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January 30, 2022, 05:17:26 AM Merited by vapourminer (2) |
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First about venting:
If you are talking about anything resembling the unit on a table exhausting its hot air toward an opened window, the unit will wither be too close, too far or both, depending on the weather. There is no sweet spot, unless you can somehow force a positive pressure in the room. Fans from the unit produce airflow that cannot compensate for the negative pressure in the room.
If you have only one unit, a properly sized air hose from the exhaust of the unit to the outside will "force" the air to go out, and you have to prevent water from following the hose to the unit, for example, by making the air exit below the unit.
Hopefully it is helpful for you next setup, or prevents that mishap to someone else. Unless actively forcing a positive pressure in a building, the wind direction and its environment will decide where air comes in and where it goes out.
Now that it happened... WARNING: If some part(s) makes some other part(s) fail, then playing around may damage parts that are not yet damaged.
It appears that you may have 2 failed hashboards. Sometimes, somehow, swapping things around fixes stuff for unknown reasons.
If you haven't done so already, you should clean the boards. Removing dirt alone may fix it.
Then look at the logs. Sharing it here may help. You want to know, for example, if the boards are not-detected or detected but malfunctioning. It may literally tell you what is the problem.
After identifying which board is working, you know that its data cable and its power cables are working. You can test each data port by connecting the working board with the working data cable to each port of the control board. If the working board does NOT work when connected to the two other data ports, then the control board is almost certainly the (or a) problem. If the board DOES works in all data ports, then you can test each data cables, then each power cables, etc. to isolate the problem.
A bad hashboard, bad power supply, a bad data cable, a bad connection of the data cable and/or a bad control board, or any combination of those may have the very same symptoms. The physical position of the parts may squeeze or stretch something just a bit in a way that makes the difference between it working and not working.
If you are equipped to do so and "have a clue" about it, I would suggest testing the power supply first, then testing for short circuits on the hashbords power inputs.
Did you contact Bitmain? It is unlikely covered by the warranty, but they may be able to give you some directions.
Best of luck!
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