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Author Topic: Do you think Bitmain make better than 16nm in future? I think no.  (Read 2836 times)
akaros (OP)
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November 18, 2016, 05:39:26 PM
 #1

I think bitmain now going to produce, mine and not for invest for development new chips for maybe years...
Because 14nm is not such move forward to invest much money what it need.

What you think about? Because if I am right, we can start nice investment in miners today. S9 will be here for long time.

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//from USB block erupters in past to S21 now. //mainly repairing miners from Bitmain, I am also cheap source for original Antminer parts.
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November 18, 2016, 05:54:36 PM
 #2

14nm to 10nm is a huge, huge gain again so eventually the benefits will outweigh the costs.

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November 18, 2016, 05:55:53 PM
 #3

Like every technology makers...

I think they already have some better equipments made..Just waiting that everything is sold, making money, and when competitors will try to make their better asics available, they will release another better miner for customers.

I think they already 1 year or 2 in advance into miners, but not releasing those at the moment. ( marketing )
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November 18, 2016, 06:03:17 PM
 #4

Just look for the next big hashrate jump on the blockchain. That will be the newest gear being switched on. Most companies in any field of research and development have things in the pipeline years before they get released. Bitmain is no different they would already be working on more efficient miners before the S9 was even bought out. The chip development is one thing but the programming and communication of the chip into a pcb and eventually miner is another. They probably already have 14nm chips but just making money out of the 16nm chips for as long as possible (look at the prices of the miners, they don't go down when they release new batches) then once they have figured out how best to incorporate the 14nm asic into a miner they will build them for themselves and earn from them inhouse. Only once someone else builds something competitive they will release it to the public and earn even more.

Lets just hope when that day comes that its better than the last few batches of S9's.

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November 18, 2016, 06:55:30 PM
Last edit: November 18, 2016, 08:22:35 PM by NotFuzzyWarm
 #5

Quote
They probably already have 14nm chips but just making money out of the 16nm chips for as long as possible (look at the prices of the miners, they don't go down when they release new batches) then once they have figured out how best to incorporate the 14nm asic into a miner they will build them for themselves and earn from them inhouse.
And just pray tell who Bitmain would have making 14nm chips for them?
TSMC does not and will not have anything at that node, their next target is around 10nm. Intel and IBM Foundries are for-internal-use only and Samsung mostly is as well which leaves GloFo and they would be the first to announce someone is using them... There are NO other Foundries on this planet able to produce 14nm chips much less anything smaller.

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November 18, 2016, 10:14:42 PM
 #6

To toss some more wood on the fire.

The 16nm chip from bitmaintech is meh.

now if I recall

BM1382 is 28nm

 https://enshop.bitmain.com/files/download/BM1382_Datasheet_v3.0.pdf

and BM1384 is 28nm


so if BM1385 is 16nm

BM1387 could be 16nm  and it would work better

as for a 10nm  3 or more  years from now 

and for a 7nm 5 to 8 years.

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November 18, 2016, 10:17:11 PM
 #7

BM1385 is the S7 chip and is 28nm; BM1387 is the S9 chip and is 16nm.

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November 18, 2016, 11:14:21 PM
Last edit: November 19, 2016, 12:20:49 AM by NotFuzzyWarm
 #8

BM1385 is the S7 chip and is 28nm; BM1387 is the S9 chip and is 16nm.
Ja. The '132 and '134 were laid out using standard automated chip design tools for the 28nm node - nicely functional, faster/cheaper to use but far from the best way to do it. Usually the biggest thing that suffers is timing of data to/from the cores. In other words - speed.

The '135 circuits layout inside them was 'hand-optimized' for pure performance. In other words people actually looked at the layout tools output and ran it through simulations, go back to the tools and tweak, re-sim, etc. several times to get highest throughput. Hell, given that by then 28nm tech was pretty much mature (read: lowish-cost) Bitmain no doubt had several runs of test wafers ran to verify results each time.

As a result he '135 was still 28nm node but performed much better than its 'quick and dirty' precursor. OF course also helped that Bitmain started using the 2-sided heat sinks with the s7 and were able to push more power into them but still able to keep a good GHs/J spec...

For a current (last October) write up of node-size What's To Come, http://spectrum.ieee.org/semiconductors/devices/leading-chipmakers-eye-euv-lithography-to-save-moores-law

They say 'maybe as soon as 2018' (emphasis mine). Not specifically said is that those chips will first be destined for SOC's integrating high-end CPU, GPU and FPGA-style processing with all attendant support circuits in one chip. Eventually will trickle down to boutique chips but don't hold your breath.

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November 19, 2016, 05:55:35 AM
 #9

Yeah, the bottom-clock efficiency of the BM1385 at 28nm is only a little bit worse than stock setpoint of Avalon's new 16nm; I think it's spec'd down to about 0.18J/GH chip-level and I've seen an S7 get 0.22J/GH wall. It ain't easy but it's doable.

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November 19, 2016, 10:53:31 AM
 #10

I could see 14nm coming in a year or two, but it's likely that performance jumps won't be very big at all and that 14nm might just be skipped in the bitcoin industry.
Yeah, the bottom-clock efficiency of the BM1385 at 28nm is only a little bit worse than stock setpoint of Avalon's new 16nm; I think it's spec'd down to about 0.18J/GH chip-level and I've seen an S7 get 0.22J/GH wall. It ain't easy but it's doable.
I was pretty shocked by the efficiency of that miner; I expected something at least close to the S9 in terms of base hashrate and erficiency. Maybe it was rushed? It's a nice low cost miner and relatively low power, but I just don't see it being adopted as much as some others.
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November 19, 2016, 01:38:05 PM
 #11

Bitmain will most likely continue working with TSMC, so I guess a 10nm chip is to be expected from them next.

http://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1329217
Quote
"Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. is ramping its 16nm process and making progress on plans to roll out 10 and 7nm nodes over the next two years."

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November 19, 2016, 03:42:53 PM
 #12

BW has 14nm ASICs; from what I understand, they're already using their 3rd revision of 14nm (LK-1403) design.

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November 20, 2016, 01:36:25 AM
 #13

I think bitmain now going to produce, mine and not for invest for development new chips for maybe years...
Because 14nm is not such move forward to invest much money what it need.

What you think about? Because if I am right, we can start nice investment in miners today. S9 will be here for long time.

14nm and 16nm are on a practical basis interchangeable - I forget which of AMD and NVidia is set up for production of their cards on BOTH nodes offhand, but that's just one example.


 10nm and 7nm however should be significant moves forward - but I think Intel and IBM (respectively) and TMSC are all bit optimistic in their projections of when they'll be bringing these new nodes to market.
 7nm in particular requires completely different "ALLOYED" wafers of a type that have never been done before, which is going to take time to get production ramped up.


 BW should have their LK-1402 second-gen part and miners based on it in production, but not a 3'd gen and haven't even announced plans for such a part.


 A721 was definitely rushed, as Caanan didn't even announce they were STARTING on a miner design 'till very close to the same time BirFury announced their new part and demo of sample, and shortly before the S9 started shipping. I'd guess the chip in the 721 is closer to the LK-1401 and isn't a "ful custom" design, as opposed to the LK-1402, BM1387 (S9), and the Bitfury part.

 As I recall, the Bitfury part is 14nm, I *think* the LK-1401 and LK-1402 are both 14nm but might be misremembering on those.

 
 Based on all of my reading, I'd guess we won't see 10nm or 7nm in miners before early 2020 - and I won't be shocked it it's more like 2021 sometime.

 I remember some of the early predictions of 14nm and 16nm process node "would be available" almost 2 YEARS before they finally were, due to the teething pains - then TSMC got hit by the earthquake and their shipping scheduals slipped a couple more months....



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November 20, 2016, 01:50:03 AM
 #14

I think bitmain now going to produce, mine and not for invest for development new chips for maybe years...
Because 14nm is not such move forward to invest much money what it need.

What you think about? Because if I am right, we can start nice investment in miners today. S9 will be here for long time.

14nm and 16nm are on a practical basis interchangeable - I forget which of AMD and NVidia is set up for production of their cards on BOTH nodes offhand, but that's just one example.


 10nm and 7nm however should be significant moves forward - but I think Intel and IBM (respectively) and TMSC are all bit optimistic in their projections of when they'll be bringing these new nodes to market.
 7nm in particular requires completely different "ALLOYED" wafers of a type that have never been done before, which is going to take time to get production ramped up.


 BW should have their LK-1402 second-gen part and miners based on it in production, but not a 3'd gen and haven't even announced plans for such a part.


 A721 was definitely rushed, as Caanan didn't even announce they were STARTING on a miner design 'till very close to the same time BirFury announced their new part and demo of sample, and shortly before the S9 started shipping. I'd guess the chip in the 721 is closer to the LK-1401 and isn't a "ful custom" design, as opposed to the LK-1402, BM1387 (S9), and the Bitfury part.

 As I recall, the Bitfury part is 14nm, I *think* the LK-1401 and LK-1402 are both 14nm but might be misremembering on those.

 
 Based on all of my reading, I'd guess we won't see 10nm or 7nm in miners before early 2020 - and I won't be shocked it it's more like 2021 sometime.

 I remember some of the early predictions of 14nm and 16nm process node "would be available" almost 2 YEARS before they finally were, due to the teething pains - then TSMC got hit by the earthquake and their shipping scheduals slipped a couple more months....



From what I know, the GTX 1060 or the 1050 and 1050ti were manufactured on a 14nm process, and AMD uses all 16nm iirc.

I wouldn't be surprised if we end up in a mining deadlock, where efficiency can't go much higher and electrical costs will need to be insanely low to even make a small profit. We know for sure that future advances will be slow, but every little advancement counts.


7 and 10nm won't come right after mainstream processors on those manufacturing processes come out, as ASIC devs always need time to develop chips- this delay could be from a half year or less, which will certainly increase time before miners are introduced.
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November 20, 2016, 02:06:53 AM
 #15

http://www.globalfoundries.com/newsroom/press-releases/2016/09/07/globalfoundries-extends-fdx-roadmap-with-12nm-fd-soi-technology
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November 20, 2016, 04:30:04 AM
 #16

It's secondhand, but I was told BW would start receiving the first batches of LK1403 in October. That was right about the same time I found out they wouldn't be selling to the public, which was right after I had a working prototype for a BW-based stickminer, including cgminer drivers, ready to roll.

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November 21, 2016, 02:40:27 AM
 #17


GLOBALFOUNDRIES Fab 1 in Dresden, Germany is currently putting the conditions in place to enable the site's 12FDX development activities and subsequent manufacturing. Customer product tape-outs are expected to begin in the first half of 2019.

 We're still looking at probably 2020 timeframe for someone to start building miners on that node, is anyone goes that route even if GF manages to hold to that schedual.

 Also have to wonder how much of that production is going to be tied up by AMD's aggrement with Global Founderies reguarding that fab (which used to be an AMD fab).



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November 21, 2016, 07:56:47 PM
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What's sure is that they won't go further than GPU manufacturers, so if those only passed the 14nm mark, we'll wait a long time before we see 10nm or so.
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November 21, 2016, 09:23:48 PM
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What's sure is that they won't go further than GPU manufacturers, so if those only passed the 14nm mark, we'll wait a long time before we see 10nm or so.

but a better 14-16nm is possible.

I think maybe an improved s9+  next spring or an s11  but either more of the same chips on a lower clock.  or a better chip that is still 14-16nm


to see a 10nm  maybe 2020 at best.

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November 21, 2016, 09:40:55 PM
 #20

I think bitmain now going to produce, mine and not for invest for development new chips for maybe years...
Because 14nm is not such move forward to invest much money what it need.

What you think about? Because if I am right, we can start nice investment in miners today. S9 will be here for long time.

There are some marketing tricks that you don't know and that's why you speak so. Every hardware gives users something new and sayes that there is something new and innovative, behind this they have already better version but they aren't going to sold it because they need to sell less better product at first. Same situation is here with bitmain and what will you say about smartphone facts? huawei, apple and lg created smartphone with two camera at the same time?

So I think there is already released what you think that isn't.

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