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Author Topic: Estimated long-term costs of owning and running different ASICs  (Read 6320 times)
crazyates (OP)
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July 04, 2013, 05:28:40 AM
 #21

Oh I forgot they are much faster, but still ~90 celsius seems a lot
Where did you see 90C? Most of the one's I've seen (online and in person (Jalapeno and 60GH Single)) have been in the 65-75C range. If one's over 80C, it's considered pretty damn hot.

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July 04, 2013, 11:12:51 AM
 #22

Thank you crazyates.

A lot of work.
Very interesting.
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July 04, 2013, 01:40:39 PM
 #23

TLDR; Most power efficient miners are the best for long haul mining.


This however is only true if the rate of return is constant... which it isn't.
I don't think people plan on running their equipment longer than it is profitable.  The biggest return while difficulty is growing is up front.  So.. I would posit that the most important metric is time to market followed by hashrate/btc, screw power efficiency.

1 TH/s isn't going to be all that profitable next year with Tytus' 100TH mine, AsicMiner's 1PHs mine, etc.  100 GH/s today is a different story.
crazyates (OP)
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July 04, 2013, 03:27:12 PM
 #24

TLDR; Most power efficient miners are the best for long haul mining.
You must not have looked at the chart very long. Compare those Block Erupter Blades (ASICMiner), and the TerraHash DX. They get almost the SAME power efficiency: ~133 vs 138 GHs/kW. Yet the initial investment of the ASICMiner Blade is so high that it jacks up the overall cost by a HUGE margin. You really should be looking at line 7, which is the cost for just the hardware.

And as I said before, this isn't a profitability calc or a return estimate. This is simply taking what hardware is available today, and putting realistic numbers to the cost it will be to run them.

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jspielberg
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July 04, 2013, 05:12:08 PM
 #25

TLDR; Most power efficient miners are the best for long haul mining.
You must not have looked at the chart very long. Compare those Block Erupter Blades (ASICMiner), and the TerraHash DX. They get almost the SAME power efficiency: ~133 vs 138 GHs/kW. Yet the initial investment of the ASICMiner Blade is so high that it jacks up the overall cost by a HUGE margin. You really should be looking at line 7, which is the cost for just the hardware.

And as I said before, this isn't a profitability calc or a return estimate. This is simply taking what hardware is available today, and putting realistic numbers to the cost it will be to run them.

Correct... as stated... I looked at AM's availability (^) and then their BTC/GHs (vvvv) and then they get taken off my list.  Partially I am trying to justify to myself my modest B3 (^/v) and Bitfury (v/^^^) orders.
crazyates (OP)
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July 04, 2013, 05:18:11 PM
 #26

Partially I am trying to justify to myself my modest B3 (^/v) and Bitfury (v/^^^) orders.
Take a look above. I really wasn't comfortable putting KNC and Bitfury's options up there, as we don't know what the final numbers are. We still haven't seen any working products from either of them. Specifically with BitFury, I think his power numbers are way off.

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k9quaint
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July 04, 2013, 05:54:24 PM
 #27

Nice spread sheet. If that is a google doc, you can share it read only and post the link here.
If it isn't, you could import it then share it read only. Might be easier to read for some.

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July 05, 2013, 02:27:02 PM
 #28

Partially I am trying to justify to myself my modest B3 (^/v) and Bitfury (v/^^^) orders.
Take a look above. I really wasn't comfortable putting KNC and Bitfury's options up there, as we don't know what the final numbers are. We still haven't seen any working products from either of them. Specifically with BitFury, I think his power numbers are way off.

The numbers are supposedly in the range of ~1W/GH system draw.
There should be plenty of bitfury information in the next couple of weeks as 100TH starts deploying their mine (50- 75TH in phase 1 I believe), and I think it was mentioned that they are not overclocking but instead going for high density boards... I guess they got a good deal on chips  Wink
crazyates (OP)
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July 09, 2013, 04:24:49 AM
 #29

Updated OP chart with the new, "low end" KNC miner, as well as miners with BitFury chips being sold in the US. For me, that's a big deal. Also, can't understand how they got the power numbers they did. BFL thought they'd get 1GHs/W too, but looks like BitFury was actually able to do it.

As the chart gets bigger, I'll prolly take off some of the more useless ones, such as the USB Block Erupters and the K1s. The point is pretty clear that they're terrible for a large scale operation, and that doesn't even include the added cost of hundreds of USB hubs. I'll also prolly take off the BFL Little Single, as it's almost exactly the same numbers as the SC Single. I'd also like to move more towards complete miners, which would give a number that represents the final cost. This means the K16 and K64 units are gone, and resellers of those in complete packages are in (such as TerraHash).

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ryszardzonk
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July 11, 2013, 09:39:13 PM
 #30

Some time ago I tried to find a link for the spreadsheet and didn't see it. Now even picture seems gone Sad Embarrassed
crazyates (OP)
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July 12, 2013, 02:01:24 AM
 #31

Some time ago I tried to find a link for the spreadsheet and didn't see it. Now even picture seems gone Sad Embarrassed
Ya Postimage was giving me issues trying to link the full-rez pic - it would work, and then not. I've reuploaded it to tinypic, so it should work better now.

I've also made some changes, including removing the USB sticks, the K64, the BFL Little Single, and I updated the 5GH/s and the 10GH/s ASICMiner blades, including the new prices.

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k9quaint
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July 12, 2013, 05:34:09 PM
 #32

Some time ago I tried to find a link for the spreadsheet and didn't see it. Now even picture seems gone Sad Embarrassed
Ya Postimage was giving me issues trying to link the full-rez pic - it would work, and then not. I've reuploaded it to tinypic, so it should work better now.

I've also made some changes, including removing the USB sticks, the K64, the BFL Little Single, and I updated the 5GH/s and the 10GH/s ASICMiner blades, including the new prices.

Real men post links to the spreadsheet, not pictures of it.  Grin

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July 16, 2013, 04:24:37 AM
Last edit: July 16, 2013, 04:40:46 AM by lyth0s
 #33

How does multiplying B10*B3 (BTC/Ghs * # to get to 1 TH/s) give you total power draw? Maybe I'm reading your spreadsheet incorrectly or the written formula is just in the wrong spot?


Edit: Nevermind, the B10 should just be B11 and then the math works out just fine. Thanks for the spreadsheet!

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roy7
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August 11, 2013, 03:43:06 AM
 #34

Should you upgrade MegaBitPower's 400GH to $8000 now? That's the October delivery price, and August deliver is sold out.
brush242
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January 02, 2014, 03:08:05 AM
 #35

Any thoughts about updating this and making it a Google doc?

No pressure of course.

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