blueflame (OP)
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December 21, 2017, 10:48:29 AM |
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I'm currently running a 4 card mining rig with powered pcie 006c risers and a 1200W high quality Corsair PSU. The GPUs run at around 69C when mining. However I was just wondering if there were any fire risks associated with the rig and if it is safe to have the rig running 24/7 next to the walls in my house (drywall). I know this is probably being over cautious but am just making sure. Thanks
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bk2000
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December 21, 2017, 11:00:01 AM |
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Probably minimal based on the setup you have, but there is definitely some risk in the larger setups, especially if having issues with power management and power supply utilization. One thing to keep in mind is to stay away from hooking up multiple risers to one SATA cable. This has been known to cause heat issues.
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stash2coin
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December 21, 2017, 11:45:00 AM |
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For your setup there is no big risk, but its always good idea to have a smoke detector if the rig is in living area.
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GregorWar
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December 21, 2017, 03:16:49 PM |
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there is always some fire risk with electricity...so from time to time shut down the rig and clean it with some air compressor and some paintbrush (not used ofcourse ) to get all the dust down...depends on where the rigs are set up...and the smoke alarm could also help u sleep better...
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flip4flop
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December 21, 2017, 04:02:50 PM |
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Ensure you are not powering risers with SATA and don't go cheap on your PSU. Those two steps are what will cause the most issues when it comes to a fire risk. After that ensure your cards are not touching or leaning against anything flammable as they run very hot, over 65 C if running them close together. Always recommend a smoke detector in the same room because you can never be to careful.
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nerdralph
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December 21, 2017, 04:37:30 PM |
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I'm currently running a 4 card mining rig with powered pcie 006c risers and a 1200W high quality Corsair PSU. The GPUs run at around 69C when mining. However I was just wondering if there were any fire risks associated with the rig and if it is safe to have the rig running 24/7 next to the walls in my house (drywall). I know this is probably being over cautious but am just making sure. Thanks Cheap or undersized cables/connectors is your primary concern. http://nerdralph.blogspot.ca/2016/06/when-does-18-26-when-buying-cheap-cables.htmlIf you are powering your risers with molex connectors, then make sure you're not running 4 of them off a single cable.
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CryptoPlay
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December 21, 2017, 05:06:31 PM Last edit: December 24, 2017, 11:59:43 PM by CryptoPlay |
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3 years ago i had a major failure in my PC. The failure fry my mobo Asrock Z68 Xtreme 3(really burned with holes), 2x4gb, I7 2600k, HX850(brand new). The survivors: Asus Xonar Sense audio card, storage(SSD and HD) and R9 290 that only works with driver 13.12(set 2013). It could have burned the room down. I was watching TV and saw it restart. I walked to the PC and whem ive removed the top cover of my case, it was a vision of hell. Sparks everywhere. White eletrical sparks caming out of the nosfet. The nosfet dissipator became red lava and was emitting light. The big top fan spinning fast pushing out air with those sparks. It was beautiful. The PC was idle... It could be the HX850 OR dust in the Mosfet. Ill never know cuz my pc was dusty.
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https://signature.statseb.fr/sig-2065.png
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Permonik
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December 21, 2017, 05:51:50 PM Last edit: December 21, 2017, 10:02:12 PM by Permonik |
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If you are afraid of fire, if you are out of the house, just buy something like this: www.elidefire.com/products.htm
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nerdralph
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December 21, 2017, 09:18:52 PM |
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If you mount mobo on wood a cheap product like this provides a lot of protection
I mount my motherboards on scrap drywall. Cheap and fire retardant.
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Dlikrot
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December 21, 2017, 09:41:51 PM |
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I’ve had a atx connector melt down on me once. If the connector is plugged in and out too many times, the pins will expand and may generate heat when there’s not good enough contact between them and the mainboard plug. Melting the plug (and maybe cause fire, but not likely). That was on a regular gaming computer, where the psu had been used in many different computers.
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BTC and KFC
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Shnikes101
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December 21, 2017, 10:14:36 PM |
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Has anyone used one of these? Very interesting. Can't seem to find a straight answer at what temp does it deploy. Sounds like there may be a difference between deploy temp and melting temp? Maybe I'm simplifying it too much.
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QuintLeo
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December 21, 2017, 10:22:57 PM |
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I'm currently running a 4 card mining rig with powered pcie 006c risers and a 1200W high quality Corsair PSU. The GPUs run at around 69C when mining. However I was just wondering if there were any fire risks associated with the rig and if it is safe to have the rig running 24/7 next to the walls in my house (drywall). I know this is probably being over cautious but am just making sure. Thanks Drywall is "fire resistant" rated. Your rig could burst into flame and it would die out before the drywall had issues.
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I'm no longer legendary just in my own mind! Like something I said? Donations gratefully accepted. LYLnTKvLefz9izJFUvEGQEZzSkz34b3N6U (Litecoin) 1GYbjMTPdCuV7dci3iCUiaRrcNuaiQrVYY (Bitcoin)
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Marvell2
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December 21, 2017, 11:46:14 PM |
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dust is like the worst enemey of rigs most of the risers i have had fail seems to be due to dust accumilationg or or too much load on the riser , Ive seen serveral risers carch fire but they just burn the cables never damaged rigs or cards
ive had a few cards catch fire on the circuit board but its always localized
modern hardware makes it really hard to spread fire eapecially on an open air rig ,
in cases its a bit different since other cables closw to the burning or sparking part can serve as
accelerant
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BigBossUSA
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December 22, 2017, 12:43:03 AM |
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I'm currently running a 4 card mining rig with powered pcie 006c risers and a 1200W high quality Corsair PSU. The GPUs run at around 69C when mining. However I was just wondering if there were any fire risks associated with the rig and if it is safe to have the rig running 24/7 next to the walls in my house (drywall). I know this is probably being over cautious but am just making sure. Thanks There is definitely a fire risk. Put protection when the chip reaches cap temperature on your GPU, it will greatly help
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Permonik
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December 22, 2017, 07:39:37 PM |
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Has anyone used one of these? Very interesting. Can't seem to find a straight answer at what temp does it deploy. Sounds like there may be a difference between deploy temp and melting temp? Maybe I'm simplifying it too much. I think that you need a "firing" temperature. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCRJSJPYy2A
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tenebriscaelum
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December 23, 2017, 03:36:16 PM |
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There are really risks of fire on hardware that runs on electricity specially if you are running it 24/7. One of the things that you would need to consider is that do you have a good / capable PSU to run all of your components. You mentioned that you have a PSU from Corsair which is a good company that makes PSUs however that is not the only thing that needs to be considered. You also need to consider the temperatures of your component specially the GPUs even though most of the GPUs will stop immediately if they throttle it is best to keep their temperatures in check to where it is permissible by the user(depends from user to user). Also monitoring your rig on a daily basis would also help along with a good maintenance cleaning to go with it. Also check your wire that is also overlooked by some users out there if you have a cheap wiring on your rig then you will start a fire.
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DarkoBlog
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December 23, 2017, 04:09:32 PM |
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The highest risk of fire is the use of cheap USB risers. Many of my friends had a problem with that.
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gargavaar
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December 23, 2017, 04:33:53 PM |
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I've recently begun mining and I have stripped out all burnable furniture and objects from the closet where I installed my rig. The walls and ceiling is made from drywall so I should be safe. The biggest fear I have is that the fusing in the house is faulty and a fire starts somewhere along the power lines.
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malthrax
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December 23, 2017, 04:34:26 PM |
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If you mount mobo on wood a cheap product like this provides a lot of protection
I mount my motherboards on scrap drywall. Cheap and fire retardant. that's actually a pretty good idea.. esp if you can get scraps of "fire-code" drywall (the thicker stuff).
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