Bitcoin Forum
April 27, 2024, 03:59:20 AM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Can you build this cheaper?  (Read 1067 times)
sLide. (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 170
Merit: 100



View Profile
May 20, 2013, 02:12:22 AM
 #1


Aim - Slide.0
1J6UeiXtBYXmpA6uajRs3aJpUD1Tsj1CF3 - Tips?
1714190360
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1714190360

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1714190360
Reply with quote  #2

1714190360
Report to moderator
1714190360
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1714190360

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1714190360
Reply with quote  #2

1714190360
Report to moderator
If you want to be a moderator, report many posts with accuracy. You will be noticed.
Advertised sites are not endorsed by the Bitcoin Forum. They may be unsafe, untrustworthy, or illegal in your jurisdiction.
TheSpiral
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 322
Merit: 113


Sinbad Mixer: Mix Your BTC Quickly


View Profile
May 20, 2013, 02:49:07 AM
 #2

I'd probably opt to get 2 7950's instead of 3 7850's. Similar hashrate, similar price, but frees up an extra PCI slot for future use. I have a couple 7850's myself, the rebate is limited to one card, if it means anything.
Other than that, looks fine (though you may opt to get a cheaper CPU if it's only for mining)
nwoolls
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 840
Merit: 1002


View Profile WWW
May 20, 2013, 03:06:11 AM
 #3

I'd personally go with:

AMD Sempron 145 Processor
GIGABYTE GA-970A-D3 AM3+
Sapphire Radeon HD 7950

The GPU's OC well in my experience (600+ Mh/s) and the mobo + CPU work well.

Amazon will also exchange any items with 1-day shipping (fry a GPU?) and will refund your money if the prices drop within 30 days (just strike up a chat with them on Amazon.com).

MultiMiner: Any Miner, Any Where, on Any Device |  Xgminer: Mine with popular miners on Mac OS X
btc: 1BmXY4ZZQh1iHSVre658gM1gPAEtDnq8rv  |  ltc: LP1SsHZTDexndkvRKsqAkXNsienPHwaMb5  |  hardware: nwoolls at gmail dot com
Veldrik
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 35
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 20, 2013, 03:15:35 AM
 #4

yes and no - with those specific parts I would spend more for the cards and less on the motherboard/cpu (I'm in Australia).

However overall, if you are mining BTC and the computer will never be used for anything else (such as gaming) and you want to get cheaper consider:
dropping the CPU to a
  • dual core and slowest as you can realistically afford (an AM2+)
    dropping the motherboard to a am2+ models, but also with 4 pcie (as many pxiex16 sized as possible, otherwise you have to use risers or an additional power source which may introduce some burnout unless you have good quality cables - I Think its 25watts for x1, and 75watts for a x16.  Also, as you have 4 cards (even though they are 7850s) you might end up running to much voltage through the motherboard (although the Ultra Durable 3 boards seem good so far for myself, but I don't run 4 cards on one motherboard)
    Optinoally, just replace multiple 7850s with an 7870 (pictairn) or bump up to a 7950.  Atleast over here, for mhash and power comsumption, the 7870 and the 7950 are the most efficient, for mhash to base price, and mhash to power usage.  I was considering 7850s aswell, but hte 7870 blew it out of the water, as did a 7950 (which uses the newer tahiti chips).  Don't forget that all because you can cram 4 cards into one rig without risers, doesn't necessarily make it that good if you can get 2 or 3 other cards to do the same job, with better better thermal and power efficiencies and a similar base cost.  It also means you can then sell them off later - or atleast use them for an overkill crossfire system jsut for gaming and running 16 monitors off for some reason.  Smiley

Basically, as you are using GPU mining, you really want a system that is:
cost effective vs total mhash
won't be a peice of junk in the corner of your garage if you stop mining any time soon

That leads to for the first point, you want the overall mhash to be high and the cost and power consumption to be low (The later is a huge factor over here where we pay around $0.30/kw/hour in USD.)
For the second point, odds are that if you ever do game on an AMD card, you won't use more than 2 cards in Crossfire. Or even one card.  So you have a bunch of spare cards - so if you don't use them you want to sell em.

Out of the box, a stock 7850 will reap around 260mhash/s.  a 7870 will do around 390mhash/s  7950 wil do around 430 mhash/s
When overclocked, to 1100mhz for the 7850, 7950 and 1200 for the 7870, you will get:  7850=340m#/s, 7870=460m#/s, and 7950=590m#/s
You could push it higher, but thats what I run and they stay pretty cool (even though I run them all in the same case - I get 64*C, except on the top card which gets all the heat from the lower cards which runs at 68*C.  I haven't been bothered to split them out of the case yet - but when stand alone they run at around 50 to 55*C.

So basically for a 4 gpu system with 7850s, you pull in 1350 m#/s.  Thats around 10% faster than running 2 7950s.  It will also consume, around 600watts give or take, where 2 7950s will do around 400. (3 7870s will probably draw around 450).  Due to higher power going through them you will also generate more temperature (think of it as a 600watt heater compared to a 400watt heater).
The GPUs that you are looking at have 2 fans each only.  If you pick up a 3 fan 7950 or 7870 (which atleast the Gigabyte ones come with), you would most usually push through more air - which is important if you stick them close together - as that motherboard can take 3 double width GPUs you may atleast do that for 3 of the cards and a riser on the 4th.  Stick two on there and you shold be fine, and the other two on risers.  They will still get hot though.
Anyways, so your pulling more power and generating more heat which you have to disipate, or just use more risers and a bigger box.
So atleast compare the cost of 3 7870 pictairns, or 2 7950 tahitis or above for a replacement to those four 7850s
Additionally, 2 7950s on that board at the furthest gap would let you mount them with 3 rails space between them without risers, all running off the power from the motherboard and one Powersupply, with space to sapre if you ever want to stick on 2 more cards (assuming you are using windows where it appears to be a four card limit).  Also, if you let the motherboard lay flat (desktop style!) your heat would disipate away from the rig, as opposed to the next card in tower orienation.  2 cards also means less dummy plugs or cables going to your monitor if you go that path.
And to boot, your power supply would last longer, or optinoally, you could drop down to an 900watt bronze, as you would still be around the 50% mark for long life efficiency.  Or stay at that 1200watt giving room to spare in the future.
As for the ram, I'd personally get 4gb if you plan on using windows.  It just runs better if you ever have to actually use it and its pretty cheap.

I hope this helps a bit.
But otherwise, good price hunting!
Veldrik
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 35
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 20, 2013, 03:18:00 AM
 #5

PS - I missed the 2 previous posts by the time I finished typing, also I assumed you were getting 4 7850s which would be jsut faster than 2 7950s or 3 7870s.  As you are only getting 3 7850s they will fit on one motherboard, but you might as well just get 2 7850s, which would be cheaper and produce the same mhash, or 2 7950s for a similar cost ($300 for a gigabyte I picked up on friday - and we don't even get rebates in Australia!) and produce the equivieltn of 4 of those 7950s with better power consumption and less heat generation, and way better airflow/heat disipation.
sLide. (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 170
Merit: 100



View Profile
May 20, 2013, 03:25:28 AM
 #6

Thanks everyone for the replies. 

After reading so far, I think for the extra $100 dollars a card, I should go with the 7950's.  They are about $300 dollars from what I see, but offer almost 300m/hash more.  I'd like to populate 3 - 7950's at 600mh/s with a 1200 watt power supply. 

I'd just use a simple open wooden frame with extenders.  If I use the MOBO that's linked above from nwools sugggestion, I'd need 2 - 16x extenders with no additional power and 1 pci1x with additional power?  I still do not fully understand the powered extenders.  Do I use them when I'm going from a 1x to a 16x since x16 cards need more power?   Thanks!

Aim - Slide.0
1J6UeiXtBYXmpA6uajRs3aJpUD1Tsj1CF3 - Tips?
ssateneth
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1344
Merit: 1004



View Profile
May 20, 2013, 05:26:10 AM
 #7

i wouldnt go with the coolmax. It's cheap, but it's also cheap.

My personal fav is the Z77a-G45 motherboard. Also would have gotten a rosewill lightning 1300W but out of stock right now.

Your total is $982.93, minus $45 in rebates, so $937.93

Do Seasonic X-1250W power supply $255-$15, MSI Z77A-G45 $125-$10, free 8GB RAM included with motherboard, intel g1610 ivy bridge CPU $50. $430 before rebates, $405 after.

If you choose 3x7850, HIS 7850 $160 each ($480 total). Free gamecards ebay for $35 each, so more like $375. $910 total system before rebates and ebay, $780 after.

If you choose 3x7950, SAPPHIRE 100352-4L 7950 $290 each ($870 total). Free gamecards ebay for $30 and $10 each (3 of each), so more like $750. Also can do 1 $20 rebate. $1300 total system before rebates and ebay, $1135 after.

edit: i've never used powered risers, and all my boards are populated with 6 cards. I have 53 individual gpu cores mining. some cards are dual gpu

crazyates
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 952
Merit: 1000



View Profile
May 20, 2013, 05:46:04 AM
 #8

You don't need a 1300W PSU for 3 7950s. You could get away with a 1000W or something around there. That just cut off $100 right there.

For a Motherboard? A used FXA-GD70 with a Sempron 145. If you're BTC mining, get whatever RAM is cheapest. If you're LTC mining, get 8GB.

Tips? 1crazy8pMqgwJ7tX7ZPZmyPwFbc6xZKM9
Previous Trade History - Sale Thread
madkind
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 42
Merit: 0


View Profile
May 20, 2013, 12:43:07 PM
 #9

That PSU brand does not seem to be reliable. Better safe than sorry.
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!