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Author Topic: Swedish ASIC miner company kncminer.com  (Read 3050098 times)
soy
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October 08, 2013, 05:05:19 PM
 #13761

How is it that I paid on June 4, and people who paid on june 8, are already receiving their orders?!?

Because you didn't wash your hand when you last used the toilet.

I never wash my hands after using the toilet so that theory is out the window.

And there's the best reason to use the dry hands paper towels for opening the men's room exit door.
noodle73
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October 08, 2013, 05:05:57 PM
 #13762

Interesting if you're hosting at home - ok I should perhaps narrow it down further to hosting at home in the UK - and were considering power factor correction capacitors to knock down the electricity costs:

"In a domestic single phase power supply, unlike commerce and industry, you do not pay reactive power charges and you do not have a kVA limit so the only one who would benefit from fitting Power Factor Correction would be the supply company since they would need to supply less "kVA" for a given killowatt consumption.
 
kW = kVA x pf.
 
Killowatts are killowatts and the simplest way to save them is to turn things off.
If your machinery is using motors, you may find reducing the voltage to these will save energy especially if they are not fully loaded.
 
I hope this helps.
 
Regards"
soy
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October 08, 2013, 05:06:42 PM
 #13763


And both the USB and 5 volt power ports have been removed from the beagleboard?
soy
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October 08, 2013, 05:10:18 PM
 #13764

Interesting if you're hosting at home - ok I should perhaps narrow it down further to hosting at home in the UK - and were considering power factor correction capacitors to knock down the electricity costs:

"In a domestic single phase power supply, unlike commerce and industry, you do not pay reactive power charges and you do not have a kVA limit so the only one who would benefit from fitting Power Factor Correction would be the supply company since they would need to supply less "kVA" for a given killowatt consumption.
 
kW = kVA x pf.
 
Killowatts are killowatts and the simplest way to save them is to turn things off.
If your machinery is using motors, you may find reducing the voltage to these will save energy especially if they are not fully loaded.
 
I hope this helps.
 
Regards"

Really?  Running air conditioning or the refrigerator at 120VAC is more energy efficient than running at 126VAC?  I suspect not.
r3animation
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October 08, 2013, 05:17:44 PM
 #13765

You can setup backup pools the same way you do normally in CGminer.

There's no GUI for the OS (angstrom linux) in this case so no teamviewer type app. SSH is the way to go.

Has anyone tried cgwatcher ?
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=185553.0



Does it work remotely?


I never tried it, but it says it does. The "CGRemote" at least.

After a quick glance, It seems cgremote is a different program developed by the same person behind cgwatcher. The prob is that i don't have any windows workstation. So no way to use it.

I use CGwatcher and its fantastic for windows boxes. CGremote sounds promising but there's no way to test it right now unless you're in the beta program.
mruiter
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October 08, 2013, 05:23:50 PM
 #13766

So nice, not.

I have the FPGA error on al firmwares .90 ,91 ,92 and 93 after about 15 minutes of mining.
Temp is not high as far as i can tel

❘|❘ ICONOMI  Fund Management Platform
  LINK TO ICO | LINK TO DISCUSSION
nightengale
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October 08, 2013, 05:25:08 PM
 #13767

Wish I had a miner to tinker with. Have not read of any new orders going to production...
Paladin69
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October 08, 2013, 05:37:30 PM
 #13768

Wish I had a miner to tinker with. Have not read of any new orders going to production...

I hear ya.  I'm growing really impatient.  I pre-registered and paid within just a couple hours of them starting to take money.  I got stuck with Day 2 order#3xx.

Day 1 & Day 2 being 24 hours apart my arse.
noodle73
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October 08, 2013, 05:39:36 PM
 #13769

Interesting if you're hosting at home - ok I should perhaps narrow it down further to hosting at home in the UK - and were considering power factor correction capacitors to knock down the electricity costs:

"In a domestic single phase power supply, unlike commerce and industry, you do not pay reactive power charges and you do not have a kVA limit so the only one who would benefit from fitting Power Factor Correction would be the supply company since they would need to supply less "kVA" for a given killowatt consumption.
 
kW = kVA x pf.
 
Killowatts are killowatts and the simplest way to save them is to turn things off.
If your machinery is using motors, you may find reducing the voltage to these will save energy especially if they are not fully loaded.
 
I hope this helps.
 
Regards"

Really?  Running air conditioning or the refrigerator at 120VAC is more energy efficient than running at 126VAC?  I suspect not.

Well, I'm only quoting the electricity guy's message to me. England moved from 240v to 230v for residential supplies a few years ago and everything still works just as well on 230 as it did on 240 but just used less electricity doing it. I'm guessing he's alluding to this. Most people here still think it's 240 because that's what they grew up with and they haven't noticed anything different plus the devices invariably say 220-240v on them
WastedLTC
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October 08, 2013, 05:50:42 PM
 #13770

I enabled SSH thought the UI and connected using putty but the user/pass isn't working.  I did change the web login and pass and have tried the original and the new one.   am I missing something?
chrono030
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October 08, 2013, 05:53:05 PM
 #13771

I enabled SSH thought the UI and connected using putty but the user/pass isn't working.  I did change the web login and pass and have tried the original and the new one.   am I missing something?

try root / admin for SSH.  it is different than the web login
Phoenix1969
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October 08, 2013, 05:54:00 PM
 #13772

The reason a power factor correction capacitor works, is because the power companies actually charge by volt-amps, while you are measured in kilowatthours... its a global electricity scam, and the PFCC's indeed work. If you run ANY equipment that contains Caps... you will save money. 10 to 25%


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r1senfa17h
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October 08, 2013, 05:54:12 PM
 #13773

I enabled SSH through the UI and connected using putty but the user/pass isn't working.  I did change the web login and pass and have tried the original and the new one.   am I missing something?

When you say, "the user/pass" - Can we assume you're using root/admin?

1N3o5Kyvb4iECiJ3WKScKY8xTVXxf1hMvA
jelin1984
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October 08, 2013, 05:54:21 PM
 #13774

chrono030
which firmware you used it at jupiter?
is stable?
WastedLTC
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October 08, 2013, 05:55:09 PM
 #13775

I enabled SSH thought the UI and connected using putty but the user/pass isn't working.  I did change the web login and pass and have tried the original and the new one.   am I missing something?

try root / admin for SSH.  it is different than the web login

using root and the password from the UI worked.   appreciate it!
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October 08, 2013, 05:59:17 PM
Last edit: October 08, 2013, 06:28:22 PM by soy
 #13776

Interesting if you're hosting at home - ok I should perhaps narrow it down further to hosting at home in the UK - and were considering power factor correction capacitors to knock down the electricity costs:

"In a domestic single phase power supply, unlike commerce and industry, you do not pay reactive power charges and you do not have a kVA limit so the only one who would benefit from fitting Power Factor Correction would be the supply company since they would need to supply less "kVA" for a given killowatt consumption.
 
kW = kVA x pf.
 
Killowatts are killowatts and the simplest way to save them is to turn things off.
If your machinery is using motors, you may find reducing the voltage to these will save energy especially if they are not fully loaded.
 
I hope this helps.
 
Regards"

Really?  Running air conditioning or the refrigerator at 120VAC is more energy efficient than running at 126VAC?  I suspect not.

Well, I'm only quoting the electricity guy's message to me. England moved from 240v to 230v for residential supplies a few years ago and everything still works just as well on 230 as it did on 240 but just used less electricity doing it. I'm guessing he's alluding to this. Most people here still think it's 240 because that's what they grew up with and they haven't noticed anything different plus the devices invariably say 220-240v on them

Ah, the British Isles.  Lots of rain, fog, clouds, and at that time likely, mostly incandescent bulbs.  Resistive loads will use less power with lower voltage but motors get more efficient with higher voltages.  You would have been turning on lamps earlier than in brighter climes.  A few short years ago what was then the largest natural gas electric generating facility in the world came online not far from here.  It provides power for a lot of the southeast, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tenn., Alabama.  Before it went online I could measure voltage at the wall to be between 126 & 128VAC.  Surprised me as it was lower on Long Island where I'm from.  Lots of rural homes out here, long lines.  The the new electric facility had a different policy.  Voltage at the wall went bam smack on 120VAC, maybe up to 122 VAC at times.  Overall there had been a trickle up effect, the northern states getting some free power.  That stopped.  They hustled adjusting voltages mid-summer.  Suddenly power lines were falling all over the northeast, particularly Pennsylvania.  Up north there they must have seen it was going to be reflected in profits and had no reasonable way to explain it.  They must have started lowering their own voltages relative to one another.  Lines got hot, stretched, broke and fell.  Things that use to work well started drawing more current.  Global warming, lots more AC use in the south, think they'd lower their voltages if the AC were going to be costing the customers less?  Don't know for sure, this is just my theory.

Perhaps the UK power utility saw what a large fraction of electric usage they had of incandescent lamps and with the low power bulbs coming on the market decided to fudge profits by making electric motors less efficient.
Phoenix1969
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October 08, 2013, 06:05:17 PM
 #13777

Interesting route to Hawaii... wonder about the wasted Phila/Louisville jauntz, lol

Kolen to phila... wow


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squish
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October 08, 2013, 06:08:22 PM
 #13778

Well, I'm only quoting the electricity guy's message to me. England moved from 240v to 230v for residential supplies a few years ago and everything still works just as well on 230 as it did on 240 but just used less electricity doing it. I'm guessing he's alluding to this. Most people here still think it's 240 because that's what they grew up with and they haven't noticed anything different plus the devices invariably say 220-240v on them

Actually I think we changed the specifications but not the supply!  I think we were and still are on 240v and we fudged it by moving to EU standard 230v with a permitted upwards range of 10%.

I'm in London and my UPS says it's 250v.
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October 08, 2013, 06:12:38 PM
 #13779

Just a heads up for fellow hosted day 1 customers.  I spoke to customer service this morning, don't expect hosting to start today.

They are 'close' and expect to be done by tomorrow (of course this is what they have told me every day that I've called since last Wednesday).  The guy on the phone verified that the 1btc/day delay will continue to accrue during the down time.  Of course, he doesn't know what date they are counting as the official 'should have started' date.  

It's hard to nit pick, as I appreciate their willingness to attempt to make the hosting delay's right by their customers but 1btc/day is not reflective of the actual amount these units would have earned.  The first 3-4 days would have been in the previous difficulty level @ 1.6 btc per day.  The next ~10 days would have been ~27% less or around 1.17 btc/day.

He wouldn't verify what exactly the problem was, other than they didn't expect it to be as time consuming as it ended up actually being and more man power is being used than they had anticipated.  They aren't necessarily having a problem/fault other than setup is taking longer than expected. I got the impression it was a router/security config issue.
Phoenix1969
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October 08, 2013, 06:16:59 PM
 #13780

Yeah, router issues had me stumped for a bit here too. As it turns out, Manually bridging connections thru the
OS on the host computer's ethernet device was necessary to get the ethernet to web-connect on my home-network... The hardware way sucked in comparison. (kept disconnecting)
(not saying that's their problem tho)


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