buzzdave (OP)
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August 07, 2013, 11:32:21 PM |
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i have a question about paying with a credit card, can the payment be broken on 2 cards? my highest limit is 7500 and i would like to order the 400gh.
Thanks
You can call your CC company and ask for a higher limit. That's what I did, lol. Though I haven't yet been able to pay as I haven't been contacted yet?? I hope that occurs soon because my local currency is tanking against us$ right now - so it's going to start really hurting soon. Sorry Stack! The credit card processing thing has become a major pain. I'll have it running as soon as possible, then we will contact everyone who is waiting to pay.
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buzzdave (OP)
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August 07, 2013, 11:34:11 PM |
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That smell just never leaves
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jflowers
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August 07, 2013, 11:44:23 PM |
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If one were to add additional H boards - does this alter their place in the queue? Thanks.
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buzzdave (OP)
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August 07, 2013, 11:55:55 PM |
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I'm leaning towards having the new M-board design made here in the states on a quick turn. If I can't make that happen, I'll supply an appropriate cable so we don't have any confusion.
The first M-board was not made for ease of use or something but to be as low-cost as possible for the 100TH. That's why the Keystone terminals were chosen, they were the next cheapest after soldering bare wires to the board:) What you can do is take a bunch of the thin wires coming from the PSU, bundle them together and cut them. Then solder a thick, 2 mm^2 or so wire to the bundle, connect that with a crimp terminal to the Keystone connector. Leave the PSU wires as short as possible and run the nice thick wire thru your rig. Insulate the solder joints of course:) intron Thanks Intron - I have no problem with this for 100TH mine, but I think I want to be very careful with the rigs that ship to customers. Does anyone know of a plastic safety cover for these Keystone terminals? I'd like to get a bunch for the mine... How many amps and volts will be required by the fully populated board? How much for M board and How much for each H board? Tytus is still playing with software settings that can adjust clock rate (within fixed bounds). I argue that achieving 400G computational hashrate meets spec. He argues that we must deliver 400G nonce rate (excludes errors) and so has turned them up a bit. This produces a 440G hashrate with 414G nonce rate (385G reported by Slushpool), but power at the wall is measured 10% higher at 330w (.825w per Gh/s total rig power). Since 330w is after the PSU losses, actual board wattage is somewhat less than that. I figure the board is pulling about 25A @ 12VDC. I have no idea yet how well the chips will hold up as they are clocked higher. What we do know is that the hotter they get the more power they pull, the more errors they throw. However they like to run best in 45C range, so over cooling them doesn't help. BitFury is running his chips at much higher clocks with heatsinks and fans and having no failures. He also found a block already so we know these are lucky chips!
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buzzdave (OP)
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August 07, 2013, 11:57:46 PM |
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If one were to add additional H boards - does this alter their place in the queue? Thanks.
No, your original position is never affected by later ordering. If we (ever) have enough quantity on hand to fulfill all the orders in the delivery month, we will combine shipping wherever possible.
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-Redacted-
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August 08, 2013, 12:01:09 AM |
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Thanks for the updates, Dave! We're all anxiously awaiting/anticipating the start of August shipping... Just think, if you deliver by August 30th, you'll be the first ASIC manufacturer with a substantial hashrate product to have delivered early, ever.
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buzzdave (OP)
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August 08, 2013, 12:14:13 AM |
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Thanks for the updates, Dave! We're all anxiously awaiting/anticipating the start of August shipping... Just think, if you deliver by August 30th, you'll be the first ASIC manufacturer with available, substantial hashrate, product to have delivered early, ever.
Another first: ...not to have premined customer hardware before shipping. Though we *will* test them and pull out bad boards. Even with a 98% yield on the chips, it still means 30% of all boards have a chance of a bad chip Individual bad chips won't be much of a problem, but if a board has a big group of bad ones or one that doesn't pass SPI down the chain, it will be replaced by a good card before shipping. Our hand-built full rig prototype has only 10 chips not showing up to the party, but there are several others hashing at subpar rates (and the thing is still producing over 400G). To determine this we will test them for at least long enough to see where the high error rates and/or zero hashing chips are. This is clearly visible within a few hours. As we get more familiar with the boards we can tighten up our test time. This will be a major bottleneck IMHO. I know some of you will say, "Please don't test mine" and/or "Please send your test hashes to these pool creds", but I just can't support doing that, sorry!
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zurg
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August 08, 2013, 12:20:05 AM |
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Thanks for the updates, Dave! We're all anxiously awaiting/anticipating the start of August shipping... Just think, if you deliver by August 30th, you'll be the first ASIC manufacturer with available, substantial hashrate, product to have delivered early, ever.
Another first: ...not to have premined customer hardware before shipping. Though we *will* test them and pull out bad boards. Even with a 98% yield on the chips, it still means 30% of all boards have a chance of a bad chip Individual bad chips won't be much of a problem, but if a board has a big group of bad ones or one that doesn't pass SPI down the chain, it will be replaced by a good card before shipping. Our hand-built full rig prototype has only 10 chips not showing up to the party, but there are several others hashing at subpar rates (and the thing is still producing over 400G). To determine this we will test them for at least long enough to see where the high error rates and/or zero hashing chips are. This is clearly visible within a few hours. As we get more familiar with the boards we can tighten up our test time. This will be a major bottleneck IMHO. I know some of you will say, "Please don't test mine" and/or "Please send your test hashes to these pool creds", but I just can't support doing that, sorry! 1st dibs on buying "bad" boards
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tom99
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August 08, 2013, 12:27:08 AM |
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What happen if Hboard sold out on site and are you going to restock?
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Stack
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August 08, 2013, 12:27:56 AM |
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Thanks for the updates, Dave! We're all anxiously awaiting/anticipating the start of August shipping... Just think, if you deliver by August 30th, you'll be the first ASIC manufacturer with available, substantial hashrate, product to have delivered early, ever.
Another first: ...not to have premined customer hardware before shipping. Though we *will* test them and pull out bad boards. Even with a 98% yield on the chips, it still means 30% of all boards have a chance of a bad chip Individual bad chips won't be much of a problem, but if a board has a big group of bad ones or one that doesn't pass SPI down the chain, it will be replaced by a good card before shipping. Our hand-built full rig prototype has only 10 chips not showing up to the party, but there are several others hashing at subpar rates (and the thing is still producing over 400G). To determine this we will test them for at least long enough to see where the high error rates and/or zero hashing chips are. This is clearly visible within a few hours. As we get more familiar with the boards we can tighten up our test time. This will be a major bottleneck IMHO. I know some of you will say, "Please don't test mine" and/or "Please send your test hashes to these pool creds", but I just can't support doing that, sorry! 1st dibs on buying "bad" boards Damn, I was thinking the same thing
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nexus99
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August 08, 2013, 12:35:44 AM |
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I'd buy 'bad' boards too :-)
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zurg
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August 08, 2013, 12:36:21 AM |
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Thanks for the updates, Dave! We're all anxiously awaiting/anticipating the start of August shipping... Just think, if you deliver by August 30th, you'll be the first ASIC manufacturer with available, substantial hashrate, product to have delivered early, ever.
Another first: ...not to have premined customer hardware before shipping. Though we *will* test them and pull out bad boards. Even with a 98% yield on the chips, it still means 30% of all boards have a chance of a bad chip Individual bad chips won't be much of a problem, but if a board has a big group of bad ones or one that doesn't pass SPI down the chain, it will be replaced by a good card before shipping. Our hand-built full rig prototype has only 10 chips not showing up to the party, but there are several others hashing at subpar rates (and the thing is still producing over 400G). To determine this we will test them for at least long enough to see where the high error rates and/or zero hashing chips are. This is clearly visible within a few hours. As we get more familiar with the boards we can tighten up our test time. This will be a major bottleneck IMHO. I know some of you will say, "Please don't test mine" and/or "Please send your test hashes to these pool creds", but I just can't support doing that, sorry! 1st dibs on buying "bad" boards Damn, I was thinking the same thing If they are August built and Dave reasonably prices them, then I am game. The only way I can afford this stuff at this point. Lol
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jspielberg
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August 08, 2013, 12:41:47 AM |
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I'd buy 'bad' boards too :-)
Sounds like a new product idea Dave... Mystery broken boards delivering between 0 and 20GH per board for a significant discount! Hopefully available in august !!11!
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buzzdave (OP)
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August 08, 2013, 12:42:42 AM |
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I'd buy 'bad' boards too :-)
Hah! I was just talking to Niko about selling reworkable boards to "advanced hobbyists" out there. We'll see what makes sense...
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zurg
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August 08, 2013, 12:48:34 AM |
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Crossing my fingers that 19 boards after my kit are 5% under Dave's threshold. Lol Just kidding. I hope everyone gets theirs on the first shot.
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-Redacted-
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August 08, 2013, 12:49:42 AM |
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Put me down on the list of buyers for "reworkable" boards at a reasonable price. I'd like 30, please..
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kaerf
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August 08, 2013, 12:55:01 AM |
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I'd buy 'bad' boards too :-)
Hah! I was just talking to Niko about selling reworkable boards to "advanced hobbyists" out there. We'll see what makes sense... count me in!
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omegaflare
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August 08, 2013, 12:58:46 AM |
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Count .. me.. in.. Keep in mind tho. I am a noob but I do have BS in IT. I don't have any soldering experience. Is there a friendly instruction? Just wondering.
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zurg
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August 08, 2013, 01:02:01 AM |
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Count .. me.. in.. Keep in mind tho. I am a noob but I do have BS in IT. I don't have any soldering experience. Is there a friendly instruction? Just wondering. I dunno, but I am hoping that the board will still hash, just at lower rate. Beyond that I am in the same n00b camp as you. Lol
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-Redacted-
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August 08, 2013, 01:02:11 AM |
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I think that "advanced hobbyist" means, "here's a copy of the schematic and a dead board, have at it, and good luck."
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