Trends
Member
Offline
Activity: 119
Merit: 10
|
|
May 31, 2014, 06:35:27 PM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks [/quote]
Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes!
Trends
|
|
|
|
Brassguy
|
|
May 31, 2014, 06:57:41 PM |
|
Trends.. I think I understand what you are saying.... When I measure the R3, etc resistor on my ant I see a value of 4.47K... duh.. it's in circuit... I'm yet again a dumbass.
|
15xNxXy2PfFv3rz8rnfkV6L7WQiwuYax2K
|
|
|
klondike_bar
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2128
Merit: 1005
ASIC Wannabe
|
|
May 31, 2014, 07:06:48 PM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor
|
|
|
|
philipma1957
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 4298
Merit: 8768
'The right to privacy matters'
|
|
May 31, 2014, 07:12:44 PM |
|
If you ever wanted to get back to "stock 180GH" your pot would have to go up to 8.2Kohms which puts you at 1.12 -1.13 V at the chip. 5K ohm will only get you up to 0.9 to 0.92 V at the chip. 0- 10K are just as common as 0-5K and both are priced the same at $0.40 - $0.70ea If you're going to play, play right.
my oem resistors were all 4.46k so a 5k pot should work
|
|
|
|
Brassguy
|
|
May 31, 2014, 07:17:06 PM |
|
If you ever wanted to get back to "stock 180GH" your pot would have to go up to 8.2Kohms which puts you at 1.12 -1.13 V at the chip. 5K ohm will only get you up to 0.9 to 0.92 V at the chip. 0- 10K are just as common as 0-5K and both are priced the same at $0.40 - $0.70ea If you're going to play, play right.
my oem resistors were all 4.46k so a 5k pot should work I'm thinking that they measure ~4.47K in circuit... but that may be a false reading without measuring the resistor out of the circuit. I'll find out when my pots come in... I have both 5K and 10K coming
|
15xNxXy2PfFv3rz8rnfkV6L7WQiwuYax2K
|
|
|
Trends
Member
Offline
Activity: 119
Merit: 10
|
|
May 31, 2014, 07:20:21 PM |
|
If you ever wanted to get back to "stock 180GH" your pot would have to go up to 8.2Kohms which puts you at 1.12 -1.13 V at the chip. 5K ohm will only get you up to 0.9 to 0.92 V at the chip. 0- 10K are just as common as 0-5K and both are priced the same at $0.40 - $0.70ea If you're going to play, play right.
my oem resistors were all 4.46k so a 5k pot should work I'm afraid you are wrong, you must be measuring on the board in circuit.
|
|
|
|
Trends
Member
Offline
Activity: 119
Merit: 10
|
|
May 31, 2014, 07:21:38 PM Last edit: June 05, 2014, 11:47:23 AM by Trends |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Agreed, but not as much fun!!
|
|
|
|
Biodom
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3934
Merit: 4453
|
|
May 31, 2014, 08:11:16 PM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Is pencil mod even stable or you have to constantly monitor the ant's power usage/HW mistakes and re-mod every week or two?
|
|
|
|
philipma1957
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 4298
Merit: 8768
'The right to privacy matters'
|
|
May 31, 2014, 08:13:28 PM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Is pencil mod even stable or you have to constantly monitor the ant's power usage/HW mistakes and re-mod every week or two? my pencil mod is 11 days old 3 ants do 430gh at 563 watts. rock solid for 11 days.
|
|
|
|
Biodom
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3934
Merit: 4453
|
|
May 31, 2014, 08:13:51 PM |
|
Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes!
Trends
Where do you buy these POTs? thanks
|
|
|
|
philipma1957
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 4298
Merit: 8768
'The right to privacy matters'
|
|
May 31, 2014, 08:18:20 PM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks
Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends Where do you buy these POTs? thanks [/quote] mouser/newark/jameco a few others. Since I may be wrong about the 5k the 10k pot may be better here is a link for a low cost 10k pot http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Bourns/3306F-1-103/?qs=sGAEpiMZZMtC25l1F4XBU9QhtPcWQTANAkX0QUL%2f5Dw%3dplease check with others but I think this is good.
|
|
|
|
uberdag
Member
Offline
Activity: 61
Merit: 10
|
|
May 31, 2014, 09:48:29 PM |
|
Do we not need to get certain wattage rating for the resistors as well as ohm?
|
|
|
|
philipma1957
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 4298
Merit: 8768
'The right to privacy matters'
|
|
May 31, 2014, 10:00:32 PM |
|
Do we not need to get certain wattage rating for the resistors as well as ohm?
yes we do. but the oem resistor was 4.47k in circuit and i think 8.3 k pulled if so it had a low watt rating due to its size. these are close to the size and quality of the stock resistor they don't handle much power. http://www.ebay.com/itm/8-2K-OHM-SMD-1206-Resistor-5000PCS-One-Roll-New-RoHS-/200999285608?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2ecc7db368items that small simply can not handle much in terms of watts. on the ebay link the most any of those resistors need handle = 1/4 watt the ones on the antminer are most likely 1/4 watt or less. I am not the best authority wait for more confirmation on the correct pot to use
|
|
|
|
uberdag
Member
Offline
Activity: 61
Merit: 10
|
|
May 31, 2014, 10:13:58 PM |
|
figure they are low but sure dont wannt get the wrong ones... blew a monitor i was working on when i forgot that resisters in series need to add the wattage up... well didnt so much blow it up as melt some things
|
|
|
|
grn
|
|
June 01, 2014, 12:32:30 AM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Is pencil mod even stable or you have to constantly monitor the ant's power usage/HW mistakes and re-mod every week or two? my pencil mod is 11 days old 3 ants do 430gh at 563 watts. rock solid for 11 days. Pencil mod has been working great for me
|
How is that Lexical analysis working out bickneleski?
|
|
|
klondike_bar
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2128
Merit: 1005
ASIC Wannabe
|
|
June 01, 2014, 12:41:28 AM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Is pencil mod even stable or you have to constantly monitor the ant's power usage/HW mistakes and re-mod every week or two? pencil mod is very stable. just remember that over the first day or two of operation the graphite is baked with heat and oxidized, and becomes *slightly* less resitive, lowering unit voltage so that clockspeed might need to tune down ~12MHz after 24hrs to remain stable. 90% of the time you wont notice unless you were finely tuning the clock to start with. i would not suggest the actual resitor swapping with an iron to anyone but a pro - if you are not sure if you can do it with the tools you have - theres a huge chance youll end up desoldering nearby components and going in to a proper repair shop monday so a pro can fix your mistakes / burn marks. I personally like tinkering with solder as much as the next guy, but these itty-bitty SMD resistors require a lot of precision
|
|
|
|
Trends
Member
Offline
Activity: 119
Merit: 10
|
|
June 01, 2014, 01:17:27 AM |
|
I agree 100% with klondike_bar, if your'e not sure don't try this mod, use the pencil method.
grn
looks like you have found every block in the last 5 days based on your Ant Monitor unless the block column means something else!
|
|
|
|
Biodom
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3934
Merit: 4453
|
|
June 01, 2014, 01:45:40 AM Last edit: June 01, 2014, 01:58:42 AM by Biodom |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Is pencil mod even stable or you have to constantly monitor the ant's power usage/HW mistakes and re-mod every week or two? my pencil mod is 11 days old 3 ants do 430gh at 563 watts. rock solid for 11 days. Pencil mod has been working great for me Ok, thanks, I think I got it. Will try pencil first. The R3 and other resistors are so tiny, I will mess them up with the iron for sure.
|
|
|
|
philipma1957
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 4298
Merit: 8768
'The right to privacy matters'
|
|
June 01, 2014, 02:06:06 AM |
|
I have never done anything like this, so a few questions from a newb: 1. My understanding that for undervolting as per bitmain scheme, I will be removing R3, etc. resistors, but then instructions are a bit thin for me…Do I put something else in place? bitmain says: refer to resistor value to replace. This is where I don't understand. I have to replace R3 and 7 other resistors (8 total, 4 on each board) with what? 2. how POTs came into this? Is it a POT I have to put in place of removed resistors, or is it optional and I can simply put a small droplet of tin where resistor (R3, etc) was?
Thanks Yes remove the R3, R66, R38 & R52 resistors from each blade. Either replace these removed resistors with new resistors of the value Bitmain has given (3.24Kohm for 102.4Ghash or 4.02Kohm for 115.2Ghash). Alternatively instead of putting in the fixed value resistors (3.24 or 4.02) put in a 0 to 10Kohm adjustable resistors (POT) (this is what is shown on the pictures attached a page or two back). With the POTs you can undervolt, go back to stock, or if you are brave overvolt with no more hardware changes! Trends just do a pencil mod. its easy enough that anyone can do it. All you need is a pencil and a multimeter, and about 10-15 minutes per antminer. (a 4B pencil is a bit easier to work with than a 2B/HB since its softer lead). Its not as precise a method as actually soldering a new resistor, but its ~95% as effective and far faster and less likely to do permentant amage then using a soldering iron to remove/replace a SMALL resistor Is pencil mod even stable or you have to constantly monitor the ant's power usage/HW mistakes and re-mod every week or two? my pencil mod is 11 days old 3 ants do 430gh at 563 watts. rock solid for 11 days. Pencil mod has been working great for me Ok, thanks, I think I got it. Will try pencil first. The R3 and other resistors are so tiny, I will mess them up with the iron for sure. yeah smd resistors are hard to do. I am 57, but my eyes are older I have had cataract surgery in each one. I can see far in one I can see medium in the other, but close meh so so at best.
|
|
|
|
grn
|
|
June 01, 2014, 10:10:17 PM |
|
I agree 100% with klondike_bar, if your'e not sure don't try this mod, use the pencil method.
grn
looks like you have found every block in the last 5 days based on your Ant Monitor unless the block column means something else!
yes the block column is correct all my ants are load balanced I solo mine with 1 of them plus I mine alt coins when profitable.
|
How is that Lexical analysis working out bickneleski?
|
|
|
|