U1TRA_L0RD
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January 01, 2014, 11:49:15 AM |
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But OP hasent told us the size of his rig, he doesnt need to spend a alot of money doing this you know?
really? I am not sure of the BTU rating, but I will need to dissipate upwards of 40,000 watts.
Must of missed that thanks.
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U1TRA_L0RD
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January 01, 2014, 11:51:23 AM |
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We have a lot of the "silliest" answers here, from people who have no datacenter or AC experience. You put up a bounty, you get stupid spammers and beggars.
Before qualifying any answer as silly or stupid, I think we need to know some additional considerations such as the amount of money he is willing to spend. If we take into account the kind of unit he is considering to buy, that sounds more like a kind of garage project, in the line of DIY and low cost solutions. In the company where I work, we recently did an investment in a cooling solution. The company spent a bit more than 50,000 euros (about 80,000 USD) in a solution based on in-row equipment from APC, like the one linked below. This was a very small datacenter with a power consumption much lower than 40,000 W http://www.apc.com/products/family/index.cfm?id=379So, if someone is willing to spend an amount in the range of 3000~4000 USD, maybe the silly solutions are those intended for real datacenters. May be, if he had a budget in the range of 100,000 USD he would be addressing his doubts to a professional cooling consultant. May be he would be ordering and paying a whole study and a project instead of being offering 0.25 BTC (about 180 USD) looking for ideas into a community of unknown people. This. I am looking for low cost, DIY solutions. This will be built out in space not originally intended for Crypto mining. I want to keep expenses to a minimum.....no need to spend all the profit on cooling the damn things. If you want, I suggest using a dehumidifier to keep out moisture and look at this expert on youtube showing his mining rig shelf and how he sets up cooling. http://youtu.be/G5f_e4P6gMAMy video is a good example though, because the duct is sucking out the hot air as the fans cover the front portion of the shelf .
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TheWoodser
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January 01, 2014, 08:52:50 PM |
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We have a lot of the "silliest" answers here, from people who have no datacenter or AC experience. You put up a bounty, you get stupid spammers and beggars.
Before qualifying any answer as silly or stupid, I think we need to know some additional considerations such as the amount of money he is willing to spend. If we take into account the kind of unit he is considering to buy, that sounds more like a kind of garage project, in the line of DIY and low cost solutions. In the company where I work, we recently did an investment in a cooling solution. The company spent a bit more than 50,000 euros (about 80,000 USD) in a solution based on in-row equipment from APC, like the one linked below. This was a very small datacenter with a power consumption much lower than 40,000 W http://www.apc.com/products/family/index.cfm?id=379So, if someone is willing to spend an amount in the range of 3000~4000 USD, maybe the silly solutions are those intended for real datacenters. May be, if he had a budget in the range of 100,000 USD he would be addressing his doubts to a professional cooling consultant. May be he would be ordering and paying a whole study and a project instead of being offering 0.25 BTC (about 180 USD) looking for ideas into a community of unknown people. This. I am looking for low cost, DIY solutions. This will be built out in space not originally intended for Crypto mining. I want to keep expenses to a minimum.....no need to spend all the profit on cooling the damn things. If you want, I suggest using a dehumidifier to keep out moisture and look at this expert on youtube showing his mining rig shelf and how he sets up cooling. http://youtu.be/G5f_e4P6gMAMy video is a good example though, because the duct is sucking out the hot air as the fans cover the front portion of the shelf . I watched the video....Is there anything sucking the air into the duct? To me I only saw the large box fans on the front. It looks like to me without proper pressurization of that air it would be hard to make it travel through that ducting.
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U1TRA_L0RD
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January 02, 2014, 02:09:45 AM |
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We have a lot of the "silliest" answers here, from people who have no datacenter or AC experience. You put up a bounty, you get stupid spammers and beggars.
Before qualifying any answer as silly or stupid, I think we need to know some additional considerations such as the amount of money he is willing to spend. If we take into account the kind of unit he is considering to buy, that sounds more like a kind of garage project, in the line of DIY and low cost solutions. In the company where I work, we recently did an investment in a cooling solution. The company spent a bit more than 50,000 euros (about 80,000 USD) in a solution based on in-row equipment from APC, like the one linked below. This was a very small datacenter with a power consumption much lower than 40,000 W http://www.apc.com/products/family/index.cfm?id=379So, if someone is willing to spend an amount in the range of 3000~4000 USD, maybe the silly solutions are those intended for real datacenters. May be, if he had a budget in the range of 100,000 USD he would be addressing his doubts to a professional cooling consultant. May be he would be ordering and paying a whole study and a project instead of being offering 0.25 BTC (about 180 USD) looking for ideas into a community of unknown people. This. I am looking for low cost, DIY solutions. This will be built out in space not originally intended for Crypto mining. I want to keep expenses to a minimum.....no need to spend all the profit on cooling the damn things. If you want, I suggest using a dehumidifier to keep out moisture and look at this expert on youtube showing his mining rig shelf and how he sets up cooling. http://youtu.be/G5f_e4P6gMAMy video is a good example though, because the duct is sucking out the hot air as the fans cover the front portion of the shelf . I watched the video....Is there anything sucking the air into the duct? To me I only saw the large box fans on the front. It looks like to me without proper pressurization of that air it would be hard to make it travel through that ducting. Thats why theres inline duct fans inside the duct.
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NewLiberty
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January 02, 2014, 03:11:51 PM |
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TheWoodser
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January 02, 2014, 03:34:21 PM |
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Thats why theres inline duct fans inside the duct.
I guess I missed that during the video....
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Sheldor333
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January 03, 2014, 01:34:46 AM |
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Also build a datacenter in a cold country like north of Canada, Iceland, Norway...and you won't have to cool it, just use the cold air from around you. Can save a lot, if you have that option.
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TheWoodser
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January 04, 2014, 03:21:38 PM |
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Lets hop back on topic.....
OP, Can you tell us what the square footage of this datacenter is planned to be and also let us know what kind of budget you are looking to work with....
Woodser
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yochdog (OP)
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January 04, 2014, 05:12:27 PM |
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Lets hop back on topic.....
OP, Can you tell us what the square footage of this datacenter is planned to be and also let us know what kind of budget you are looking to work with....
Woodser
1500 SF.......I would like to keep cooling to $5,000 or less. I am looking for out of the box ideas here. This will not be your typical data center!
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Unacceptable
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January 05, 2014, 11:12:43 PM |
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You got a nearby underground cave
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"If you run into an asshole in the morning, you ran into an asshole. If you run into assholes all day long, you are the asshole." -Raylan Givens Got GOXXED ?? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KiqRpPiJAU&feature=youtu.be"An ASIC being late is perfectly normal, predictable, and legal..."Hashfast & BFL slogan
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YipYip
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January 06, 2014, 04:00:35 AM |
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But OP hasent told us the size of his rig, he doesnt need to spend a alot of money doing this you know?
really? I am not sure of the BTU rating, but I will need to dissipate upwards of 40,000 watts.
youchdog has been around for a while ...lolz He is running ~ 120m of scrypt or ~ 200+ GPU's of various descriptions Real farms are starting to get out of control and in regards to heat ...fucking HEAT !!!! I run 70m and have 6 x 3000L second fans on both intake and exhaust AC is toooo expensive ... Just go with lots of air directed onto the GPU's and an fan connected to an extract fan mounted into the rig chasis that then pumpts the air out to a chimmney stack that then exhausts out with a 3000l fan suckikng at the other end go for a largeish 600-800m outside exhaust fan stack (its like the ones u see on mcdonadls) http://www.fantech.com.au/FanRange.aspx?MountingID=RVE&RangeID=32The key being control the air in and then GET RIG of the HEAT !! I live in australia that is currently 100+ at the moment ... the cards are running stable ~ 80c (its not great but oh well warranty) Anyway youchdog thanks for added to diff :S I could go further but this is what u get for free lolz
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Millicent
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January 06, 2014, 05:39:01 AM |
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You got a nearby underground cave I hadn't seen this post, but it's along the lines of what I'm thinking. Your location put's you at a disadvantage right off the bat. What's the infrastructure like where you plan on locating this? Lots of older buildings?, silos? If it were me and I was trying to be budget minded I would find an existing underground facility or basement. This will dramatically cut your ambient temps and provide a more stable environment. Is anything like this available or is your facility already selected?
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U1TRA_L0RD
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January 06, 2014, 04:46:31 PM |
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You got a nearby underground cave I hadn't seen this post, but it's along the lines of what I'm thinking. Your location put's you at a disadvantage right off the bat. What's the infrastructure like where you plan on locating this? Lots of older buildings?, silos? If it were me and I was trying to be budget minded I would find an existing underground facility or basement. This will dramatically cut your ambient temps and provide a more stable environment. Is anything like this available or is your facility already selected? Warehouse rentals aren't cheap, even spaces, OP will have to add the cost of electricity, equipment for cooling,hardware, and cost of space. If you ask me, I don't think its worth it,you'll be lending more out of your pocket than making money.
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Millicent
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January 07, 2014, 12:34:43 AM |
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You got a nearby underground cave I hadn't seen this post, but it's along the lines of what I'm thinking. Your location put's you at a disadvantage right off the bat. What's the infrastructure like where you plan on locating this? Lots of older buildings?, silos? If it were me and I was trying to be budget minded I would find an existing underground facility or basement. This will dramatically cut your ambient temps and provide a more stable environment. Is anything like this available or is your facility already selected? Warehouse rentals aren't cheap, even spaces, OP will have to add the cost of electricity, equipment for cooling,hardware, and cost of space. If you ask me, I don't think its worth it,you'll be lending more out of your pocket than making money. There not cheap where I am, but I'm in the Bay Area. That doesn't mean that in the middle of Missouri they're not. Location is everything and finding something that's cool naturally is going to make a BIG difference in cost
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boniggy
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January 07, 2014, 10:41:28 PM |
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The summer here are brutally hot....can get up to 110 F.
Arizona? Phoenix maybe? If so, im here too. let me know if you need help or another hand in setting something like this up.. id love to be a part of something like that ... and yes i do have technical experience.
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U1TRA_L0RD
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January 07, 2014, 10:56:04 PM |
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The summer here are brutally hot....can get up to 110 F.
Arizona? Phoenix maybe? If so, im here too. let me know if you need help or another hand in setting something like this up.. id love to be a part of something like that ... and yes i do have technical experience. Lol, me too, mesa.
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NewLiberty
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January 09, 2014, 04:09:07 PM Last edit: January 09, 2014, 04:49:41 PM by NewLiberty |
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Lets hop back on topic.....
OP, Can you tell us what the square footage of this datacenter is planned to be and also let us know what kind of budget you are looking to work with....
Woodser
1500 SF.......I would like to keep cooling to $5,000 or less. I am looking for out of the box ideas here. This will not be your typical data center! For out of the box + not typical...Sell the heat. Have your cooling system pay you instead of paying for it. Run a jacuzzi / steam room / sauna business next to your data center Heat a pool Run a laundramat Distillery, brewery, bakery Lots of uses for extra heat if you can control it. The cost of moving the air where it is more valuable from where it is not wanted on your chips is paid by the receiver rather than the sender. This is also a marketing press opportunity.
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EvilPanda
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January 09, 2014, 05:27:09 PM |
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Lets hop back on topic.....
OP, Can you tell us what the square footage of this datacenter is planned to be and also let us know what kind of budget you are looking to work with....
Woodser
1500 SF.......I would like to keep cooling to $5,000 or less. I am looking for out of the box ideas here. This will not be your typical data center! For out of the box + not typical...Sell the heat. Have your cooling system pay you instead of paying for it. Run a jacuzzi / steam room / sauna business next to your data center Heat a pool Run a laundramat Distillery, brewery, bakery Lots of uses for extra heat if you can control it. The cost of moving the air where it is more valuable from where it is not wanted on your chips is paid by the receiver rather than the sender. This is also a marketing press opportunity. Or as I said earlier try geothermal cooling. Pros: runs almost by itself, won't affect electricity bill, causes no moisture problems and doesn't require maintenance. Cons: you need to dig a hole in the ground (bad idea if you're just renting the place).
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NewLiberty
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January 09, 2014, 06:35:08 PM |
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Lets hop back on topic.....
OP, Can you tell us what the square footage of this datacenter is planned to be and also let us know what kind of budget you are looking to work with....
Woodser
1500 SF.......I would like to keep cooling to $5,000 or less. I am looking for out of the box ideas here. This will not be your typical data center! For out of the box + not typical...Sell the heat. Have your cooling system pay you instead of paying for it. Run a jacuzzi / steam room / sauna business next to your data center Heat a pool Run a laundramat Distillery, brewery, bakery Lots of uses for extra heat if you can control it. The cost of moving the air where it is more valuable from where it is not wanted on your chips is paid by the receiver rather than the sender. This is also a marketing press opportunity. Or as I said earlier try geothermal cooling. Pros: runs almost by itself, won't affect electricity bill, causes no moisture problems and doesn't require maintenance. Cons: you need to dig a hole in the ground (bad idea if you're just renting the place). This is also location dependent. Some places it is much warmer in the ground than above it. In Malibu, the well water is warmer than the air.
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Millicent
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January 11, 2014, 05:48:11 PM |
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This is also location dependent. Some places it is much warmer in the ground than above it. In Malibu, the well water is warmer than the air.
Where did you come up with that? In Malibu? surely you jest. The earths temp is pretty consistent once you get below a certain level. I don't think it's that deep either, but I don't remember the exact depth. It's a constant somewhere around 50 degrees Fahrenheit. A quick search on "underground temperature constant" will give you plenty of good reliable info on this subject.
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BTC ~ 1CX9TMGCv73XLcvckz5RsnHgsHA5fJrL2q
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