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Author Topic: Part list help!  (Read 1032 times)
zak2501 (OP)
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December 02, 2017, 02:46:37 AM
 #1

Hey everyone, I would love it if someone could check over my part list and give me some opinions.
I am not 100% sure on my PSU selection. I've used PSU calculators to try and figure it out on my own but I am not sure how much the molex on the mobo and risers draw.

On the ASUS B250 MINING EXPERT do I populate all 3 ATX and bridge the forth PSU with another? What about the 3 molex connections on the board itself?

I live in Canada, we don't have good availability or prices like the states. All my prices are in CAD.

ASUS B250 MINING EXPERT Socket 1151  MOBO
https://www.pc-canada.com/item/B250%20MINING%20EXPERT.html
$181.99

DREVO X1 Series 60GB SSD
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B01K1W7JNW/_encoding=UTF8?coliid=I3K4XZXYSPGT0Q&colid=2W1B38STTX96W&psc=1
$44.99

Ballistix Sport LT 4GB Single DDR4 RAM
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B01DPZVP3W/_encoding=UTF8?coliid=I3W87NAZ49OZA&colid=2W1B38STTX96W&psc=1
$59.99

Intel Celeron G3900
http://www.pc-canada.com/item/BX80662G3900.html
$53.99

HDE PC Case Power Push Button Cable ATX Computer On/Off 23" 60cm Switch Wire
$6

Ubit 12-PCS PCI-E Riser
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B072XGDWB3/_encoding=UTF8?coliid=I39H0J1I2PIZ8L&colid=2W1B38STTX96W&psc=1
$96.87

6-Pack PCI-E 16x to 1x Powered Riser Adapter Card
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B01GU94QSQ/_encoding=UTF8?coliid=I3SZ9I6M8PG5ID&colid=2W1B38STTX96W&psc=0
$56.98

ZQ100WT 2017 Newest ATX 24Pin to Molex 4Pin Dual Triple PSU Power Supply Sync Starter
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0716S64Q9/
$13.88

ROG-STRIX-RX570-O4G-GAMIN
https://www.pc-canada.com/item/ROG-STRIX-RX570-4G-GAMING.html
18 = $5227.02

EVGA SuperNOVA 650 G1
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B00K85X2AW/_encoding=UTF8?coliid=I30YGFYEI06XAK&colid=2W1B38STTX96W&psc=1
4 = $400

18 GPU’s 1 Computer:
1x Mobo $181.99
1x CPU $53.99
1x RAM $59.99
1x SSD $44.99
18x GPU  $5227.02
4x PSU  $400
1x PC Button $6
1x PSU Bridge $14
Risers 12+6pack $97+$57
=$6142 CAD
=$4832 USD
(this is all before tax)

So 18 RX570 mining Ethereum @
502.2 Mh/s
2160.0 Watts
Would give me a Monthly return of:
2.52739744 ETH $1,225.52 USD

Does that sound right?
Am I missing anything?
Any options on getting my price down?
whattomine.com says 4 RX570 draw 405.0 watts mining ethereum
So I can populate 4 RX570 per 650w EVGA G1? Can it handle that?
Should I consider another card besides the RX570?

Thank you for the help.

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December 02, 2017, 02:57:37 AM
 #2

You won't be able to run all 18 cards on the same motherboard. Running more than 13 GPU's with the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2357461.msg24031325#msg24031325

If you want to run all AMD cards I would suggest breaking it up in to a 12 card build on a ASRock H110 Pro BTC+ and a 6 card build on a Biostar TB85 or another H110 Pro BTC+ motherboard if you plan to expand.
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December 02, 2017, 03:45:56 AM
 #3

You won't be able to run all 18 cards on the same motherboard. Running more than 13 GPU's with the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2357461.msg24031325#msg24031325

If you want to run all AMD cards I would suggest breaking it up in to a 12 card build on a ASRock H110 Pro BTC+ and a 6 card build on a Biostar TB85 or another H110 Pro BTC+ motherboard if you plan to expand.

I'll go with Vann's advice, even you manage all cards to be working on one Rig this is not practical for since it has a centralized failure, mining is not a 100% reliable all the time of the day, if any of the GPU's, PC components, Softwares or even connectivity failed, your profits will greatly reduced.

Also, each RX470 will draw 180-190w  in dual mining, 4x650w PSU in 18GPU is not sufficient to power them all
zak2501 (OP)
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December 02, 2017, 04:04:32 AM
Last edit: December 02, 2017, 04:16:37 AM by zak2501
 #4

You won't be able to run all 18 cards on the same motherboard. Running more than 13 GPU's with the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2357461.msg24031325#msg24031325

If you want to run all AMD cards I would suggest breaking it up in to a 12 card build on a ASRock H110 Pro BTC+ and a 6 card build on a Biostar TB85 or another H110 Pro BTC+ motherboard if you plan to expand.

Crap, I misunderstood Asus's marketing speak. Thanks for clarifying that for me.
Do you know if Asus planned firmware update for Q4 2017 will support all 19 or 18 cards of amd?
zak2501 (OP)
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December 02, 2017, 04:34:35 AM
 #5

You won't be able to run all 18 cards on the same motherboard. Running more than 13 GPU's with the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2357461.msg24031325#msg24031325

If you want to run all AMD cards I would suggest breaking it up in to a 12 card build on a ASRock H110 Pro BTC+ and a 6 card build on a Biostar TB85 or another H110 Pro BTC+ motherboard if you plan to expand.

I'll go with Vann's advice, even you manage all cards to be working on one Rig this is not practical for since it has a centralized failure, mining is not a 100% reliable all the time of the day, if any of the GPU's, PC components, Softwares or even connectivity failed, your profits will greatly reduced.

Also, each RX470 will draw 180-190w  in dual mining, 4x650w PSU in 18GPU is not sufficient to power them all

Ya you guys are convincing me to do just 12 card builds on ASRock H110 Pro BTC+.

Does the RX570 draw the same in dual mining?

With 190w per card I wouldn't even get away with 4 gpus on a 750w.
Should I do 4 cards per 850w $140
Or just 3 cards per 650w for $100

I guess that saves me $20 if I go 650w and only use 12 GPUS


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December 02, 2017, 05:35:53 AM
 #6

You won't be able to run all 18 cards on the same motherboard. Running more than 13 GPU's with the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2357461.msg24031325#msg24031325

If you want to run all AMD cards I would suggest breaking it up in to a 12 card build on a ASRock H110 Pro BTC+ and a 6 card build on a Biostar TB85 or another H110 Pro BTC+ motherboard if you plan to expand.

I'll go with Vann's advice, even you manage all cards to be working on one Rig this is not practical for since it has a centralized failure, mining is not a 100% reliable all the time of the day, if any of the GPU's, PC components, Softwares or even connectivity failed, your profits will greatly reduced.

Also, each RX470 will draw 180-190w  in dual mining, 4x650w PSU in 18GPU is not sufficient to power them all

Ya you guys are convincing me to do just 12 card builds on ASRock H110 Pro BTC+.

Does the RX570 draw the same in dual mining?

With 190w per card I wouldn't even get away with 4 gpus on a 750w.
Should I do 4 cards per 850w $140
Or just 3 cards per 650w for $100

I guess that saves me $20 if I go 650w and only use 12 GPUS




IDK, I'm running a 480 and 3 570s off a 750w PSU.  You have to undervolt them.  Bits be trippin put out a good video on how to mod a 570.  Go to youtube and check it out.
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December 02, 2017, 01:48:13 PM
Last edit: December 02, 2017, 03:22:17 PM by Vann
 #7

I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for Asus to release a firmware update. Dual mining ETH + DCR a RX 570 will pull ~140 W between the GPU and riser and a RX 580 ~180 W. I have a 13 card mixed card build on a H110 Pro BTC+ dual mining ETH + DCR and it's been rock solid. Total power draw at the wall is 2475 W with a triple ATX PSU setup.



I was running it off of a dual 120V 2400W PSU I ordered from a manufacturer on Alibaba and a 1000 W ATX for the motherboard and risers. The dual 120V 2400 W PSU has 18 PCI-E 6+2 connectors that I use for the GPU VGA power inputs. Total cost through PayPal was $181 and shipping via DHL direct from the manufacturer was very quick.

http://www.panto-tech.com/products/206-110v-260v-power-supply-2400W-for-miner.html

For a while it ran quiet at less than 50% of the capacity. When you run it at more than that, the fans got progressively louder the more wattage you pull from it. Recently the fans started running louder and it became annoying to deal with the constant high pitched whining sound. I got tired of dealing with the noise and switched to a triple ATX PSU setup with a triple ATX power adapter cable.

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/New-24-Pin-20-4Pin-Triple-PSU-ATX-Power-Supply-Adapter-Cable-18AWG-Wire-For-Mining/32827769189.html?

The same manufacturer also has the same PSU with only the 18 PCI-E connectors and it's about $30 less, so I think that may be a better option for a dual PSU setup since I don't use the ATX 24-pin or sata/molex connectors on it.

http://www.panto-tech.com/products/207-110v-220v-power-supply-2400W-for-miner.html

This is the same PSU BBT used in his 21 card build on the Asus B250 mining expert live stream and you can hear how loud it is.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=miUoqnUqk9M&feature=youtu.be&t=6201

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December 02, 2017, 10:00:33 PM
 #8

I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for Asus to release a firmware update. Dual mining ETH + DCR a RX 570 will pull ~140 W between the GPU and riser and a RX 580 ~180 W. I have a 13 card mixed card build on a H110 Pro BTC+ dual mining ETH + DCR and it's been rock solid. Total power draw at the wall is 2475 W with a triple ATX PSU setup.


What mixed cards are you running?
Also what wall circuits are you running that into?

I have one 120v 20amp curcuit and one 120v 15amp circuit running to one room.
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December 02, 2017, 10:30:29 PM
 #9

Mostly RX 480/580 8GB cards. Asus STRIX, Sapphire Nitro+ and  MSI Gaming X. Also a Saphire Pulse RX 580 4 GB and a Nitro+ RX 570 4GB with a EVGA 1600 W T2 for the motherboard, all 13 risers and 4 cards VGA power on a 120V 20A outlet together with a EVGA P2 1000 W + G2 850 W for the rest of the cards on a 15A circuit. All the cards have a Polaris Bios Editor v1.62 'one click timing patch' Bios mod and I get the best result with the Sapphire Nitro+ RX 580's 30-30.5 MH/s ETH 875 MH/s DCR dual mining.
zak2501 (OP)
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December 02, 2017, 11:44:37 PM
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Mostly RX 480/580 8GB cards. Asus STRIX, Sapphire Nitro+ and  MSI Gaming X. Also a Saphire Pulse RX 580 4 GB and a Nitro+ RX 570 4GB with a EVGA 1600 W T2 for the motherboard, all 13 risers and 4 cards VGA power on a 120V 20A outlet together with a EVGA P2 1000 W + G2 850 W for the rest of the cards on a 15A circuit. All the cards have a Polaris Bios Editor v1.62 'one click timing patch' Bios mod and I get the best result with the Sapphire Nitro+ RX 580's 30-30.5 MH/s ETH 875 MH/s DCR dual mining.

You are running 2475w at the wall
and have 3450w worth of psu's.

If I were to run 13 570's can I get away with 3 850w? Or 1 1000w and 2 850w?
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December 03, 2017, 12:16:23 AM
Last edit: December 03, 2017, 12:53:33 AM by Vann
 #11

You don't want to run PSU's close to the rated the capacity. They won't be as efficient and it will shorten it's lifespan. 50% to 80% of the rated capacity is where PSU will run most efficiently and cool. The other consideration is how many PCI-E connecors you need for all the GPU's and risers. Many PSU's less than 1000W will only have 4 PCI-E connectors per PSU. For 13  RX 570's you will need a minmum of 13 individual 8-pin connectors just for the VGA power. Some cards like the Nitro+ also have a 6-pin connector that may be optional. For risers I use 6-pin PCI-E risers only and connect two or three risers per PSU 8-pin cable using a PCI-E 8-pin to dual 6+2 splitter cable, figure another 5 PCI-E PSU ports for the risers, so in total you need a minimum of 18 PCI-E ports.

For that you can use a minimum of 1 x 1200 W EVGA G2/P2 PSU for the motherboard, risers and 1 VGA together with 2 x EVGA 1000 W G2/P2 for the rest of the VGA power with a triple ATX PSU splitter cable, or a server PSU with enough PCI-E connectors like the one I mentioned above and a EVGA G2/P2 1000 W for the motherboard, using the PCI-E connectors for the risers only.

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/10pcs-lot-Upgraded-PCI-E-1X-to-16X-Express-Riser-Card-PCI-Extender-60cm-USB3-0/32819231652.html

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/20CM-Black-Sleeved-8-Pin-PCI-E-GPU-to-Dual-8-6-2-Pin-Splitter-PC/32688175733.html?

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Adapter-Cable-24-Pin-20-4Pin-Triple-PSU-ATX-Power-Supply-Adapter-Cable-18AWG-Wire-For/32827712390.html?




zak2501 (OP)
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December 03, 2017, 12:41:40 AM
 #12

You don't want to run PSU's close to the rated the capacity. They won't be as efficient and it will shorten it's lifespan. 50% to 80% of the rated capacity is where PSU will run most efficiently and cool. The other consideration is how many PCI-E connecors you need for all the GPU's and risers. Many PSU's less than 1000W will only have 4 PCI-E connectors per PSU. For 13  RX 570's you will need a minmum of 13 individual 8-pin connectors just for the VGA power. Some cards like the Nitro+ also have a 6-pin connector that may be optional. For risers I use 6-pin PCI-E risers only and connect two or three risers per PSU 8-pin cable using a PCI-E 8-pin to dual 6+2 splitter cable, figure another 5 PCI-E PSU ports for the risers, so in total you need a minimum of 18 PCI-E ports.

Wow thanks alot for that and everything. That has clarified alot for me. I didn't realize you have to run risers off the PCIe ports on PSUs.
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December 03, 2017, 12:56:35 AM
Last edit: December 03, 2017, 01:07:04 AM by Vann
 #13

There are sata and 4-pin molex risers, but I like 6-pin PCI-E risers the best. They have better power regulation with four capacitors instead of three, a voltage regulator to prevent spikes and 6-pin connectors that are rated for 75W each. If you use sata or molex risers, be sure to only connect 2 risers max per psu strand or you will overload the connector and cable. Sometines I use dual 4-pin molex to 6-pin PCI-E adapter cables to power risers but the quality of the connectors is not the best.

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/10Pcs-Set-Dual-Molex-4-Pin-To-One-PCI-E-6-Pin-Power-Connector-Y-Adapter/32820421116.html?

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December 03, 2017, 02:47:03 AM
 #14

Get a server power supply plus breakout board and a couple 6pin male to 8pin male cables in addition to a desktop psu.  I have some hp's that will do 900w at 110v.  That's the cheapest way to power it. 
zak2501 (OP)
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December 03, 2017, 04:27:14 AM
 #15

Get a server power supply plus breakout board and a couple 6pin male to 8pin male cables in addition to a desktop psu.  I have some hp's that will do 900w at 110v.  That's the cheapest way to power it. 

Wow those are cheap.
So 2 HP 900w@110v
What size evga psu should I get?
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December 03, 2017, 04:46:14 AM
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7 RX 570 dual mining will use ~700 W from the VGA power only. You can run 7 cards on one 900 W and 6 on the other one. Keep in mind server PSU's are made to run in a server room where no one is around them and without consideration to how loud the fans are. At 80% power, the PSU fans will be spinning fast and most likely loud. You also will have to turn the server PSU's on and off manually since you don't have an ATX 24-pin to daisy chain them. For the motherboard and 13 risers I would recommend a 1000 W ATX PSU minimum.
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December 03, 2017, 09:38:48 AM
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For the power supplies, I'd recommend getting 3 of these:
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/New-and-original-Gold-POWER-1800W-BTC-power-supply-for-R9-380-RX-470-RX480-6/32825827647.html?spm=a2g0s.9042311.0.0.xNt9Ym
Im running a mining farm with 48 of these PSUs for the past 8 months, and none of them have failed, you get ample power, and running 6 cards on each.

1x 570 consumes around 100W from the wall mining ethereum solo, and 140W from the wall dual mining.
Even thought those are average numbers, in any electrical components, there will almost always be that power surge that occurs for a split second; you do not want your PSU to blow up because of that. Thats why I'd always recommend anyone to calculate their power requirements to be at 80% of the PSUs capacity; so if you have a 1000W PSU, try to calculate that your components connected to the PSU to run at 800W, and leave that extra room for electrical surges.

18 cards will not run on Windows as of now, we are expecting an update in december that will allow windows to recognize 18 cards; where currently linux is the only way to go for more than 12 GPU. (Simplemining OS is a nice noob friendly linux OS for miners)

With the asus motherboard, you do not need the dual/triple PSU cables. You may hook 3 PSUs to the motherboard, and it does the job on its own.

The graphic cards are too expensive, even with canada's inflated prices.
A quick check on newegg.ca , I was able to build a cart of 18 RX580s, but different vendors, that can easily save you 500$ and If I were you, I'd configure each card's overclock/undervolt through their bios (time consuming, but worth the effort).
Prices are inflated as well in my country's local market (Dubai, UAE), but what I've done is I found the distributor's for these graphic cards in my country, and Im purchasing directly from them. In my case it was sapphire.

I would recommend getting a bigger harddrive, or at least a second cheap non-SSD drive for virtual memory. I had this issue before when I upgraded my rigs from 6gpus each to 12 gpu where claymore's cryptonote miner (cryptonight) requires to have at least the same amount of VRAM as virtual memory. In your case, it would be 18x 4GB which is 72GB + your OS which is around 20GB; a 120gb SSD would be a better option, and it isnt that much more expensive.
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December 03, 2017, 10:25:06 AM
 #18

The problem is not Windows. The problem is the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards with more than 13 cards on the board. BBT was able to run 21 cards, 13 AMD RX 570 and 8 Nvidia P106 in Windows 10 with the latest Crimson Relive drivers on the Asus B250 mining expert. I don't think anyone has been able to run more than 13 AMD cards in Linux on this board either.
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December 03, 2017, 11:39:47 PM
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The problem is not Windows. The problem is the Asus B250 mining expert REQUIRES using Nvidia P106 mining cards with more than 13 cards on the board. BBT was able to run 21 cards, 13 AMD RX 570 and 8 Nvidia P106 in Windows 10 with the latest Crimson Relive drivers on the Asus B250 mining expert. I don't think anyone has been able to run more than 13 AMD cards in Linux on this board either.

I can only find the Asrock H110 Pro BTC+ for $235.19
But I can find the Asus B250 mining expert  for $181.99
Should I just get the Asus an just run 13 amd cards off it? Would Asrock be more stable?

For the power supplies, I'd recommend getting 3 of these:

1x 570 consumes around 100W from the wall mining ethereum solo, and 140W from the wall dual mining.
Even thought those are average numbers, in any electrical components, there will almost always be that power surge that occurs for a split second; you do not want your PSU to blow up because of that. Thats why I'd always recommend anyone to calculate their power requirements to be at 80% of the PSUs capacity; so if you have a 1000W PSU, try to calculate that your components connected to the PSU to run at 800W, and leave that extra room for electrical surges.

18 cards will not run on Windows as of now, we are expecting an update in december that will allow windows to recognize 18 cards; where currently linux is the only way to go for more than 12 GPU. (Simplemining OS is a nice noob friendly linux OS for miners)

With the asus motherboard, you do not need the dual/triple PSU cables. You may hook 3 PSUs to the motherboard, and it does the job on its own.

The graphic cards are too expensive, even with canada's inflated prices.
A quick check on newegg.ca , I was able to build a cart of 18 RX580s, but different vendors, that can easily save you 500$ and If I were you, I'd configure each card's overclock/undervolt through their bios (time consuming, but worth the effort).
Prices are inflated as well in my country's local market (Dubai, UAE), but what I've done is I found the distributor's for these graphic cards in my country, and Im purchasing directly from them. In my case it was sapphire.

I would recommend getting a bigger harddrive, or at least a second cheap non-SSD drive for virtual memory. I had this issue before when I upgraded my rigs from 6gpus each to 12 gpu where claymore's cryptonote miner (cryptonight) requires to have at least the same amount of VRAM as virtual memory. In your case, it would be 18x 4GB which is 72GB + your OS which is around 20GB; a 120gb SSD would be a better option, and it isnt that much more expensive.


How much do 580 consume dual mining?
I am definitely gonna overclock and undervolt them
The lowest I see is MSI 4gb 580 for $325
and Asus 570 are around $284

Is it worth it to go for 580's?
I can only find mining reviews on the 8gb versions of the 580's.
The 8gb 580's start at $359.99
That ruins my ROI.

I was looking into distributors yesterday
I did find a few for Canada, I am gonna try to get an account with one of them and get a quote for the 580's.
http://www.comtronic.ca
https://www.eprom.com

Anyways I was thinking of running the Linux based OS's
is there any benefit of running windows?
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December 04, 2017, 04:53:44 AM
 #20

You don't want to run PSU's close to the rated the capacity. They won't be as efficient and it will shorten it's lifespan. 50% to 80% of the rated capacity is where PSU will run most efficiently and cool. The other consideration is how many PCI-E connecors you need for all the GPU's and risers. Many PSU's less than 1000W will only have 4 PCI-E connectors per PSU. For 13  RX 570's you will need a minmum of 13 individual 8-pin connectors just for the VGA power. Some cards like the Nitro+ also have a 6-pin connector that may be optional. For risers I use 6-pin PCI-E risers only and connect two or three risers per PSU 8-pin cable using a PCI-E 8-pin to dual 6+2 splitter cable, figure another 5 PCI-E PSU ports for the risers, so in total you need a minimum of 18 PCI-E ports.

Wow thanks alot for that and everything. That has clarified alot for me. I didn't realize you have to run risers off the PCIe ports on PSUs.

 You CAN run them safely via MOLEX adapters - and there are some with all 3 connections that are the recent "4 cap" versions.
 The COBOC ones Newegg sells as an example, seen the same design from a few other places.

 You don't HAVE to run 19 cards from the ASUS B250 Mining Pro to make it worthwhile - the on-board power supply management is nice, and saves a few $$ + is simpler vs having to use Add2PS type adapters.
 If it's lower cost vs a 13-slot MB, it's DEFINITELY the better choice.

 NewEgg has a Canadian branch, can't hurt to check them in addition to the other sites you mention.

 I strongly recommend use of the EVGA G2 supply line over the G1 or the GQ or the G3 - the BALL BEARING fan is going to outlast the "fancy name sleeve bearing" junk in the other lines.
 I'm not 100% sure on the G2L line - I think it's also ball bearing fan, but the power connections are kinda wierd and do NOT match up with anything else at all.
 I can also recommend the Seasonic X-series, but those are in very short supply and getting way expensive when you CAN find them any more.



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