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Author Topic: [ANN] Bitfury ASIC sales in EU and Europe  (Read 250457 times)
mikef
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August 30, 2013, 08:40:24 PM
 #681

mikef: you may want to put the second H-Board into Bus B, slot one. It will cool itself better and it may even have positive impact on hashing speed, if I understand correctly.

Thanks for the suggestion - this has already been done. I think the effect on hashing speed was negligible with just two boards though.
spiccioli
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August 30, 2013, 08:49:45 PM
 #682


We're now going to celebrate with my team here a bit.. been amazingly busy week.

Cheers!


You well deserve it and thank for the tracking number Wink

spiccioli
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August 30, 2013, 08:52:46 PM
 #683

Thank you and your team, Punin. Fantastic job!!

BTW, does anyone recommend a good, reliable p2ppool? I heard some miners don't perform well on them due to latency issues.



If you're going the p2pool path the best option is to have your instance of bitcoind/p2pool software running, otherwise, just for a test and to be sure the embedded miner does work on p2pool you can select any pool from this list

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=264533.msg2829721#msg2829721

the closer to you the better.

spiccioli
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August 30, 2013, 08:54:00 PM
 #684


I'm not sure if it small enough, but I intend to plug my Bitfury into Slush's pool.

Trupik,

it's the oldest one and below 50 TH... so go for it Smiley

spiccioli
achimsmile
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August 30, 2013, 09:17:51 PM
 #685

What PSU would you recommend for a starter kit that will hopefully be fully populated by october?

The M-board takes 2x 6pin PCI-E. I guess a Seasonic G-450 would do the trick, also power wise?

And I assume I will have to do the paperclip trick on the ATX connector?

Thanks for clarifying it for me  Grin
Isokivi
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August 30, 2013, 09:26:29 PM
 #686

What PSU would you recommend for a starter kit that will hopefully be fully populated by october?

The M-board takes 2x 6pin PCI-E. I guess a Seasonic G-450 would do the trick, also power wise?

And I assume I will have to do the paperclip trick on the ATX connector?

Thanks for clarifying it for me  Grin
Any psu with 2x 6pin Pci-e is fine.. but incase you are planning to upgrade to a full kit eventually the I'd reccomed 500w or more.. and yes the old paperclip trick is in use Smiley

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August 30, 2013, 09:30:29 PM
 #687

What PSU would you recommend for a starter kit that will hopefully be fully populated by october?

The M-board takes 2x 6pin PCI-E. I guess a Seasonic G-450 would do the trick, also power wise?

And I assume I will have to do the paperclip trick on the ATX connector?

Thanks for clarifying it for me  Grin
Any psu with 2x 6pin Pci-e is fine.. but incase you are planning to upgrade to a full kit eventually the I'd reccomed 500w or more.. and yes the old paperclip trick is in use Smiley

Thank you! Will do so.
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August 30, 2013, 09:36:04 PM
 #688

On a sidenote I should propably mention that the psu I used for my starter kit initially died on me. There is nothing to suggest that this had anything to do with the hardware. It was a heavily pre-abused psu: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=76008.0

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arorts
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August 30, 2013, 10:03:08 PM
 #689

Thank you and your team, Punin. Fantastic job!!

BTW, does anyone recommend a good, reliable p2ppool? I heard some miners don't perform well on them due to latency issues.
 

If you're going the p2pool path the best option is to have your instance of bitcoind/p2pool software running, otherwise, just for a test and to be sure the embedded miner does work on p2pool you can select any pool from this list

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=264533.msg2829721#msg2829721

the closer to you the better.

spiccioli


Excellent! Thanks!
 Do you know if there's any rPI-ready p2pool software out there that could work with bitfury or steps to do so?
spiccioli
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August 30, 2013, 10:08:19 PM
 #690

Thank you and your team, Punin. Fantastic job!!

BTW, does anyone recommend a good, reliable p2ppool? I heard some miners don't perform well on them due to latency issues.
 

If you're going the p2pool path the best option is to have your instance of bitcoind/p2pool software running, otherwise, just for a test and to be sure the embedded miner does work on p2pool you can select any pool from this list

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=264533.msg2829721#msg2829721

the closer to you the better.

spiccioli


Excellent! Thanks!
 Do you know if there's any rPI-ready p2pool software out there that could work with bitfury or steps to do so?

No, you can't run p2pool on an rPI.

You need a full PC to do this task and then you point your rPI to the address of your PC port 9332.

spiccioli
Humax
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August 31, 2013, 06:32:30 AM
Last edit: September 02, 2013, 06:23:11 PM by Humax
 #691

order #35x, no tracking number......  Cry

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Trupik
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August 31, 2013, 07:11:24 AM
 #692

What PSU would you recommend for a starter kit that will hopefully be fully populated by october?

The M-board takes 2x 6pin PCI-E. I guess a Seasonic G-450 would do the trick, also power wise?

And I assume I will have to do the paperclip trick on the ATX connector?

Thanks for clarifying it for me  Grin
Any psu with 2x 6pin Pci-e is fine.. but incase you are planning to upgrade to a full kit eventually the I'd reccomed 500w or more.. and yes the old paperclip trick is in use Smiley
Important thing to notice: you should get a power source with one +12V rail rated 38A or more (the Seasonic G-450 looks fine). There are also power supplies that have two +12V rails, rated at half of the needed amps (e.g. 2x 19A). If there are two +12V rails, they are in most cases wired that way, that both PCI-E 6-pin wires are on the same rail, while the CPU and MB are on the other. The reason behind this is to separate the CPU and GPU and suppress the interference between these two. This is normally OK thing to do in a PC computer, but in the case of your mining rig, you will overload one rail, while the other is unused.

You can tell how many +12V rails there are, by looking at the label on the power supply itself:

one +12V rail example: http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/fullimage.php?image=51129

two +12V rails example: http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/fullimage.php?image=24299
Aajo
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August 31, 2013, 08:44:17 AM
 #693


Important thing to notice: you should get a power source with one +12V rail rated 38A or more (the Seasonic G-450 looks fine). There are also power supplies that have two +12V rails, rated at half of the needed amps (e.g. 2x 19A). If there are two +12V rails, they are in most cases wired that way, that both PCI-E 6-pin wires are on the same rail, while the CPU and MB are on the other. The reason behind this is to separate the CPU and GPU and suppress the interference between these two. This is normally OK thing to do in a PC computer, but in the case of your mining rig, you will overload one rail, while the other is unused.

You can tell how many +12V rails there are, by looking at the label on the power supply itself:

one +12V rail example: http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/fullimage.php?image=51129

two +12V rails example: http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/fullimage.php?image=24299

why 38A or more on one rail? Punin said 250W at the wall so depending on the PSU he used that makes around 20A @12V in my calculation, am I wrong?
joris
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August 31, 2013, 10:15:46 AM
 #694

I'd like to invite everyone who is going to receive a unit to use a small pool and/or p2pool if the miner inside the unit can work with it.

There are several small pools, pools with less than 50 TH/s of capacity, which should/need to grow to be able to balance the one or two mega-pools available.

This is for the health of the bitcoin network, most of all, and given that BitFury is delivering several TH/s of hashing power this is a good moment for this call to arms Smiley

spiccioli


I like to recommend the mining pool https://pool.itzod.ru. Needs some hashrate to bring pool hashrate back to above 1% of the network.

No fees, I have donation set at 1%, and all mining rewards (both block and transaction fees) go towards paying for all of your PPS-work (including those for invalid blocks). From March untill now I'm standing at 2-3% in BTC to be paid from future lucky rounds. Not bad compared with pure PPS-pools.

Best wishes,

Joris


;-)
Trupik
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August 31, 2013, 10:22:55 AM
 #695

why 38A or more on one rail? Punin said 250W at the wall so depending on the PSU he used that makes around 20A @12V in my calculation, am I wrong?

Your calculation seems right (20.8333333 amps to be exact, assuming 100% efficiency). There are reasons why I'm going for higher limit in my supply:

1. H-Boards are under-performing at the moment. If the issue is resolved, they may drain more power at the desired hashing speed. Advertised consumption is ~40W (at the wall) at ~25GH/s per board.

2. There are 3 positions to plug in fans to the Master board. Depending on the fan model, they may draw up to 0.6A each. Add this to the calculation.

3. The power supply efficiency is best (generally speaking) between 50% and 80% load. Nearing 99% load, you are not at the best efficiency, and you are risking that the power supply will shut down (or blow a fuse) to protect itself.

4. Overclocking - if you hope to overclock your rig, it would need more power.

But I'm just an enthusiast. It would be far better, if punin can make some official recommendations about the PSU.
punin (OP)
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August 31, 2013, 03:31:22 PM
 #696

PSU considerations:

H-boards were designed to be passively cooled and the core voltage is one of key elements limiting the hash speed.

ATX PSU's are relatively inexpensive and widely available. I suggest you to spend your money on quality, that leaves headroom for expansion. I use OCZ 1250 ZX myself. This can easily power 3 full rigs, is fully modular, quiet and has efficiency of ~90%. (It's little brother 1000 ZX received outstanding review on johnnyguru and should be sufficient for 3 rigs also.)

The bottleneck on our design is the TPS53355 regulator, that can only supply 30A. Increasing resistance on R01F increases the core voltage, but can lead to overload of TPS53355 (not to mention cooling issues) as chips consume more amps. The chips will not overclock to extreme frequencies with insufficient core voltage, but produce errors instead or lose programming etc.

If you plan on modifying your boards, please remember that doing so will void your warranty. Please remember your boards were not designed to run this hot, so blow some air on them you plan modding.

We also found a noticeable voltage drop on the IOVDD chain when all 16 cards are plugged in (down to 1V66 from 1V8). This will get fixed (hopefully) in next revision on M-boards, that is already in production. This should help lower the errors and noise on Bus D.


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mr_rulezzz
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August 31, 2013, 03:44:20 PM
 #697

PSU considerations:

We also found a noticeable voltage drop on the IOVDD chain when all 16 cards are plugged in (down to 1V66 from 1V8). This will get fixed (hopefully) in next revision on M-boards, that is already in production. This should help lower the errors and noise on Bus D.


this mean rev2 m-boards are not ready for full upgrade?
punin (OP)
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August 31, 2013, 03:59:38 PM
 #698

No it means next M-boards will be even better Smiley

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Micky25
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August 31, 2013, 04:44:19 PM
 #699

We're now going to celebrate with my team here a bit.. been amazingly busy week.
No it means next M-boards will be even better Smiley

Back at work already? I'm disappointed. For what you achieved, you and your team would have merited a massive two-day party-weekend + joint blackout and two-day hangover (optional)  Cheesy

For the October milestone, which, I'm quite sure, will again surprise everybody in multiple positive ways, I will arrange a tip-jar for you guys, which will enable you to go on a 3-day wreak havoc feast.  Grin
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August 31, 2013, 05:03:36 PM
 #700

I want to personally thank Bitfury for being one start-up Asic Hardware company that is executing on plans.

I encourage you to be the role model and leader that others will hopefully follow.

There are other companies (not to be named) that said it couldn't be done in such short timelines just to justify their own inadequacies.

I say to you "BRAVO!"
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