not be included for efficiency calculations. If the
power supply has an internal fan, then the manuf
acturer will give provis
ion to supply external
power to the fan during the power
supply efficiency testing.
If th
e power supply does not have an
internal fan and if it fails to operate during the
efficiency testing due to thermal cutoff, then an
external fan shall be used to
cool the power supply. The power
 consumed by the external fan
shall not be included in the efficiency calcula
tions. In both cases th
e fan power used during
testing at each load setting
will be recorded for data colle
ction in determining industry
performance of efficiency
with and without fan power.

That is just one small section of relevance in the testing procedure that would skew the numbers by up to 4.3% efficiency.  I also wonder if Bitcoin miners are able to maintain constant load to within +-0.5%. Or if any criteria at all were observed from the 80+ testing procedure in order for you to "Certify" it as bronze.

Again, I would love to see how you tested the units (equipment, conditions, etc). You'll have to forgive me for not simply taking your word for it.  I find it extremely difficult to believe that the Bladecenter PSU's jumped from "Bronze" to Platinum rating overnight when they built the 2980W.

IBM 2880W PSU Packages: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=966135 IBM 4K PSU Breakout Boards & Packages: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1308296 
Server PSU-powered GPU rig solutions! https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1864539  Wallet address: 1GWQYCv22cAikgTgT1zFuAmsJ9fFqq9TXf 
dmwardjr
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December 30, 2015, 09:43:05 PM
 #103

I would also love to know the methods used to determine the 2880W PSU efficiency.  The 80+ program is more involved than just measuring input amps and output amps from what I gather.

David, if you really want to know, a good comparison would be to get one of the 2980W PSU's and measure amperage for a fixed amount of miners over 24 hours, and then do the same with the 2880W with the same miners before you pull the trigger on such a large purchase of PSU's. I'll see if I can track one down myself.

I just paid $150 with free shipping for a 2980 on eBay.  It's supposed to be here no later than January 7th.  I'll get back in touch.  However, I do want some suggestions as to the best possible tool for measuring the amperage.  If it cost a couple of hundred dollars to purchase it, so be it.  The kilowatt meter I bought on Amazon was a piece of crap.  He went out on me after about 30 days.

Follow me on Trading View for excellent signals in Bitcoin/US dollar - Bitstamp - https://www.tradingview.com/u/WyckoffMode/.  You can follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ModeWyckoff My YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8IbhpQwrTD6BozJPWnyAHA  My Discord Invite Link: https://discord.com/invite/3EJYTytaTT  My Website is in LIVE BETA: https://wyckoffmode.com/
dmwardjr
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December 30, 2015, 10:05:47 PM
 #104

That is just one small section of relevance in the testing procedure that would skew the numbers by up to 4.3% efficiency.  I also wonder if Bitcoin miners are able to maintain constant load to within +-0.5%. Or if any criteria at all were observed from the 80+ testing procedure in order for you to "Certify" it as bronze.

Again, I would love to see how you tested the units (equipment, conditions, etc). You'll have to forgive me for not simply taking your word for it.  I find it extremely difficult to believe that the Bladecenter PSU's jumped from "Bronze" to Platinum rating overnight when they built the 2980W.

I honestly believe the 2980's will be at least 6% more efficient at a minimum than the 2880's.  80+ testing procedures did not begin until late 2004.  Which see:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/80_Plus

Who know's how long it was before IBM got around to getting their blade center PSU's rated?  They may not have sought getting them rated until they went with more quality design and components to get as high of a rating as possible for marketing purposes.

"The Climate Savers Computing Initiative efficiency level targets for workstations for 2007 through 2011, correspond to the 80 Plus certification levels. From July 2007 through June 2008, basic 80 Plus level (Energy Star 4.0). For the next year target is 80 Plus Bronze level, the following year 80 Plus Silver, then 80 Plus Gold, and finally Platinum."  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/80_Plus

It really wasn't over night either with the creation of the 2980's.  They were made available in late 2010 to 2011.  The 2880's were out for quite a while before the 2980's came on the scene it appears [Maybe 2004 or 2005].  I would have to go along with Prelude on this one at the moment with the 2880's probably being around Bronze and no higher than Silver.  Even if the 2880's are equivalent to a Silver rating, this makes the 2980 a much better buy for one who intends to have a lot of gear mining.  At least after I did the math it appears to be the case.

Follow me on Trading View for excellent signals in Bitcoin/US dollar - Bitstamp - https://www.tradingview.com/u/WyckoffMode/.  You can follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ModeWyckoff My YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8IbhpQwrTD6BozJPWnyAHA  My Discord Invite Link: https://discord.com/invite/3EJYTytaTT  My Website is in LIVE BETA: https://wyckoffmode.com/
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December 30, 2015, 10:13:14 PM
 #105

Honestly if that is the case, I will gladly change all my threads to reflect it. But I was always under the impression they were in fact Platinum rated.  I'm hoping J4bberwock will chime in, as he originally had linked to the data sheet (that I can't find now) in his PSU thread before I got involved with them.

IBM 2880W PSU Packages: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=966135 IBM 4K PSU Breakout Boards & Packages: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1308296 
Server PSU-powered GPU rig solutions! https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1864539  Wallet address: 1GWQYCv22cAikgTgT1zFuAmsJ9fFqq9TXf 
dmwardjr
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December 30, 2015, 10:16:22 PM
 #106

Honestly if that is the case, I will gladly change all my threads to reflect it. But I was always under the impression they were in fact Platinum rated.  I'm hoping J4bberwock will chime in, as he originally had linked to the data sheet (that I can't find now) in his PSU thread before I got involved with them.

I remember that data sheet.  I was trying to find it last night but could not.  I wanted to see what "model" it may had referred to.

Follow me on Trading View for excellent signals in Bitcoin/US dollar - Bitstamp - https://www.tradingview.com/u/WyckoffMode/.  You can follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ModeWyckoff My YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8IbhpQwrTD6BozJPWnyAHA  My Discord Invite Link: https://discord.com/invite/3EJYTytaTT  My Website is in LIVE BETA: https://wyckoffmode.com/
dmwardjr
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December 30, 2015, 10:19:48 PM
 #107

If it's anywhere, it will be in this thread I believe:  https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=893159.0

Follow me on Trading View for excellent signals in Bitcoin/US dollar - Bitstamp - https://www.tradingview.com/u/WyckoffMode/.  You can follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ModeWyckoff My YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8IbhpQwrTD6BozJPWnyAHA  My Discord Invite Link: https://discord.com/invite/3EJYTytaTT  My Website is in LIVE BETA: https://wyckoffmode.com/
philipma1957 (OP)
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December 30, 2015, 10:20:55 PM
 #108

I would also love to know the methods used to determine the 2880W PSU efficiency.  The 80+ program is more involved than just measuring input amps and output amps from what I gather.

David, if you really want to know, a good comparison would be to get one of the 2980W PSU's and measure amperage for a fixed amount of miners over 24 hours, and then do the same with the 2880W with the same miners before you pull the trigger on such a large purchase of PSU's. I'll see if I can track one down myself.

I just paid $150 with free shipping for a 2980 on eBay.  It's supposed to be here no later than January 7th.  I'll get back in touch.  However, I do want some suggestions as to the best possible tool for measuring the amperage.  If it cost a couple of hundred dollars to purchase it, so be it.  The kilowatt meter I bought on Amazon was a piece of crap.  He went out on me after about 30 days.

I saw that link what i will do is get one I will run it with the one s-7 i have and compare it directly to the 2880w i have.

use the pdu meter.   should be an easy direct comparision.

I can run 1 s-7 get pdu meter settings and run 1 s-7 + 1 avalon 6

get pdu reading then   do it with the other .

in theory I should do 5.9/6.0 2880w   then 5.5/5.6 2980w

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dmwardjr
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December 30, 2015, 10:26:53 PM
 #109

I saw that link what i will do is get one I will run it with the one s-7 i have and compare it directly to the 2880w i have.

use the pdu meter.   should be an easy direct comparision.

That was the only thing I knew to do as well.  My PDU's have meters but they are whole numbers with no decimal points.  It simply rounds off to the nearest whole number.  I'm going to do a search to find something better if possible.  By the way, I have the APC7911 "Switched" PDU's.  I have not hooked them up yet.  They too are metered.  However, I'm not sure if they have decimal point or not.  Do you?  I have to run another 30A outlet to plug it in.  I do not want to unplug the PDU's I have going at the moment.  They have rigs mining on them.

If you happen to know of something I can get on Amazon and/or eBay that can measure properly without spending too much money, let me know please.

Follow me on Trading View for excellent signals in Bitcoin/US dollar - Bitstamp - https://www.tradingview.com/u/WyckoffMode/.  You can follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ModeWyckoff My YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8IbhpQwrTD6BozJPWnyAHA  My Discord Invite Link: https://discord.com/invite/3EJYTytaTT  My Website is in LIVE BETA: https://wyckoffmode.com/
Prelude
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December 30, 2015, 11:46:11 PM
 #110

I would also love to know the methods used to determine the 2880W PSU efficiency.  The 80+ program is more involved than just measuring input amps and output amps from what I gather.

Actually, that's exactly how efficiency is determined. AC input watts VS DC output watts. There is no other way to measure it. Ecova (The company behind the 80+ efficiency program) uses hardware that is worth 5 digits to do the testing, meanwhile I'm using a $200 watt meter and a $300 amp clamp to measure DC output. My results will of course be a little less accurate, but very close nonetheless. I regularly compare my efficiency testing to the 80+ results, and I'm always very close to their results.

Also, server PSU 80+ program is more stringent since they run on 230v. Don't confuse 80+ ATX number with 80+ server numbers:



I was wrong. 87% means the 2880W-ers are actually bronze rated, not silver.

Did you power the fans externally?

4.4.4      Fan Load Considerations

for Single-output Power Supplies
In typical single-output
power supplies (typically used in the
rack mount servers and blade server
applications) the fans are sized not only to remo
ve heat from the power supply but also the heat
from the system. In order to facilitate the system
designer’s use of different
 cooling strategies for
the system, the power consumed by the fan will not be included for efficiency calculations. If the
power supply has an internal fan, then the manuf
acturer will give provis
ion to supply external
power to the fan during the power
supply efficiency testing.
If th
e power supply does not have an
internal fan and if it fails to operate during the
efficiency testing due to thermal cutoff, then an
external fan shall be used to
cool the power supply. The power
 consumed by the external fan
shall not be included in the efficiency calcula
tions. In both cases th
e fan power used during
testing at each load setting
will be recorded for data colle
ction in determining industry
performance of efficiency
with and without fan power.

That is just one small section of relevance in the testing procedure that would skew the numbers by up to 4.3% efficiency.  I also wonder if Bitcoin miners are able to maintain constant load to within +-0.5%. Or if any criteria at all were observed from the 80+ testing procedure in order for you to "Certify" it as bronze.

Again, I would love to see how you tested the units (equipment, conditions, etc). You'll have to forgive me for not simply taking your word for it.  I find it extremely difficult to believe that the Bladecenter PSU's jumped from "Bronze" to Platinum rating overnight when they built the 2980W.


I typed up a very long and detailed reply that for some reason didn't get posted when I hit "post". Pretty infuriating, and I'm not typing it up again so I'll be brief here.

Fans were not powered externally, and I believe that to be disingenuous since no one will use a second power supply to power the main power supply's fan(s) in the real world. Most server PSU fans I've come across are 5-10w. These PSUs definitely use more juice with their fans. Don't think it's enough to bring efficiency down by any meaningful amount, much less 4.3%. Where did you get that figure?

I've already described my testing methods to you. 20-25c ambient, Watts Up? Pro .net AC meter, $300 AC/DC amp clamp to measure DC amperage and multiply it by voltage measured at the load end of wires to account for vdroop. Some simple math then gives us efficiency numbers. IF you don't want to accept my methodology, I'm very open to suggestions to improve my process. It has proven to be very accurate when used with PSUs that have results posted by ecova, even when taking the fan into consideration. Furthermore, a 1500GH/s SP20E has consistently used less power at the wall using an actual platinum PSU vs the 2880W-er by a large enough amount. I do consider that a little unfair since 1 SP20E won't hit 50% load on the 2880w, but on the other hand the other PSU was close to 100% load which lowers it's efficiency.

What you call overnight is actually a 5 to 6 year difference in engineering and manufacturing, a new (better) OEM,  not to mention the adoption of PSU efficiency measures to reduce global power consumption of data centers and consumer IT and a shift to ever more efficient PSUs to meet those goals. The 2880w came before all of that. Don't see why you have such difficulty believing that it's possible. You'll have to forgive me for not taking your word that it's platinum when there is absolutely no proof of that anywhere to be found. I've only seen that it's platinum being parroted on this forum. I hope you'll do your own tests and post the results. Until then, the burden of proof is on you to prove it is platinum and not bronze.

I hope you aren't taking this as a knock on you or j4bber. It is anything but. You guys sell what I consider to be the best server equipment for mining, and I know that you both believed the PSUs to be platinum rated. I know you wouldn't have sold them as platinum power supplies without believing that they were, and no one in their right mind will think that.

Edit: With the exception of S4, what I've seen is a constant load from miners on the power supply. Never seen it move more than 0.1A while mining on S7, for example.
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December 31, 2015, 12:05:38 AM
 #111

Relax  everyone  I ordered this

 I had a coupon and paid about 140 not 150

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00TMPKE96?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=od_aui_detailpages00

should be a direct fit and easy to compare to this

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00VMEB944?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=ox_sc_act_title_1&smid=A25R0MJJKVE76I


this is 76 with shipping.


so say 77 vs 150  or 75 dollars difference .

    I will run with identical testing.   and buyers can tell the watt difference   both should work fine with the breakout board.

The only thing I am sure about today is my titanium 1600 watt evga gets better watts rating then the 2880watt psu.  at freq 600

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December 31, 2015, 12:11:09 AM
 #112

I saw that link what i will do is get one I will run it with the one s-7 i have and compare it directly to the 2880w i have.

use the pdu meter.   should be an easy direct comparision.

That was the only thing I knew to do as well.  My PDU's have meters but they are whole numbers with no decimal points.  It simply rounds off to the nearest whole number.  I'm going to do a search to find something better if possible.  By the way, I have the APC7911 "Switched" PDU's.  I have not hooked them up yet.  They too are metered.  However, I'm not sure if they have decimal point or not.  Do you?  I have to run another 30A outlet to plug it in.  I do not want to unplug the PDU's I have going at the moment.  They have rigs mining on them.

If you happen to know of something I can get on Amazon and/or eBay that can measure properly without spending too much money, let me know please.


APC7911 has decimal points in the web interface, but not on the PDU its self.

If you want a good/accurate meter, look into the Watts up? meter, the UO version of the .net version is ideal for this kind of testing. Elsewise, I think you'll be spending thousands for something better, like a fluke power meter/analyzer.
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December 31, 2015, 01:29:14 AM
 #113

  You guys are too awesome, your detail reviews definitely helps others decide what is best for them (size, efficiency,  noise level, etc).  I just hooked up my next pair of IBM 2K PSU and of course I found out they are the newer Rev so I can't use them with the 4K board voltage controls (Only work with Rev 8 or lower per Finksy).  Going to order a pair of older rev PSU from FINKSY to go with the new 4K board bundle.
  
  For this new pair of IBM 2K PSU, I simply just use the Scotch mounting tape Phillip recommended.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00004Z498?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00

 Although they feel weak to the touch, these things are strong as heck when you tape them to something.  They're so strong that I didn't even bother to split out the other pair of PSU to find out the Rev #.  I only use a small piece to attach the FAN together.  Since they're at the bottom of the PSU, I didn't even need to use a mount, just place the PSU (taped together) on top and it's nice and steady on top.  I love this SCOTCH TAPE!  Make this solution clean, sexy and no obstruction to flow.  Guess I wont be needing to buy any fan mounting kit with this Tape.  Op, please quote my message so picture will show.

http://imgur.com/a/MaTjR

Just "Mining" my own business.
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December 31, 2015, 03:26:47 AM
 #114

I saw that link what i will do is get one I will run it with the one s-7 i have and compare it directly to the 2880w i have.

use the pdu meter.   should be an easy direct comparision.

That was the only thing I knew to do as well.  My PDU's have meters but they are whole numbers with no decimal points.  It simply rounds off to the nearest whole number.  I'm going to do a search to find something better if possible.  By the way, I have the APC7911 "Switched" PDU's.  I have not hooked them up yet.  They too are metered.  However, I'm not sure if they have decimal point or not.  Do you?  I have to run another 30A outlet to plug it in.  I do not want to unplug the PDU's I have going at the moment.  They have rigs mining on them.

If you happen to know of something I can get on Amazon and/or eBay that can measure properly without spending too much money, let me know please.


APC7911 has decimal points in the web interface, but not on the PDU its self.

If you want a good/accurate meter, look into the Watts up? meter, the UO version of the .net version is ideal for this kind of testing. Elsewise, I think you'll be spending thousands for something better, like a fluke power meter/analyzer.

My pdu has 1/10 or nearest tenth. It certainly will show close enough to see a large difference between the 2880w and the 2980w.

What we all really need to know is 100 watts a s-7 or 100 watts an Avalon really the difference between the two models.

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hawkfish007
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December 31, 2015, 03:28:46 AM
 #115

Do we know for sure if DPS-2000BB is platinum rated? I thought 2880W was platinum rated until now.

For quality risers, splitters or 133 CFM fans, please visit my eBay listings,
http://www.ebay.com/sch/hawkfish007/m.html?_ipg=50&_sop=12&_rdc=1
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December 31, 2015, 03:34:12 AM
 #116

Do we know for sure if DPS-2000BB is platinum rated? I thought 2880W was platinum rated until now.

Well we are working on the 2880w vs the 2980w all out of pocket for this test.

I think I can do some kind of a fair test with the 2000 in the set of two.

I will do some tests but I am not sure how to be sure .

I need to get volts equal which I can do on the middle setting.

Fast guess is 2880 the my 2x 2000  then the 2980

I will run a pair of avalons to test it.

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December 31, 2015, 03:42:35 AM
 #117

Do we know for sure if DPS-2000BB is platinum rated? I thought 2880W was platinum rated until now.

It isn't officially rated, but I did test it. Unfortunately it's been a while, and I can't find my results anywhere, but going from memory I'm pretty sure I had measured 89% efficiency while pulling ~1500w DC from it.

I'm thinking about retesting a bunch of power supplies and making a detailed thread out of the results. If I do, it will be an ongoing process starting possibly in the second week of 2016.
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December 31, 2015, 03:50:28 AM
Last edit: December 31, 2015, 04:40:36 AM by philipma1957
 #118

Do we know for sure if DPS-2000BB is platinum rated? I thought 2880W was platinum rated until now.

It isn't officially rated, but I did test it. Unfortunately it's been a while, and I can't find my results anywhere, but going from memory I'm pretty sure I had measured 89% efficiency while pulling ~1500w DC from it.

I'm thinking about retesting a bunch of power supplies and making a detailed thread out of the results. If I do, it will be an ongoing process starting possibly in the second week of 2016.

I for one would like this.

I also want to stress that an 89%  dps-2000bb in a 2x breakout set up will give you really good numbers running avalon sixes.

 I get 7600 for 2 units on high volt setting of 12.5

the easy 3 volt setting on the 2x breakout boards allows for over and under clocks. and the  two fans I use are  scythe at full speed which is 19/20 watts

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001JKNMBE?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00

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December 31, 2015, 04:49:20 AM
 #119

I'll break this up to make it easier to follow. I'll leave the discussion alone after this post.

Fans were not powered externally, and I believe that to be disingenuous since no one will use a second power supply to power the main power supply's fan(s) in the real world. Most server PSU fans I've come across are 5-10w. These PSUs definitely use more juice with their fans. Don't think it's enough to bring efficiency down by any meaningful amount, much less 4.3%. Where did you get that figure?

The 2880W PSU uses 3 60x38mm fans that are rated for 1.68A each.  At the PSU's typical 12.2V output, that would be maximum of 20.5W each, for a total of 61.5W.  @ your 50% load testing of 1440W, that could account for a margin of error up to 4.27% if they were at max load.  I don't think following the testing procedures for 80+ should be considered disingenuous if you are going to use their outcome/ratings in your assessment of the PSU.  If anything, I think it's disingenuous for you to use their rating label if you are going to ignore their protocol whether you agree with it or not. I'm not here to debate the real-world meaningfulness of Ecova's rating system, that is for the end user to decide for themselves just as EPA ratings on new vehicles (and not real-world fuel economy) are up to the consumer to interpret.  What I wouldn't do though is tell the dealer that the EPA rating on my new car is wrong based on my own fuel economy, if I'm not willing to replicate the EPA's testing procedure myself.

I do agree that the cooling setup used by the 2880W PSU's is not very efficient, it relies on small diameter high RPM fans to push air through a long narrow tunnel filled with components. Most ATX PSU's use very large single ~0.6A fan (~7W) to cool them, which is why they wouldn't have had near the impact in your testing in the past.  Thankfully MarkAZ has nearly finished his acrylic solution to replace the loud stock fans with a single 120mm fan which will reduce noise and wasted power from the 3x screamers.

I've already described my testing methods to you. 20-25c ambient, Watts Up? Pro .net AC meter, $300 AC/DC amp clamp to measure DC amperage and multiply it by voltage measured at the load end of wires to account for vdroop. Some simple math then gives us efficiency numbers. IF you don't want to accept my methodology, I'm very open to suggestions to improve my process. It has proven to be very accurate when used with PSUs that have results posted by ecova, even when taking the fan into consideration. Furthermore, a 1500GH/s SP20E has consistently used less power at the wall using an actual platinum PSU vs the 2880W-er by a large enough amount. I do consider that a little unfair since 1 SP20E won't hit 50% load on the 2880w, but on the other hand the other PSU was close to 100% load which lowers it's efficiency.
 
Where do you put the DC amp clamp to measure the DC load by the miners, do you have to take 1 strand of a PCIe cable or can you group them all in together? I'm honestly curious about that, seems interesting as a way to compare miner efficiency vs manufacturers published specs. And to see if for example the SP20e's DC Watts are accurate from the GUI.

SP20 @ 1500 GH/s is only 900W DC IIRC? So your 87% efficiency was measured at that load or at true 50% load?  This is the stuff I'm mainly interested in about your testing method (and I apologize if you've already posted about it) all I read was that you tested 87% efficiency at 50% load, which would have included fan draw of up to 60.5W of that.  However, if it was the SP20E @ 1500GH/s, load would be a fair amount less than 50%. Also, depending on what the fans were drawing and the DC load, the fans could make up more than the 4.27% figure of the energy consumption if it was less the 1440W load I thought it was. I'm very interested if you managed to test it at different loads to see if it was consistent? The real-world impact of this is that fans in general would make up a significantly lower portion of the wasted power (reflected as inefficiency in your test) at 100% load than they would at 20% load. This would also skew the results when comparing the efficiency of a PSU @ 100% load to a larger PSU @ 30% load, which is what I interpreted you as saying.

If you are open to suggestions, what I would love to see is a straight AC draw comparison vs a known similar 80+ platinum PSU at 50% and 100% DC load.  I have 2x 2980W PSU's coming and would be happy to lend one to you, along with another 2880W PSU for redundancy to test and show your results here. If you have enough mining power to load it up that is. Since it's impossible for anyone to make a definitive conclusion without actually following Ecova's guidelines, I think a comparison vs a near identical and known tested 80+ platinum PSU like the 2980W would be as close as one could get.

What you call overnight is actually a 5 to 6 year difference in engineering and manufacturing, a new (better) OEM,  not to mention the adoption of PSU efficiency measures to reduce global power consumption of data centers and consumer IT and a shift to ever more efficient PSUs to meet those goals. The 2880w came before all of that. Don't see why you have such difficulty believing that it's possible. You'll have to forgive me for not taking your word that it's platinum when there is absolutely no proof of that anywhere to be found. I've only seen that it's platinum being parroted on this forum. I hope you'll do your own tests and post the results. Until then, the burden of proof is on you to prove it is platinum and not bronze.

What you're saying about the timeline makes sense and could absolutely be right, it just didn't seem to me like much was changed through the years with the 2880W PSU's. And if it had, that it wouldn't have happened all at once with a new model.  All I am interested in is the truth of this.  And what you've showntold me is not exactly compelling, just that you tested the PSU @ 50% (or possibly 30% load if it was a single SP20, which i'm hoping you can clarify) and claim Bronze-level efficiency.  But you didn't follow 80+'s guidelines to determine that, and are now arguing that those guidelines are disingenuous...

I hope you aren't taking this as a knock on you or j4bber. It is anything but. You guys sell what I consider to be the best server equipment for mining, and I know that you both believed the PSUs to be platinum rated. I know you wouldn't have sold them as platinum power supplies without believing that they were, and no one in their right mind will think that.
Edit: With the exception of S4, what I've seen is a constant load from miners on the power supply. Never seen it move more than 0.1A while mining on S7, for example.

I realize I may be coming off as abrasive, and for that I apologize. The truth is I'm not taking this personally, I'm just learning now about how they actually rate PSU's, and learned how much wasted energy the fan packs on the 2880's could be burning (which makes me hopeful to test out and offer MarkAZ's alternate acrylic panel to mount a single 120mm fan instead).  Now what I would like to know is if these PSU's would actually meet the ratings that I was under the impression they met, and I believe the best way to do that (if you are willing) would be to have you compare the 2880W to the near identical and tested platinum 2980W PSU, to take your methods/equipment out of the equation (even if the method/equipment isn't perfect, it should be consistent enough to show a difference as significant as this).  If they do not match, I will be more than happy to change the wording in my threads.  The last thing I or J4bberwock are trying to do is to deceive anybody.  I started selling the product because I believed it was the best solution on the market, and still believe that today.

I have a bunch of server PSU's I could lend you for your PSU efficiency thread you mentioned too, DPS 2000's, DPS 750's, 800 GBA's, etc.

IBM 2880W PSU Packages: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=966135 IBM 4K PSU Breakout Boards & Packages: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1308296 
Server PSU-powered GPU rig solutions! https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1864539  Wallet address: 1GWQYCv22cAikgTgT1zFuAmsJ9fFqq9TXf 
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December 31, 2015, 04:53:30 AM
 #120

 You guys are too awesome, your detail reviews definitely helps others decide what is best for them (size, efficiency,  noise level, etc).  I just hooked up my next pair of IBM 2K PSU and of course I found out they are the newer Rev so I can't use them with the 4K board voltage controls (Only work with Rev 8 or lower per Finksy).  Going to order a pair of older rev PSU from FINKSY to go with the new 4K board bundle.
  
  For this new pair of IBM 2K PSU, I simply just use the Scotch mounting tape Phillip recommended.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00004Z498?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00

 Although they feel weak to the touch, these things are strong as heck when you tape them to something.  They're so strong that I didn't even bother to split out the other pair of PSU to find out the Rev #.  I only use a small piece to attach the FAN together.  Since they're at the bottom of the PSU, I didn't even need to use a mount, just place the PSU (taped together) on top and it's nice and steady on top.  I love this SCOTCH TAPE!  Make this solution clean, sexy and no obstruction to flow.  Guess I wont be needing to buy any fan mounting kit with this Tape.  Op, please quote my message so picture will show.

http://imgur.com/a/MaTjR


3m double side tape works if you have the older single breakout boards board and grilled shelf system

this is nhando's twist on my mount

here you go :
he double side tape the two fans



 he uses the shelf as a grill and base


lastly he gets good wire management  this is 2 single 2000 watt breakout finksy j4bberwock boards


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