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Author Topic: Block Erupter USB - Overclocking/ hacking ?  (Read 168717 times)
bobsmith652
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July 05, 2013, 06:04:50 PM
 #41

Those crystals can be had for under a dollar in small quantities so getting the is not a problem. The crystals used are more than just a crystal it has power ground enable and clock out, a normal crystal need two caps and this has them built in. The real question is how fast can we go. I should have two of these arriving today for experimentation. I'll report back what I find.  Wink

The ones I have seen on ebay are over £3.50, there isn't a 14.0MHz one, and I can't be arsed asking each seller what the dimensions are, as they seem to lack the ability of putting it in the listing.  The dimensions they list are "SMT", which is no use at all.  And I don't even know if the pinouts are standard.

Adding 15% to 0.008BC a day isn't going to pay for itself.  Especially with the current price drop... I might do one just for kicks.

Edit:
This one looks the part, 5x3.2mm http://uk.farnell.com/txc/7b-14-31818maaj-t/xtal-14-31818mhz-18pf-smd-5x3-2/dp/1841973 but I'm pretty sure the minimum order quantity and delivery charges will make it not worthwhile.
Bluestreak66
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July 05, 2013, 06:13:28 PM
 #42

Check digikey or mouser or element 14 or one of the other hundreds of electronics distributers
bobsmith652
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July 05, 2013, 06:18:25 PM
 #43

Yup, min £20 for debit card orders on farnell.  £12 delivery on digikey and mouser.

Maplins are useless for anything like this - nothing remotely like it in stock, and if there was, they would be about £6.99.
Bluestreak66
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July 05, 2013, 11:09:11 PM
 #44

If your just buying in single quantities there's no way it would be worth your cost. I order from digikey a lot and I typically get my order within 2 to 3 days. I'll probably throw some 14 and 16mhz crystals in my next order I keep alot of extra stock just because its cheaper if you buy in quantity and convenient to have on hand.
Bluestreak66
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July 06, 2013, 03:00:46 PM
 #45

I've had these things for just under 24hrs. I've had one running since It came out of the mailbox. The heat sinking though these things is terrible, there has to be a 10*c difference from the top of the chips to the bottom heatsink i'd say this is going to be the limiting factor on overclocking. I bolted one straight to a heatsink without the stock one and the heatsink gets warm but there is just a small difference in temp for stock to the larger heatsink. I'd like to know the thermal conductivity of the sheet between the board and the heatsink i'm not sure if its this or the board itself.
bobsmith652
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July 06, 2013, 08:40:29 PM
 #46

I've had these things for just under 24hrs. I've had one running since It came out of the mailbox. The heat sinking though these things is terrible, there has to be a 10*c difference from the top of the chips to the bottom heatsink i'd say this is going to be the limiting factor on overclocking. I bolted one straight to a heatsink without the stock one and the heatsink gets warm but there is just a small difference in temp for stock to the larger heatsink. I'd like to know the thermal conductivity of the sheet between the board and the heatsink i'm not sure if its this or the board itself.

They do run hot.  I think everyone has fans pointed at them.  The photos of the original batch with the spiky heatsink would have been better.  What temps are you getting?

I assumed the sheet was silicone to take up any gaps between the heat spreader and the back plate due to non-flatness.  Silicone is meant to be a good conductor of heat.

The clip on heatsinks I posted earlier make a big difference as they touch the chip on the top, as well as contacting the heat spreader.  
ludsum
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July 06, 2013, 09:18:28 PM
 #47

Anyone tried sticking some small heat sinks on the top?
http://archive.benchmarkreviews.com/images/reviews/cooling/Zalman_VF900Cu/Zalman_VF900Cu_RAM_Heat_Sink.jpg
It helped a lot on my Raspberry Pi...  Wink
bobsmith652
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July 07, 2013, 12:10:00 AM
 #48

What size is that?  We are talking 5-6mm chips on this.  The RPi RAM chip that sits on top of the CPU is about 12mm square.
ludsum
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July 07, 2013, 07:16:21 AM
 #49

Its 13x13x6 mm
I think there is enough space in there for one heat sink on the BE 110.
Cutting it is an option too.
Bluestreak66
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July 07, 2013, 02:30:21 PM
 #50

I think a better option would be just to dunk these in transformer oil I think that's the oil way to get enough cooling to overclock. The way these are designed I just don't think there is enough thermal dissipation though the board to overclock they struggle as is. Heat is dissipated through the bottom pad at the die. I thinks most of it is collecting around the base of the chip. The only way to cool that is oil.
Trongersoll
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July 07, 2013, 03:20:12 PM
 #51

I think a better option would be just to dunk these in transformer oil I think that's the oil way to get enough cooling to overclock. The way these are designed I just don't think there is enough thermal dissipation though the board to overclock they struggle as is. Heat is dissipated through the bottom pad at the die. I thinks most of it is collecting around the base of the chip. The only way to cool that is oil.

And how do you cool your mineral oil? I've wondered about that for a while.
Bicknellski
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July 07, 2013, 03:50:14 PM
 #52

I think a better option would be just to dunk these in transformer oil I think that's the oil way to get enough cooling to overclock. The way these are designed I just don't think there is enough thermal dissipation though the board to overclock they struggle as is. Heat is dissipated through the bottom pad at the die. I thinks most of it is collecting around the base of the chip. The only way to cool that is oil.

And how do you cool your mineral oil? I've wondered about that for a while.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qW0MbZPfmiQ



http://www.brazetek.com/24x24-water-to-air-heat-exchanger

Dogie trust abuse, spam, bullying, conspiracy posts & insults to forum members. Ask the mods or admins to move Dogie's spam or off topic stalking posts to the link above.
Trongersoll
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July 07, 2013, 06:21:11 PM
 #53

hmm. so ya need a heat exchanger and some kind of pump. sounds like this is getting industrial.
Bluestreak66
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July 07, 2013, 08:10:36 PM
 #54

I think a better option would be just to dunk these in transformer oil I think that's the oil way to get enough cooling to overclock. The way these are designed I just don't think there is enough thermal dissipation though the board to overclock they struggle as is. Heat is dissipated through the bottom pad at the die. I thinks most of it is collecting around the base of the chip. The only way to cool that is oil.

And how do you cool your mineral oil? I've wondered about that for a while.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qW0MbZPfmiQ



http://www.brazetek.com/24x24-water-to-air-heat-exchanger

Its funny you posted that I just brewed a batch of their brown ale yesterday. Any way any type of heat exchanger would work I may try it and see how well it transferred the heat.
TechCF
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July 07, 2013, 08:58:17 PM
 #55

Anyone tried sticking some small heat sinks on the top?
It helped a lot on my Raspberry Pi...  Wink

Yes, I have three "RAM heatsinks" on top of the stock cooler plate, and one "MOS heatsink" on the BE100 chip. Used the same heatsinks for the chips in my rPI too.
ludsum
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July 08, 2013, 08:33:18 AM
 #56

Anyone tried sticking some small heat sinks on the top?
It helped a lot on my Raspberry Pi...  Wink

Yes, I have three "RAM heatsinks" on top of the stock cooler plate, and one "MOS heatsink" on the BE100 chip. Used the same heatsinks for the chips in my rPI too.
Are they any good? Have you noticed any difference? Smiley
Trillium
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July 12, 2013, 10:40:57 AM
 #57

It looks like having hardware errors on these erupters is pretty normal. Has anyone managed to get theirs to run 24/7 without any hardware errors? I am not sure its a heat related issue because I've attached some small heatsinks to the ASIC chip and have server fans blowing onto them, but still the occasional error.

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bobsmith652
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July 12, 2013, 02:00:52 PM
 #58

It looks like having hardware errors on these erupters is pretty normal. Has anyone managed to get theirs to run 24/7 without any hardware errors? I am not sure its a heat related issue because I've attached some small heatsinks to the ASIC chip and have server fans blowing onto them, but still the occasional error.

Even with the clip-on heatsinks touching both sides, and having a fan on them, I still get just under 1% HW errors.

I noticed the 5V at the USB connector is actually 4V.  The other voltages on the pads at the end of the stick are OK though.  Not sure why the 5V is low, as it measures 5V on the next molex connector along (I have a 550W PSU powering my RPi rig, nowhere near the 17A the 5V line is meant to produce).  Maybe something in the USB hubs is lowering the voltage.  I haven't beefed up the power lines inside my hubs yet.
rmhuntley
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July 15, 2013, 09:51:35 AM
 #59

Could small peltier units be used to cool the back plate?

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Trillium
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July 15, 2013, 09:48:15 PM
Last edit: July 15, 2013, 09:59:24 PM by Trillium
 #60

Could small peltier units be used to cool the back plate?

You can cool almost anything you can think of with peltiers, but the problem is they are horribly inefficient devices. You'd be using a lot of power to cool a 2.5 watt device (+some extra from the OC) and that means more heat to remove. You'd have to cool the hot side of the peltier with a large heatsink, and you'd be better of just putting that heatsink onto the miner directly. From my experience with them, to get their rated temperature differential (perhaps 30 degrees) with no thermal load on the cold side, you have to run them with their rated power which is usually 50+ watts. So your 2.5+ watt heat load is now 52.5 watts or more.

Also because peltiers are capable of sub-ambient cooling, you run the risk of condensing water on the miner if you lower its temp below the dew point of the ambient air: pretty easy to do if suddenly the miner becomes idle and is no longer giving off much heat (you'd probably want dynamic temp control for the peltier itself, using a furnace controller programmed in cooling mode instead of heating mode - most Eurotherm models and some cheaper brands support this - or get a 'peltier temperature controller' off ebay).

A better option for overclocked miners (if anyone bothered to make one) would be to watercool them. Although they're terribly designed, you can get small waterblocks from ebay (read: China) for <$10. If you had a lot of miners to cool they could be attached to a larger watercooled plate, there are several commercial solutions to do this, or you could approach a machine shop. You can even make waterblocks yourself with a router and drill press and a bit of swearing.

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