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December 29, 2020, 03:01:59 PM |
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I love this thread! Thank you for starting it, and for those who are contributing to it. I was thinking of starting a thread basically asking the question that Phil answered in the title. I have been reading and asking lots of questions as a newbie getting started. I'm doing my due diligence, and hoping to start building a small mining room in my basement early next year. The way I was going to pose my question was basically if you were able to take what you've learned by building your rigs over time, and had the ability to buy everything (but the GPUs maybe! hahaha) all in one stroke a build your setup the best way possible, what would it look like?
The vision I have for what I'd like to do, involves running a dedicated 30amp 240v line into my basement, which I believe would support 4 rigs, 8 cards each, provided I could ever actually get my hands on 32 GPUs (leaning towards 3060Ti if they become available for a decent price, right?)
What tools and tricks would you use to set all that up? I'm thinking 4 identical mobos, sets of risers, same CPU, etc., trying to build 4 identical racks so that all the processes are the same, just cloning the setup for efficiency's sake. What power supplies have proven the most reliable? Would you put a Killawatt on every PSU and leave them there permanently to monitor? Would you craft some external air flow to draw in cold outside air in the winter and pipe the hot air into the home to get some heating out of it? What would your investment look like if you were able to build a full rack of GPUs at one shot - even if you just got each rig up and running and added cards slowly as you found them to become available?
My day job is all about creating processes, redundancies for production, fail safes, and automation. I'm trying to apply what I know there, to how I could build an excellent mining garden (the word farm seems to big for what I could do!) that is reliable, efficient, tidy cable management, etc.
I think this thread is going to have a lot of useful information for this process, thanks again!
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