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Author Topic: Cointerra Hardware Support **Unofficial  (Read 56743 times)
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July 12, 2014, 02:49:03 AM
 #121

Sad that CT took down their forums.  I had been reasonably active there like many others.

Anyhow, I've been nursing my two TMIV's along since April.  One continues to crank out a reasonably stable 1.6 th with decent core temps.  The other is hobbled down to 1.2 th as one core gets far too hot.  I've applied Noctua NT-H1 twice.  Worked well for a while, but then temps went back up.  Decided to give Liquid Pro a try.

Now I've got my LPro ready to go.  I'm hoping I'll see gains similar to what others have claimed here as well as a solution that keeps working (hopefully).

My question is, do I need to let the LPro cure before firing my machine back up at all?  Or should I just run it at "low" (PL 1-3) power while the stuff cures for 40hrs or so.  Or even better, can I just go right up to full throttle (PL 9)?

I know the material cures, I'm just not clear on what care needs to be taken during that process.  

The documentation provided by Cool Laboratory is both a bit short and sometimes torqued by the German translation.  They make no mention of curing, or oddly even needing to use the included "rough" pad which I'm guessing some may use to rough up the surface?  

I think I may skip that step on my Goldstrike chips though.  Maybe more something for CPU/GPUs where there is a larger smooth surface to deal with.

I did not use the scotch pad. I went full throttle after applying with no problems. I did use the provided q-tip for spreading. Put it all back together and fired up! Just be careful with the LP and take your time, DO NOT get that stuff anywhere other than on the chip surface. Good luck and report back!
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July 12, 2014, 04:51:18 AM
Last edit: July 12, 2014, 04:25:37 PM by scriber
 #122

Ive noticed all my machines are hashing lower then spec for the past week or two. They are 1.5Gh/s 1.5Gh/s and 750Gh/s (one miner died). Not sure why the constant drop for so long. Temps, fans, pumps all appear normal

UPDATE: Lost power for a couple hours and when it returned the machines appear to be hashing and normal speeds, I guess a reboot helped them
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July 13, 2014, 12:19:24 AM
Last edit: July 13, 2014, 04:03:36 AM by marvinmartian
 #123

Having applied TIM to my goldstrike chips twice now, I've noticed a few things that make the application a bit more difficult than your normal CPU or GPU rig.  I'm hoping the following observations might save some folks time and/or help their application of Liquid Pro or any other TIM.

1.  The mount points, ie. the screws, for the water block aren't the easiest to deal with.  By that I mean specifically keeping the water block stationary as you put the four mounting screws back in can be prone to more movement than you might want.  The very first time (using Noctua paste) I noticed that the water block was moving around quite a bit as I screwed it back on.  The second time, I tried to be more careful about that but found it quite a challenge.  You might even consider it somewhat of a royal pain in the neck.

2.  The washers for each screw are aluminum.  So they don't get picked up by a magnetic screw driver.  Even worse, they have a tendency to fall into hard-to-reach places as you deal with the screws and are generally just an annoyance.  The net result is that they add a bit more unwanted chaos to an already delicate process.

3.  Even though both my machines seem to have some from the factory, I do not believe there should be any TIM on the outer square "ring" as such.  This is more of an observation than anything else.  I'm referring to the metal square that immediately encloses your 4 goldstrike chips under the cooling block.

My solution to #1 was to build a jig that helped tremendously.  Here's a pic.

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B5ki_Xeim-C2RVl3bUtNWWQ5bkE

NOTES ON THE JIG:  In the picture those are four chopsticks sharpened on each end.  Not expensive ones but not the super cheap have-to-break-them-apart ones either.  You basically just need some long round pieces of wood or metal.

To make your own, first a) pick your material to hold the chopsticks (foam, cardboard, styrofoam, wood, clay, a sponge, etc...) then b) measure the distance between the screw holes (I forget as I'm typing this) then c) draw a square on some graph paper with holes matching those distances then d) poke your sticks through and into your chopstick-holding material of choice.  Make sure you can slide each of the sticks UP and DOWN with some good friction so that they'll stay in place.  They should not slide on their own.

For #2 I just put the tiniest dab of crazy glue between the screw and the washer (NOT BETWEEN THE WASHER AND THE WATER BLOCK PLATE).  Do this with the SCREWS OUTSIDE THE MACHINE.  Cut a Qtip in half and use the stick side as an applicator if that helps.  I went out and did some shopping as I waited for them to dry.  I'm not 100% clear on the minimum time you want here.  Just make sure they're glued on and all the glue is dry.  It's not so much to bond the washer and screw.  It's more to just prevent the stupid washer from falling onto the board as you're trying to (very precisely) screw it back in place.  So you really only need the tiniest drop of glue.

For #3 I just left the outer square bare, no TIM or anything on it.  Like I said, just an observation here.

NOTE:  to remove the old TIM I found using a good solvent and purifier essential.  I use the 2 step Arcticlean and have been quite happy with it.

1.  First apply your Liquid Pro.  What an amazing material.  Behaves like solder but at room temperature and takes a LONG time to solidify.  The qtip they provide works great.  I had a small, flat, stiff, paintbrush handy just in case I had any spills over the edge of a chip.  BTW:  the brush turned out to be NOT AS GOOD as the qtip for actual application onto the chips.

2.  Then insert the long ends of the (chop)sticks into the water block's metal brackets where the screws normally go.  Your foam or whatever material you used should be on top with the water block underneath it and the motherboard below.  The sticks should be just touching the board (assuming you can't get four holes in one - see step 4 below).

3.  Have someone hold the water block up and safely away from the four goldstrike chips while you try step 4 next.  You don't want it falling down onto your nice new mirror-like application of Liquid Pro and messing it all up.  You also don't want anyone putting their fingerprints on the super clean and purified copper bottom of your block.  Care needs to be taken here.

4.  Insert each pointed stick end into the corresponding screw hole.

5.  Now you have four vertical "rails" upon which to slide down the water block and keep it in place.

6.  Slide the water block down gently into place, applying light pressure to the top as you insert the screws.

7.  Insert screws one at a time as follows.

8.  Slide ONE of your chopsticks up a few inches while keeping the other three firmly in place along with your cooling block.

9.  Insert ONE screw (carefully) into the now vacant hole.  Just finger tighten it.

10.  Slide ONE other chopstick upward, the one diagonally across from the one you just slid up and replaced with a screw.

11.  Repeat with the remaining chopsticks (and screws).

12.  Then go back around diagonally tightening the screws a little at a time until they're all snug.

I found this method kept the water block much more solidly in place as I screwed it back down.  I had my wife help me as some of the steps above are better with more than two hands.

I suspect the jig would help with general application of any TIM but I've been wanting to give Liquid Pro a try so I did.  Everything I've read suggests it is in fact better than even the best pastes.

I'm going to let it run at PL 7 for a day, then 8 then 9.  So far, at PL 7 my results are great.  

Prior to application, I wasn't even able to run at PL 7 any more.  I had to step down to 5, eeking out 1.1 th or so with my "hot" CTA spiking up to 90C at which point I'd throttle back to PL 4 for a while.  Ugh.

Now, at PL 7 my "hot" CTA1 is at 60.4 - 43.75 (used to cook up to 90 or so at PL 5).

And my former "cool" CTA0 is at 61.68 - 52.41.

I'm very happy with that improvement.  I hope it continues to hold as I creep back to PL 9, which this machine hasn't seen in about a month.  

I noticed when applying regular pastes that they only worked for a short while.

We'll see.

PS.  I did use the scotch pad ever so slightly on the copper bottoms of the cooling blocks.  I figured some tiny micro scratches might help the bonding/curing process.

"... and the geeks shall inherit the earth."
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July 13, 2014, 12:55:36 AM
 #124

When did mine I bought four M3 screws 1.5 inch long cut the heads off and wrapped masking tape around each one (about 4.25mm) leaving 3/16 or so of threads showing. Screwed them in each hole and installed the water block. Removed one at a time and installed the hold down screws corner to corner finger tight. Then tightened them the rest of the way corner to corner 1/4 turn at a time.

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July 13, 2014, 04:57:35 PM
 #125

I like the screw based jig.  Maybe I'll head out to find some appropriate screws and shroud them with some tubing this afternoon.  I've only done 1 of my boards, so I have three more eventually to do.  Only one has temps above 80C at the moment but it would still be nice to have everyone in the 60s.  Better for the chips as well as hash/watt ratio.

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July 13, 2014, 05:23:20 PM
 #126

I like the screw based jig.  Maybe I'll head out to find some appropriate screws and shroud them with some tubing this afternoon.  I've only done 1 of my boards, so I have three more eventually to do.  Only one has temps above 80C at the moment but it would still be nice to have everyone in the 60s.  Better for the chips as well as hash/watt ratio.

The screws work great. Especially if you're doing it by yourself. I got mine at a local nut and bolt shop. Cost me a dollar for 8 of them. Just make sure you get M3 screws.
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July 14, 2014, 05:01:03 AM
Last edit: July 14, 2014, 05:27:31 AM by marvinmartian
 #127

The results on the machine I did yesterday have been great.  It's running nice and cool in the 60s.  So I thought I should deal with my other machine with the slowly rising board temp (gets into the 80s and 90s depending on various).  I still had all the parts and tools out on my bench and liked the idea of all my machines running with temps in the 60s.

Unfortunately, my local Lowes didn't have any M3 screws longer than 1/4" so I decided to use my chopstick jig again and wrap up this little project.  Managing these Cointerra rigs is getting to be a pain.

The application of Liquid Pro went smoothly, even better than yesterday.  I turned on the machine and everything seemed great.  Nice low temps in the 60s just as one might expect.  So I began cleaning up my workbench very much in a good mood.  Shortly after I noticed that only ONE of the machine's green "miner" LEDs was on.  Perhaps I forgot to plug in that (or some other)  cable, I thought.

I shut the machine down and took a look.  Nope, all the cables were in order.

Then I started the machine back up.

Both lights came on and by looking at the machine alone, everything seemed fine.

Then I went to the web interface.  This is where the bad news began.  I was showing one chip with temps in the 180s even spiking past 200C!  WTF?!?!?!?!

I immediately shut down the machine.  I had read on the CT forums about this before they took them down.  Folks were blaming it on wonky temp sensors.  I don't recall if there was ever a solution.

I cannot understand how this problem just somehow started.  Perhaps no good deed really does go unpunished as they say.

I took the water blocks off again to see if anything was amiss with the Liquid Pro.  To be honest, some did appear to spill over the edges of one or two of goldstrike chips.  So I cleaned them all up and put the blocks back on.

Started the machine and had the same problem.  Now, it was even worse.  Aside from the oddball temperature rating, CTA0 is no longer hashing ... or only occasionally.  It seems to be throttling back due to the extremely high (and likely bogus) temp reading.  For a few seconds after it throttles and tries to reset it will get a few hashes in and register some gH.  Then it throttles completely and does nothing.

I took the water blocks off again and CLEANED OFF ALL THE LIQUID PRO.  It's not so hard to get off when it's still liquid.  

I wanted to test how things might be if I went back to regular thermal past (Noctua).  So I reapplied the Noctua and put everything back together.

Started the machine again and still had the problem.  CTA0 won't hash because it thinks (maybe it's not crazy either) that one of the chips is overheating beyond the point of reason ... hence keeps throttling itself to 0.

I have no idea what's gone wrong.  One guess is that some little drop of Liquid Pro must have landed in a very inconvenient spot on the board.  I swabbed the whole thing down with no luck.  Plus I was very careful so I doubt this one.

Another idea is that these boards are just plain fragile as hell and that something got messed up by simply moving the water blocks on and off.  This doesn't explain how things appeared to be running great until the LED stopped and I restarted the machine.

Regardless, my formerly "good" machine is now my 1/2 dead machine and it's a major bummer.  I wish I had left everything alone and not even bothered with Liquid Pro now.

It seems as though the temp sensors are built into the chips and there appears to be nothing I can do to correct the issue.  Did I mention that it's a huge bummer?

Maybe I'll put my dead board up for sale on eBay.  I saw a guy parting his out not long ago and I wish I had grabbed it.

"... and the geeks shall inherit the earth."
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July 14, 2014, 05:28:00 AM
 #128

The results on the machine I did yesterday have been great.  It's running nice and cool in the 60s.  So I thought I should deal with my other machine with the slowly rising board temp (gets into the 80s and 90s depending on various).  I still had all the parts and tools out on my bench and liked the idea of all my machines running with temps in the 60s.

Unfortunately, my local Lowes didn't have any M3 screws longer than 1/4" so I decided to use my chopstick jig again and wrap up this little project.  Managing these Cointerra rigs is getting to be a pain.

The application of Liquid Pro went smoothly, even better than yesterday.  I turned on the machine and everything seemed great.  Nice low temps in the 60s just as one might expect.  So I began cleaning up my workbench very much in a good mood.  Shortly after I noticed that only ONE of the machine's green "miner" LEDs was on.  Perhaps I forgot to plug in that (or some other)  cable, I thought.

I shut the machine down and took a look.  Nope, all the cables were in order.

Then I started the machine back up.

Both lights came on and by looking at the machine alone, everything seemed fine.

Then I went to the web interface.  This is where the bad news began.  I was showing one chip with temps in the 180s even spiking past 200C!  WTF?!?!?!?!

I immediately shut down the machine.  I had read on the CT forums about this before they took them down.  Folks were blaming it on wonky temp sensors.  I don't recall if there was ever a solution.

I cannot understand how this problem just somehow started.  Perhaps no good deed really does go unpunished as they say.

I took the water blocks off again to see if anything was amiss with the Liquid Pro.  To be honest, some did appear to spill over the edges of one or two of goldstrike chips.  So I cleaned them all up and put the blocks back on.

Started the machine and had the same problem.  Now, it was even worse.  Aside from the oddball temperature rating, CTA0 is no longer hashing ... or only occasionally.  It seems to be throttling back due to the extremely high (and likely bogus) temp reading.  For a few seconds after it throttles and tries to reset it will get a few hashes in and register some gH.  Then it throttles completely and does nothing.

I took the water blocks off again and CLEANED OFF ALL THE LIQUID PRO.  It's not so hard to get off when it's still liquid.  

I wanted to test how things might be if I went back to regular thermal past (Noctua).  So I reapplied the Noctua and put everything back together.

Started the machine again and still had the problem.  CTA0 won't hash because it thinks (maybe it's not crazy either) that one of the chips is overheating beyond the point of reason ... hence keeps throttling itself to 0.

I have no idea what's gone wrong.  One guess is that some little drop of Liquid Pro must have landed in a very inconvenient spot on the board.  I swabbed the whole thing down with no luck.  Plus I was very careful.

Another idea is that these boards are just plain fragile as hell and that something just got messed up by simply moving the water blocks on and off.

Regardless, my formerly "good" machine is now my 1/2 dead machine and it's a major bummer.  I wish I had left everything alone and not even bothered with Liquid Pro now.

It seems as though the temp sensors are built into the chip somehow.  There appears to be nothing I can do to correct the issue.

Maybe I'll put my dead board up for sale on eBay.

I can say that I had mine drop a core from overheating twice after applying MX4. To much and it will overheat, to little and it will overheat. I just redid it till it came back. Also when you applied LP how much did you use? Did you apply it to both chips and block? When I did mine I used a little more than one syringe and put it on both.
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July 14, 2014, 05:34:33 AM
 #129

I can say that I had mine drop a core from overheating twice after applying MX4. To much and it will overheat, to little and it will overheat. I just redid it till it came back. Also when you applied LP how much did you use? Did you apply it to both chips and block? When I did mine I used a little more than one syringe and put it on both.

Well, I did the LP twice and one round of Noctua today.  No luck.

I applied only to the chips, just as I did on my other machine's board.  That machine is now running better than new.

I used about half the LP just as I did on my other machine (remember I'm only doing one board per machine, not an entire machine).  If I were to use any more it would definitely flow into the gaps.  It already did this today so I used a bit less on my 2nd round of LP application.

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July 14, 2014, 05:38:49 AM
 #130

I can say that I had mine drop a core from overheating twice after applying MX4. To much and it will overheat, to little and it will overheat. I just redid it till it came back. Also when you applied LP how much did you use? Did you apply it to both chips and block? When I did mine I used a little more than one syringe and put it on both.

Well, I did the LP twice and one round of Noctua today.  No luck.

I applied only to the chips, just as I did on my other machine's board.  That machine is now running better than new.

I used about half the LP just as I did on my other machine (remember I'm only doing one board per machine, not an entire machine).  If I were to use any more it would definitely flow into the gaps.  It already did this today so I used a bit less on my 2nd round of LP application.

I wonder if its not flowing right since you only applied it to the chip? I would try putting it on both. Also have you tried to power step it down to 1 to see if it will run a while before it overheats?
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July 14, 2014, 05:43:23 AM
 #131

I can say that I had mine drop a core from overheating twice after applying MX4. To much and it will overheat, to little and it will overheat. I just redid it till it came back. Also when you applied LP how much did you use? Did you apply it to both chips and block? When I did mine I used a little more than one syringe and put it on both.

Well, I did the LP twice and one round of Noctua today.  No luck.

I applied only to the chips, just as I did on my other machine's board.  That machine is now running better than new.

I used about half the LP just as I did on my other machine (remember I'm only doing one board per machine, not an entire machine).  If I were to use any more it would definitely flow into the gaps.  It already did this today so I used a bit less on my 2nd round of LP application.

I wonder if its not flowing right since you only applied it to the chip? I would try putting it on both. Also have you tried to power step it down to 1 to see if it will run a while before it overheats?

Well on the 2nd application I left the LP on the water block.  I was even able to get it all nice and smooth on there in precisely the right spots.  So on my 2nd attempt, I did in fact have LP on the blocks.  Plus as I observed, a bit of LP was already getting between the gaps on application #1.  So more LP will just make things worse.

Also, the thing is behaving the same way with LP and Noctua NT-H1.

Something has become a bit more permanently effed up now.  ;-(

Yes, I tried PL 1.  The temps are still way out of whack (200C).  Power stepping doesn't seem to affect that one chip's temp at all.  I don't think the chip is actually that hot.  I think the temp sensor on one of the chips is hopelessly effed up.  Either way, the machine is totally gimped whereas it had been my "good box" since day one.

Also, when it throttles and tries to reset, it registers NEGATIVE TEMPS for the other chips for a second or two  Methinks some math is getting messed up in their firmware.

My other chips, however, all appear in the 30s.  I'm guessing this is because they're not hashing (ie., throttled).  But can one chip throttle the other 7?  Even the 4 on the other board?

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July 14, 2014, 06:00:26 AM
 #132

I can say that I had mine drop a core from overheating twice after applying MX4. To much and it will overheat, to little and it will overheat. I just redid it till it came back. Also when you applied LP how much did you use? Did you apply it to both chips and block? When I did mine I used a little more than one syringe and put it on both.

Well, I did the LP twice and one round of Noctua today.  No luck.

I applied only to the chips, just as I did on my other machine's board.  That machine is now running better than new.

I used about half the LP just as I did on my other machine (remember I'm only doing one board per machine, not an entire machine).  If I were to use any more it would definitely flow into the gaps.  It already did this today so I used a bit less on my 2nd round of LP application.

I wonder if its not flowing right since you only applied it to the chip? I would try putting it on both. Also have you tried to power step it down to 1 to see if it will run a while before it overheats?

Well on the 2nd application I left the LP on the water block.  I was even able to get it all nice and smooth on there in precisely the right spots.  So on my 2nd attempt, I did in fact have LP on the blocks.  Plus as I observed, a bit of LP was already getting between the gaps on application #1.  So more LP will just make things worse.

Also, the thing is behaving the same way with LP and Noctua NT-H1.

Something has become a bit more permanently effed up now.  ;-(

Yes, I tried PL 1.  The temps are still way out of whack (200C).  Power stepping doesn't seem to affect that one chip's temp at all.  I don't think the chip is actually that hot.  I think the temp sensor on one of the chips is hopelessly effed up.  Either way, the machine is totally gimped whereas it had been my "good box" since day one.

Also, when it throttles and tries to reset, it registers NEGATIVE TEMPS for the other chips for a second or two  Methinks some math is getting messed up in their firmware.

My other chips, however, all appear in the 30s.  I'm guessing this is because they're not hashing (ie., throttled).  But can one chip throttle the other 7?  Even the 4 on the other board?

Well I can say when mine overheated it read low temps 40°C. I will say this, when they overheated they shut off before I got the GUI opened up. As for throttling, mine throttles ever since firmware upgrade 0.7.6. It still throttles with temps in the 50-60's.
 
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July 14, 2014, 06:27:02 AM
 #133

I have faced many problems with my machines... half board not working, 1 core not runing, water pump showing 0 flow rate.

I did some experiments over the past week, and your +- 200C problem happened to me once and only once:---   Did you switch the 3-pin cable connections of your 2 water blocks on the board?  (i.e. the bottom water block takes power from the the top, and the top block taking power from the bottom) 

The water blocks HAVE to take power from the exact 3-pin supply that it was originally shipped, that's how the board communicate with the block and check the temperature.  If you mess with 3-pin cables, the board will get confused.
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July 14, 2014, 07:58:03 AM
 #134

I have faced many problems with my machines... half board not working, 1 core not runing, water pump showing 0 flow rate.

I did some experiments over the past week, and your +- 200C problem happened to me once and only once:---   Did you switch the 3-pin cable connections of your 2 water blocks on the board?  (i.e. the bottom water block takes power from the the top, and the top block taking power from the bottom) 

The water blocks HAVE to take power from the exact 3-pin supply that it was originally shipped, that's how the board communicate with the block and check the temperature.  If you mess with 3-pin cables, the board will get confused.

I'm 99% sure the cables coming from the water blocks are for reporting pump speed and nothing more.  You can verify this by unplugging them and starting up your machine.  It will run pretty much as normal but there will be no pump speed reported on the status page.

Just for fun, I tried your switch.  No difference.  Same problems.

Regardless, I did have all the cables connected exactly as they were. 

It seems like some kind of sensor mapping / byte issue in the firmware.  IE., the high temp will shoot up to +300C (or some other unrealistic number) then the next second the lowest temp is -300C.  It flip flops and if you're unlucky landing on the + side you stay throttled until it flips to a minus reading.  If the chip really did get to 300C it would likely burn out.  So ...

The negative temp reading was discussed on the CT forums.  I'm not sure if anyone discovered a workaround. 

It might be, in my case, that I had the extreme misfortune of a tiny bit of LP shorting out or otherwise messing up one of the temp sensors on one of the goldstrike chips.  Now it's borked and can't be reset to behave normally.  And as of right now, that spells GAME OVER for the entire board ... along with the other seven chips.

I'm back to hating CT again.  The machines are way too fragile for the $$$ we paid for them.

"... and the geeks shall inherit the earth."
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July 14, 2014, 09:19:03 AM
 #135

Let me share my experience with you see if helpful.

I got quite a few machines with 1 core (i.e. 4 chips) dead, temperature at 50C, pump speed at 0, not hashing.  So the machines are hashing at 1200 TH/s max at step 9.

I am so upsat about this, and have tested so many times and have identified which core was the faulty core on one of my machines.  I found one very special hint, that when I swap the top water block 3-pin cable with the bottom water block, the machine fires back to 1600 TH/s, very very briefly for like 3 seconds ... but the temperature reading reads +200C or something like that.  Also, the row of orange chaser lights suddenly showed a "special" red light.  Guess nothing is good about red light usually haha, so I shut off the machine and swap back the 3-pin cables to it's original connection ... everything back to normal.

Now, it hinted me that the chips were not dead, the board was not dead, and if i tricked the board to believe that the water block was runing, it will run.  So, I suspect it must be something wrong with the water block !!!

So, I went off the the computer and bought myself the cheapest water blcok available, and spend the whole weekend learning how to install a water block.  I remove the faulty water block with the new block.  Guess what ..... it did start for a while back on with 2 chips in the faulty core !!!!! big improvement already.... now I see that pump speed was only 1000 RPM, I was guessing that because it is too hot so only 2 chips ran.  I step down to power step 6 .... now guess what, the machine hashes with all 16 chips !!! which it had not done so for over 2 weeks !!!  The pump IS the problem.  So I went off and bought myself some higher grade water blocks!!! Since it was out of stock ... now I'm waiting for the new block to arrive and will further test, but it is looking good, as I have successfully revitalized the dead chips albit could only run at step 6 (the whole board, even the good core, shuts as soon as i step up to step 7).


Now I see your problem, I hesitate to apply the Liquid Pro, which I have just received today.

But anyway, if your problem is only with 1 chip, you can remove the 3-pin power to that specific faulty water block, it powers it off, trust me, I have done this.  If it's stopped, that core will not start (there will be reading, but it is not hashing without the cooling system going online), then the good core can still run happily without being affected by the bad core, at least you get 4 chips back.

Mattster28
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July 14, 2014, 04:05:02 PM
 #136

For you guys that are thinking of trying Liquid Pro stop and think about this for a minute. When you go to spread Liquid Pro to the chips you will see it takes a little work to get it to cover the chip. Once you have a thin layer on the chips and you apply a little to the center you will see it flow across the chip. So what's going to happen if you don't apply it to the water block also? Its going to push the Liquid Pro off the sides of the chip instead of flowing between them like it should. You need to break the surface tension on both the chips and the water block by spreading just enough to cover each then putting a drop in the center of the chip before assembling it. Measure out where it needs to be if you can't see the outline of the chips on the bottom of the water block. Last thing you want is for the water block to push it somewhere its not supposed to be. Not sure where this applying it just to the chip came from. Liquid Pro is NOT like regular thermal paste it HAS to be spread!
marvinmartian
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July 14, 2014, 04:05:15 PM
 #137

Yeah, these machines were barely out of beta testing IMHO and they shipped them to us anyway.  I can only imagine how many little hacks and tricks have gone on both in hardware AND software just to get them running in the first place (from the factory).

Now we all have this very delicate machines that can go haywire for the most nonsensical reason.

I doubt it's the pump.  This machine has run perfectly for more than three months.  It was "elective" surgery I performed on it yesterday as one of the cores would sometimes get up to 90C.  Inspired by my initial success with Liquid Pro I thought I'd give it a go.  As I said in my post about it, I had all the tools and everything laid out on my bench so why not, right?

All I did was apply Liquid Pro.  It actually ran perfectly for about 30 min.  Only after I noticed one of the green LEDs wasn't on did this most recent nonsense happen.  Yes, I too have the red light.  I'm pretty sure that's just the board telling me I have a bad chip.  Since the temp sensors are somehow integrated into those chips ... the problem is compounded.

If you have an ASIC chip go out and the temp sensor remain in tact, you're ok.  You'll just hash with one less ASIC.

If you have an ASIC chip go out and the temp sensor gets messed up to, then you're in for a world of pain.  

It is truly annoying.  I hope the class action suit drives CT into bankruptcy.  I bought mine just after November 1 so I'm SOL for that myself.

If they had just made it so you can remove individual ASIC chips all our lives would be better.  Shit, there'd be a market for buying and selling just the damn chips.

I'm sure I'll waste more time on it today and the rest of this week.  It's so aggravating words can't express.

"... and the geeks shall inherit the earth."
marvinmartian
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July 14, 2014, 04:09:06 PM
 #138

For you guys that are thinking of trying Liquid Pro stop and think about this for a minute. When you go to spread Liquid Pro to the chips you will see it takes a little work to get it to cover the chip. Once you have a thin layer on the chips and you apply a little to the center you will see it flow across the chip. So what's going to happen if you don't apply it to the water block also? Its going to push the Liquid Pro off the sides of the chip instead of flowing between them like it should. You need to break the surface tension on both the chips and the water block by spreading just enough to cover each then putting a drop in the center off the chip before assembling it. Measure out where it needs to be if you can't see the outline of the chips on the bottom of the water block. Last thing you want is for the water block to push it somewhere its not supposed to be. Not sure where this applying it just to the chip came from. Liquid Pro is NOT like regular thermal paste it HAS to be spread!

That's a good point.  But ...

1.  The first machine I did this with is working flawlessly.  Maybe I just got lucky.

2.  The second machine was running fine, until whatever episode happened that led to my current situation.  But when I re-applied LP to the 2nd machine I did have it on the water block too.  

It could be that the damage was done once the LP oozed out past the chip die edge and shorted or caused whatever havoc.

I'd generally agree with you though.  If anyone goes down the risky LP road they should apply it to the cooling block too.  It doesn't need much.  Just "paint" enough on there to break the surface tension so that, as you observe, it will bond with the LP on your goldstrike chips.

However, a little bit of LP oozing over the edge of your chip should not wreak such havoc with the motherboard.

"... and the geeks shall inherit the earth."
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July 14, 2014, 10:35:22 PM
Last edit: July 15, 2014, 12:18:55 AM by marvinmartian
 #139

An update ...

Spent all day trying to get the board back to normal.  No dice.  One of the ASIC chips is fried (only reports 7 dies on the advanced stats page) and the temp sensor is mangled along with it.  I still get swings from +300C do -300C.  But after many reboots and other attempts, it's mostly reading negative low temps right now.  So it gets some hashing in.  Currently:

Core Temp 1 (°C)   65.22   48.64   54.80
Core Temp 2 (°C)   46.94   -216.28   -22.62

I have a hunch that -216.28 actually means 21C (the temp on the dead chip) and that 310C means 31C.  At someplace below 28C it reports a negative value (times -10) and somewhere above 30C it reports as a positive value (times 10) ... that's my guess based on what I've been seeing.  Those scalar multiples may not be exact of course.

So I'm trying to keep the board as cool as possible for now in the hopes I can use SOME of CTA0.

"... and the geeks shall inherit the earth."
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July 15, 2014, 12:19:11 AM
 #140

you scared the hell out of me ... just received my liquid pro yesterday, and some thermal pads too from coollab

i hasitate to apply now ...

btw, how many chips can one syringe of liquid pro cover?? I only got 1 syringe and doubt it would be enough even for one machine ...
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