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Author Topic: How many houses will burn down due to mining?  (Read 3513 times)
Tosmekop
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February 12, 2014, 06:15:57 PM
 #21

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?
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ymer
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February 12, 2014, 06:22:42 PM
 #22

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?

Why would anyone do that?  Roll Eyes
Tosmekop
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February 12, 2014, 06:26:27 PM
 #23

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?

Why would anyone do that?  Roll Eyes

Why not?
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February 17, 2014, 06:05:08 AM
 #24

I was watching the news on TV a few days ago, and there was a segment on how it is so much harder to fight fire when the weather's icy cold.

Anyway, it got me thinking. With all the miners ordering these new fangled ASIC hardware at home, there's bound to be at least a few idiots, with dollars signs dancing in their eyes, who cram as many units as they can for maximum profit. They don't plan for electrical load, blinded by greed. Electrical overload happens and fire will consume these idiots' houses.

Authority will catch on to this and will start to put their foot down, banning bitcoin mining at home.

Mark my word, this too shall pass.

Is that like the Fire Departments/local code enforcement banning indoor use of gas/charcoal grills for heating and yet every year tens of people die of CO poisoning. Stupid is as stupid does.
ymer
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February 17, 2014, 06:31:27 AM
 #25

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?

Why would anyone do that?  Roll Eyes

Why not?

Ever done the math?
rograz
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February 17, 2014, 12:19:55 PM
 #26

It is very simple to put a 14.9A continuous load on a 15A breaker intended for residential purposes and still burn the wiring and the house down since wiring is only rated for 80% continuous loads...its a perfect storm actually.

If that would ever happen in a modern building you should probably fire your electrician, if your breakers has the same maximum rating as your wiring you are doing it wrong.
johncarpe64
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February 17, 2014, 12:27:04 PM
 #27

This is a Public Service Announcement.

Please do not install ASIC miners in your house without consulting electricians.

Sure, if you have the low hash units like the Jalapenos, Blades, Cubes, etc, you don't have to talk to your local electrician, unless you have more than 10 of these units.

All the new, upcoming miners require kilo-watts of power. Take the example of the Terraminer: it requires you to pull power from 2 separate circuits and will probably require you to upgrade from 15 Amp to 20 Amp. KNC Neptunes require similar power draw and upgrade.

How many people are going to install these potential fire hazard without proper care and understanding? Quite a lot, I'm afraid.

Nah, the chances of burning your house is really low unless your house is like 20 years old..
vrm86
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February 17, 2014, 12:55:44 PM
 #28

When the 110V-part of the world burns due to mining, the 220-250V-part gonna win  Cheesy
pjviitas
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February 17, 2014, 03:31:28 PM
 #29

This is a Public Service Announcement.

Please do not install ASIC miners in your house without consulting electricians.

Sure, if you have the low hash units like the Jalapenos, Blades, Cubes, etc, you don't have to talk to your local electrician, unless you have more than 10 of these units.

All the new, upcoming miners require kilo-watts of power. Take the example of the Terraminer: it requires you to pull power from 2 separate circuits and will probably require you to upgrade from 15 Amp to 20 Amp. KNC Neptunes require similar power draw and upgrade.

How many people are going to install these potential fire hazard without proper care and understanding? Quite a lot, I'm afraid.

Nah, the chances of burning your house is really low unless your house is like 20 years old..

Why are you advising people to connect a dangerous number of miners in their home?
zoran
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February 17, 2014, 03:47:46 PM
 #30

2-3 ASICs cannot burn your house. 40 Gigabyte videocards can  Grin
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February 17, 2014, 05:06:07 PM
 #31

It is very simple to put a 14.9A continuous load on a 15A breaker intended for residential purposes and still burn the wiring and the house down since wiring is only rated for 80% continuous loads...its a perfect storm actually.

If that would ever happen in a modern building you should probably fire your electrician, if your breakers has the same maximum rating as your wiring you are doing it wrong.

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

Guide to armory offline install on USB key:  https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=241730.0
pjviitas
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February 17, 2014, 08:42:37 PM
 #32

2-3 ASICs cannot burn your house. 40 Gigabyte videocards can  Grin

Depending on what else you have on the breaker 3 oc'd antminers on a single 15A breaker might burn your house down...4 for sure will.
iglasses
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February 17, 2014, 10:50:13 PM
 #33

I look through the pics thread and am aghast at what I see.  How do people think some of that is OK?

I only have a signature because I'm allowed.
rograz
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February 18, 2014, 01:11:23 AM
 #34

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

Let me clarify then, if your breaker has a rating higher than the continuous load rating of your wiring you are doing it wrong.

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

It's not sub 0,5S loads we are talking about.
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February 18, 2014, 03:29:13 AM
 #35

Also, be careful with the PCI-E cables running from the power supplies to some of the ASIC miners. Some of the PC cables can run very hot, especially if you bundle them together in loom or tightly wrap them. Best bet is to move your equipment to somewhere safe and outside of a home.

pjviitas
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February 18, 2014, 05:10:44 AM
 #36

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

Quote
Let me clarify then, if your breaker has a rating higher than the continuous load rating of your wiring you are doing it wrong.

Doing what wrong...most people don't wire their own homes and 80% continuous rating is not a contravention of the electrical code.

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

Quote
It's not sub 0,5S loads we are talking about.

Starting AC is exactly what sub 0.5s loads are.
ElGabo
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February 19, 2014, 01:27:07 PM
 #37

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?

Why would anyone do that?  Roll Eyes

I'm just thinking about it.

The cost would be half with the generator and with the hot side you can solve the cooling.

But it's a high investment, I'll wait a few months with that to see what will happen on the asic market.

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AndrewGucci
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February 19, 2014, 02:03:11 PM
 #38

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?

Why would anyone do that?  Roll Eyes

I'm just thinking about it.

The cost would be half with the generator and with the hot side you can solve the cooling.

But it's a high investment, I'll wait a few months with that to see what will happen on the asic market.

Do you really think it will be worth trying ?
ElGabo
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February 19, 2014, 07:57:08 PM
 #39

Why don't you guys just buy gas powered generators?

Why would anyone do that?  Roll Eyes

I'm just thinking about it.

The cost would be half with the generator and with the hot side you can solve the cooling.

But it's a high investment, I'll wait a few months with that to see what will happen on the asic market.

Do you really think it will be worth trying ?

Here where I live yes.

Just need a good contract for commercial gas source. But it's not the small ball game. It's about 100-150 kw.... That means for example 300-350 antminers to run....

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rograz
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February 23, 2014, 04:43:21 PM
 #40

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

Quote
Let me clarify then, if your breaker has a rating higher than the continuous load rating of your wiring you are doing it wrong.

Doing what wrong...most people don't wire their own homes and 80% continuous rating is not a contravention of the electrical code.

The max rating is less than the continuous rating.  Or you'd never be able to start your AC.

Quote
It's not sub 0,5S loads we are talking about.

Starting AC is exactly what sub 0.5s loads are.

Ye but my whole point is that turning on something that causes a load spike for 0,5s will not burn up your wiring in this case.

Alright if I say it like this then, If your breaker allows for a high enough continuous load to damage your wiring, let alone start a fire you should probably redo your wiring or downgrade the breakers. Like if they allow for that one of the biggest damn points of even having them installed is removed, might as well go back the the early 1900s.
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