eviltt (OP)
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February 06, 2012, 06:04:48 AM |
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I am working on my first dedicated rig right now, which got me thinking, what is the record for a single PC for MH pr S Stable? and what cards? how many? and what power draw?
anyone know?
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Transisto
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February 06, 2012, 09:20:57 AM |
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Not sure why it matters,
7x 5970 would be the the max for an ATX motherboard
Around 5ghs I suppose.
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bulanula
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February 06, 2012, 09:26:48 AM |
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Not sure why it matters,
7x 5970 would be the the max for an ATX motherboard
Around 5ghs I suppose.
Yeah sounds like you managed to hack the limit that ATI imposed on Linux of 8 GPUs for a system ... It is either 4 * 5970 or 4 * 7990 OR 8 * 5870 or 8 * 7970 to get maximum hashrate per rig but trust me that 8 * 5870 setup is impossible to do unless you live in Antartica with decent temps.
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cypherdoc
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February 06, 2012, 09:59:15 AM |
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Not sure why it matters,
7x 5970 would be the the max for an ATX motherboard
Around 5ghs I suppose.
Yeah sounds like you managed to hack the limit that ATI imposed on Linux of 8 GPUs for a system ... It is either 4 * 5970 or 4 * 7990 OR 8 * 5870 or 8 * 7970 to get maximum hashrate per rig but trust me that 8 * 5870 setup is impossible to do unless you live in Antartica with decent temps. Wouldn't extenders make this easy?
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bulanula
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February 06, 2012, 10:02:10 AM |
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Not sure why it matters,
7x 5970 would be the the max for an ATX motherboard
Around 5ghs I suppose.
Yeah sounds like you managed to hack the limit that ATI imposed on Linux of 8 GPUs for a system ... It is either 4 * 5970 or 4 * 7990 OR 8 * 5870 or 8 * 7970 to get maximum hashrate per rig but trust me that 8 * 5870 setup is impossible to do unless you live in Antartica with decent temps. Wouldn't extenders make this easy? If you ignore the fact that some machines have BIOS limitations on IRQ ranges and that kind of stuff and also that it really is hard to get Linux to run all 8 cards then good luck. Been trying to do a 8 * 5870 setup since June last year. Finally gave up and split into two 4 * 5870 rigs now. I'm no noob but unless you put them in a fridge or something the heat output in that small a space is very hard to cool down.
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cypherdoc
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February 06, 2012, 10:33:17 AM |
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Not sure why it matters,
7x 5970 would be the the max for an ATX motherboard
Around 5ghs I suppose.
Yeah sounds like you managed to hack the limit that ATI imposed on Linux of 8 GPUs for a system ... It is either 4 * 5970 or 4 * 7990 OR 8 * 5870 or 8 * 7970 to get maximum hashrate per rig but trust me that 8 * 5870 setup is impossible to do unless you live in Antartica with decent temps. Wouldn't extenders make this easy? If you ignore the fact that some machines have BIOS limitations on IRQ ranges and that kind of stuff and also that it really is hard to get Linux to run all 8 cards then good luck. Been trying to do a 8 * 5870 setup since June last year. Finally gave up and split into two 4 * 5870 rigs now. I'm no noob but unless you put them in a fridge or something the heat output in that small a space is very hard to cool down. Well I am a noob but the small amount of time I've been doing this I do know that spacing seems to make all the difference in heat buildup. Now software issues are a different thing...
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bulanula
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February 06, 2012, 10:37:28 AM Last edit: February 06, 2012, 01:27:56 PM by bulanula |
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Not sure why it matters,
7x 5970 would be the the max for an ATX motherboard
Around 5ghs I suppose.
Yeah sounds like you managed to hack the limit that ATI imposed on Linux of 8 GPUs for a system ... It is either 4 * 5970 or 4 * 7990 OR 8 * 5870 or 8 * 7970 to get maximum hashrate per rig but trust me that 8 * 5870 setup is impossible to do unless you live in Antartica with decent temps. Wouldn't extenders make this easy? If you ignore the fact that some machines have BIOS limitations on IRQ ranges and that kind of stuff and also that it really is hard to get Linux to run all 8 cards then good luck. Been trying to do a 8 * 5870 setup since June last year. Finally gave up and split into two 4 * 5870 rigs now. I'm no noob but unless you put them in a fridge or something the heat output in that small a space is very hard to cool down. Well I am a noob but the small amount of time I've been doing this I do know that spacing seems to make all the difference in heat buildup. Now software issues are a different thing... You would also need powered extenders because trying to draw 75 * 8 = 600W through the mobo = recipe for disaster. You also need a MSI BB Marshall P67 B3 motherboard ( only mobo that has 8 PCIe slots ). I got 2 for sale if you wanna attempt this. I'm in the UK etc.
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BkkCoins
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February 06, 2012, 12:13:56 PM |
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Probably not what you're expecting but ArtForz has something like 50+ odd FPGAs. I'm not certain he has them on one rig but it is possible.
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P4man
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February 06, 2012, 12:26:51 PM |
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Chefnet
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February 06, 2012, 12:32:00 PM |
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and whats with the driver limit?
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P4man
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February 06, 2012, 12:41:52 PM |
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I suspect you can work around that either by launching multiple X servers each tied to less than 8 gpus, or possibly through virtualization, running multiple OS instances, but I dont know how far along gpu virtualization is these days.
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bulanula
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February 06, 2012, 01:31:52 PM |
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and whats with the driver limit?
You can run a maximum of 8 GPUs using the ATI driver on Linux or Windows ( recent drivers like 11.6 etc. ) You can have like 4*5830 and 2*5870 and 2*5850 on one of those boards.
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P4man
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February 06, 2012, 01:35:20 PM |
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You can run a maximum of 8 GPUs using the ATI driver on Linux or Windows ( recent drivers like 11.6 etc. )
Youve said that before. And while its true (I think its actually 6 on windows?), you seem to ignore my suggestion of launching multiple X servers, since each would run its own driver, and each could be limited to less than 8 gpus. Granted, this is more a theoretical exercise than anything else, because the cost of these boards will likely make it unrealistic anyway.
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eviltt (OP)
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February 06, 2012, 03:54:07 PM |
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what kind of price are we talkin for a rig like that? that would be insane.. BTW the reason I am asking is I am looking for the most powerful single dedicated gpu miner i can, i went the 5970 route, even if its less mh than a 4 6990 only due to availability and cost. so a 4 5970 should net what 3200mh?
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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February 06, 2012, 04:05:20 PM |
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so a 4 5970 should net what 3200mh?
More like ~3.0 to 3.1 GH. To get 3200 MH would require 400 MH/s per GPU, and that means running them at 870MHz each. While you can do it keeping them stable and cool would be very difficulty unless you are watercooling.
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rjk
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1ngldh
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February 06, 2012, 04:13:58 PM |
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what kind of price are we talkin for a rig like that? that would be insane.. Well, I'm going to try hooking up used server power supplies, to keep cost down there. I have found some 2360 watt PSUs for less than 100 bucks, and they are 91% efficient at full load! The board costs close to $1200 new, but I got mine for $600. The largest cost will be the Single Board Computer that runs the whole show - this board is only a backplane. New, the SBC (AKA System Host Board or SHB) is between $1500 and $3000. I hope to get some used ones, but I don't yet know the cost. I am going to be experimenting with VT-d and AMD drivers to see what happens in a virtualized environment. It is going to be a fun experiment, and hopefully I will come out of it with the fastest single system ever built. It probably won't be -the- lowest power usage system, since the SHB has 2 quad core Xeons, but it might rank pretty high, if I can underclock them. (Or remove one and have a single quad core) Even if it is far more expansive than it should be, I might be able to sell the complete system for uses other than Bitcoin mining, since systems of this sort are usually $40,000 and up. Especially with more than 4 video cards.
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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February 06, 2012, 04:22:02 PM Last edit: February 06, 2012, 07:33:11 PM by DeathAndTaxes |
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I am going to be experimenting with VT-d and AMD drivers to see what happens in a virtualized environment. It is going to be a fun experiment, and hopefully I will come out of it with the fastest single system ever built. It probably won't be -the- lowest power usage system, since the SHB has 2 quad core Xeons, but it might rank pretty high, if I can underclock them. I am pretty sure Trenton makes single CPU SMB that can use a Core i series CPU. You should be able to find an SMB for $500 (although that is still insanely high for a miner).
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bulanula
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February 06, 2012, 06:14:28 PM |
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what kind of price are we talkin for a rig like that? that would be insane.. Well, I'm going to try hooking up used server power supplies, to keep cost down there. I have found some 2360 watt PSUs for less than 100 bucks, and they are 91% efficient at full load! The board costs close to $1200 new, but I got mine for $600. The largest cost will be the Single Board Computer that runs the whole show - this board is only a backplane. New, the SBC (AKA System Host Board or SHB) is between $1500 and $3000. I hope to get some used ones, but I don't yet know the cost. I am going to be experimenting with VT-d and AMD drivers to see what happens in a virtualized environment. It is going to be a fun experiment, and hopefully I will come out of it with the fastest single system ever built. It probably won't be -the- lowest power usage system, since the SHB has 2 quad core Xeons, but it might rank pretty high, if I can underclock them. (Or remove one and have a single quad core) Even if it is far more expansive than it should be, I might be able to sell the complete system for uses other than Bitcoin mining, since systems of this sort are usually $40,000 and up. Especially with more than 4 video cards. Loving people like you ( with server PSUs and server backplanes ) and people like P4Man ( oil submerged rig ) that bring new creativity and ideas into the community and actually carry out those ideas at great risk to themselves and share with us ! Thank you !
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rjk
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1ngldh
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February 06, 2012, 07:19:47 PM |
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Damn if I can get this working, I think I can safely say I have the largest e-peen of all the GPU miners here. If I want to sell it to an enterprise or government, I'd probably have to load it with "Pro" cards like FireGL shit and Quadros though. I think there are a few FireGL cards that have 1600 shaders each and only take up one slot. BTW, I know of Quadro-based systems that have more than 8 GPUs - wonder if the "pro" drivers remove that limitation, or whether nVidia just has never had such a limitation.
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