Bobs Yerunkle
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January 06, 2014, 10:08:47 PM |
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Nice setup. I am trying to find out if i can overclock them to 425 or 450Mhz. With your setup i have a better cooling then now. Going to find more of these fans What values should be set for 425 or 450 MHz ? I mean: freq_value' 'chip_freq' '425' option 'timeout' ITT chip_freq | GH/s/chip | freq_value | timeout https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=348327.msg3850360#msg3850360
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warhawk187
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January 07, 2014, 03:50:57 AM |
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Anyone know whats the most efficient way to run these? My apartment is running out of available circuits and want to not overload them since the building is old. Any ideas? I could always host a few units at my brothers place as a last resort option.
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pdawg
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January 07, 2014, 04:09:54 AM |
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What do you mean? the most efficient power draw will be at stock settings.
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Bobs Yerunkle
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January 07, 2014, 04:16:56 AM |
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Anyone know whats the most efficient way to run these? My apartment is running out of available circuits and want to not overload them since the building is old. Any ideas? I could always host a few units at my brothers place as a last resort option.
Prerequisite: Have access to a Kill-A-Watt ( http://www.p3international.com/products/p4400.html) or similar device. I have limited power and I checked the circuit breakers for my home and noted the amp rating and then determined what plugs go to what breakers and split up the load. I suppose you could look at increasing the efficiency of your PSUs. Running a power supply at 50% load, ie using half of the power rating is generally the most efficient. However you are often only looking at an increase in efficiency of 3%. e.g. A 80 Plus Platinum PSU on 110v at 50% load is 92% efficient (or at least so they claim) vs 89% at 100% load. src: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/80_PlusAnother approach is to determine your most efficient GH/joule settings of you miner. Edit: Yeah, so basically you have as much power available as you have available...not much you can do there.
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mitty
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January 07, 2014, 05:50:58 AM |
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The "ASIC status" on some of my 400M overclocked Antminers show all x's (i.e., xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx) yet the temps are fine (~44-46) and the hashrate is still showing about 200 GH/s, as well as hashrate on my pool staying the same. Is this a warning that I'm slowly burning out the unit?
From what I have read "x" means either not enough power to the chip or overheating. Since the machine is overclocked and pulling more power, perhaps you are on the cusp of the power range of you PSU? Do you have a Kill-a-watt (or other such device) to measure what the S1 is pulling at the wall? 6. I see "x" in the ASIC Status
For the ASIC status wise, "x" doesn't necessary means the chip is faulty or failing. If the hashing power seems to be affected, please check your PSU and wiring and reboot and check the status a few times. It should go back to an average 168-180 gh/s range per AntMiner.
when you are getting "x" on the ASIC chip status, please turn off the antminer and double check your PSU cables are connected well and restart. Check the status in about 5 minutes and every 30 minutes for a few hours and see if the "x" are showing up constantly at the same chip or randomly changes or completely disappear.
src: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=344970.0Ty for the info & sorry for not checking the support thread first! My power supplies are definitely more than enough (1000w and 1200w PSUs each with two miners) and the temp being reported on the web interface also seems fine (no higher than 47). They seem to be hashing fine so I'll just leave it.
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mitty
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January 07, 2014, 05:56:37 AM |
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Anyone know whats the most efficient way to run these? My apartment is running out of available circuits and want to not overload them since the building is old. Any ideas? I could always host a few units at my brothers place as a last resort option.
If you have access to the breaker panel you can install a 240v circuit which will only pull half the current as a 120v circuit for the same power output. PSUs are also slightly more efficient at 240v so you get slightly decreased power consumption there too. Don't attempt this unless you know what you're doing/have researched it thoroughly or just have a friend who knows what they're doing or actual electrician install it. You don't want to mess up wiring since it could create a fire hazard, especially in an old building.
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Batteryman
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January 07, 2014, 03:41:46 PM |
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The "ASIC status" on some of my 400M overclocked Antminers show all x's (i.e., xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx) yet the temps are fine (~44-46) and the hashrate is still showing about 200 GH/s, as well as hashrate on my pool staying the same. Is this a warning that I'm slowly burning out the unit?
I had this happen overnight as well on one of mine. Temp on mine is 42 & 43 and it is sitting in an aircon server room. Unit is definately hashing away on 400 setting (202Gh/s) and pool reporting continual hashing data, so xxxx must be bogus in some way, or at least does not prove unit has stopped.
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Bobs Yerunkle
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January 07, 2014, 04:34:53 PM |
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I had this happen overnight as well on one of mine. Temp on mine is 42 & 43 and it is sitting in an aircon server room. Unit is definitely hashing away on 400 setting (202Gh/s) and pool reporting continual hashing data, so xxxx must be bogus in some way, or at least does not prove unit has stopped.
I will join this club. Woke this morning to: xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx Shut it down and let it sit for 5 minutes. Now back to: oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo (at least for the moment...) S1 had been running for >4 days constant.
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miter_myles
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January 07, 2014, 08:36:31 PM |
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Think I read one of Sushi's reply once where he stated as long as the machine is hashing normally, but showing XXXX's that it was a "firmware" glitch and all was still well/okay... reboot required for peace of mind OOOOOO's
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BTC - 1D7g5395bs7idApTx1KTXrfDW7JUgzx6Z5 LTC - LVFukQnCWUimBxZuXKqTVKy1L2Jb8kZasL
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klondike_bar
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January 08, 2014, 10:34:09 PM |
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worth putting here:
I took my new S1 unit (with PCI sockets) and a PSU with 630W available on the 12V line
at 400MHz its running a little over 202GH and 46-49C at 425MHz it still falls to ~191GH
it seems the cooling is not the issue, and the issue cant be the regulators (that would act differently) - The chips simply need more voltage in order to achieve this clockrate.
anyone familiar enough with the TPS53355 or the antminer schematics to identify how this could be achieved? I imagine a pencil mod similar to with the bitfury ystem could be used to slightly increase to 1.20V and allow the unit to push past 210GHash
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Guava
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January 08, 2014, 10:55:56 PM |
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worth putting here:
I took my new S1 unit (with PCI sockets) and a PSU with 630W available on the 12V line
at 400MHz its running a little over 202GH and 46-49C at 425MHz it still falls to ~191GH
it seems the cooling is not the issue, and the issue cant be the regulators (that would act differently) - The chips simply need more voltage in order to achieve this clockrate.
anyone familiar enough with the TPS53355 or the antminer schematics to identify how this could be achieved? I imagine a pencil mod similar to with the bitfury ystem could be used to slightly increase to 1.20V and allow the unit to push past 210GHash
According to Bitmain, you will need to change the resistor for higher voltage. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=330665.msg3580902#msg3580902
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klondike_bar
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January 09, 2014, 05:07:08 AM |
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worth putting here:
I took my new S1 unit (with PCI sockets) and a PSU with 630W available on the 12V line at 400MHz its running a little over 202GH and 46-49C at 425MHz it still falls to ~191GH
it seems the cooling is not the issue, and the issue cant be the regulators (that would act differently) - The chips simply need more voltage in order to achieve this clockrate.
anyone familiar enough with the TPS53355 or the antminer schematics to identify how this could be achieved? I imagine a pencil mod similar to with the bitfury ystem could be used to slightly increase to 1.20V and allow the unit to push past 210GHash
According to Bitmain, you will need to change the resistor for higher voltage. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=330665.msg3580902#msg3580902of course. however, the question is an issue of what the actual PCB schemativc is. if the R1 and R2 (if there is an R2) values for the TPS53355 are identified, a pencil mod would not be very difficult
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mvdgeijn
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January 09, 2014, 08:59:11 AM |
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Yesterday 3 antminers arrived. Immediatly set the frequency to 375, all working OK. Now I've set one to 400. I noticed that the processor is 100% used. Isn't that the main bottleneck?
Marc
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Bobs Yerunkle
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January 09, 2014, 04:39:05 PM Last edit: January 09, 2014, 10:56:07 PM by Bobs Yerunkle |
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Yesterday 3 antminers arrived. Immediatly set the frequency to 375, all working OK. Now I've set one to 400. I noticed that the processor is 100% used. Isn't that the main bottleneck? Marc
If you ssh into the S1 and run top you can stare at the process' cpu usage and pretend it is an aquarium. But as you mentioned, cgminer definitely appears to be utilizing the majority of the cpu. I have seen mention of this in various Bitmain threads but ATM don't have links queued up. I would guess that this utilization stays fairly consistent (although excessive) through at least the 350 MHz - 400 MHz range. You have 3? Lucky. How about setting one at 350, 375, and 400 and start up the aquariums and telling us what you see?
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mackminer
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January 09, 2014, 10:52:51 PM |
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Guys, I have an antminer with an antec 450w psu. 360 is the specified power draw as per the initial group buy page? Has anyone had any good results with overclocking within this limitation?
Thanks.
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klondike_bar
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January 10, 2014, 12:50:38 AM |
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Guys, I have an antminer with an antec 450w psu. 360 is the specified power draw as per the initial group buy page? Has anyone had any good results with overclocking within this limitation?
Thanks.
a 450w psu probably has only ~350W available on 12V so you may have difficulty obtaining 180GH stock speeds. overclocking is out of ht equestion (if there was 450w of 12V, 190Gh might be possible)
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chadwickx16
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January 10, 2014, 03:42:20 AM |
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After logging in via SSH the following steps: 1. type: "cd /etc/config"(without the quotes) and hit enter. 2. type: "vim asic-freq"(without the quotes) and hit enter. 3. hit I button to enable "edit mode" and adjust the settings, lines beginning with # are ignored. 4. after you're done hit the ESC button to exit "edit mode". 5. type ":wq" (without the quotes) to execute write and quit. 6. you'll be back in the command line, type reboot to restart your device. You can check your frequency in the web interface miner status page. If everything went ok, you're mining with higher speed Then you can donate to me for providing you with extra steps to unleash ultimate hashing power 15j3fDzunHtoTsDH7MAKQQiG95q5yWYTfk Keep looking at your HW errors to make sure your device isn't frying up. I've added some tiny heatsinks, and running 400Mhz but still 3.3% HW error. But my Antminer is using the Corsair AX860 80+ Platinum PSU and @400Mhz it's sucking around 395W out of the wall-socket JohnC. Thank you! Small tip incoming once I get my first payout! Also, has anyone thought about strapping a delta fan on this?? Possibly higher OC values??
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thecr4ne
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January 10, 2014, 05:04:23 PM |
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I've been running my Antminer S1 for about 3 days (just made it out of newb-town here) at 400MHz and it's going well. Average hashrate is 200-205 GH/s with momentary spikes as high as 241 GH/s according to pool stats. Would be awesome to sustain rates like that. Has anyone tried contacting bitmain directly about specifics of how to increase chip voltage?
I blew a 760W PSU running it (hopefully just the fuse) but now have it hooked up to a 1000W HP server PSU. It required some soldering, and it's a little noisier but it's humming along nicely at this point. I'll hopefully get some pics of the PSU rig posted soon.
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alfabitcoin
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January 10, 2014, 05:41:41 PM |
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Bitmain have open sourced S1 miner. Schematics are available so volt regulator data sheet and some instructions. However, somebody with knowledge need to confirm what resistor to change or pencil mode.
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goxed (OP)
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Bitcoin / Crypto mining Hardware.
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January 10, 2014, 09:27:47 PM |
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Bitmain have open sourced S1 miner. Schematics are available so volt regulator data sheet and some instructions. However, somebody with knowledge need to confirm what resistor to change or pencil mode.
The regulator is a 30AMP part and is running well beyond its rated limits.
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Revewing Bitcoin / Crypto mining Hardware.
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