Papipapito
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October 10, 2011, 01:47:36 PM |
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trippp
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October 12, 2011, 02:58:59 PM |
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2 Machines,
1- Pentium 4 with a 5830 @ 900/300 2- Core 2 Duo with Gigabyte 6950 oc unlocked @900/300 and 5850 @900/300
Why don't you stick all three cards in one of them? No spare PCIe-slots?
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Papipapito
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October 13, 2011, 01:15:54 PM |
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2 Machines,
1- Pentium 4 with a 5830 @ 900/300 2- Core 2 Duo with Gigabyte 6950 oc unlocked @900/300 and 5850 @900/300
Why don't you stick all three cards in one of them? No spare PCIe-slots? Hello The cost of Electricity is 0€ (datacenter of my work) Cost of Pentium 4 machine 0,1€ (obsolete machines of my work) The mobo of core2 support a pci x1, but the case of to small for 3 cards, and the machine without case not is possible , solution... other machine. and the next card mount into other Pentium 4 a 0.01€ cost , the AC power is the 300W but the 5830 work fine.
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mikethebodacious
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October 15, 2011, 02:14:57 AM |
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One of three rigs: -AMD Sempron 140 CPU -G-Skill 2GB DDR3 RAM -Gigabyte 990FX-UD3 (great motherboard, cheap and has good PCI-E layout) -Western Digital 80GB Hard Drive (WD800JD) -AMD Radeon HD 5970s (the new OEM ones that came out, solid overclockers) -Cougar GX-1050 (great efficiency and rail design, only has 6 PCI-E cables though) I have 3 Scythe Slipstream 120mm 1900RPM fans blowing cold air down on the GPU chips, they make a huge difference in VRM temps so the cards don't throttle down. These fans are quite amazing, great price, great CFM, and acceptable dBA (nowhere near my 5970s @ 70% fan speed). I also have a Honeywell table fan circulating the air. The whole rig and cooling solution only uses 700 watts so mining is still profitable, for long-term mining I focused on energy efficiency first and foremost (even over cooling or hash rate). This rig does 1520MH/sec (380 MH/sec for each GPU core). It sure doesn't look pretty but it gets the job done, the mobo is laying on some computer case sides from junked computers I found by the dumpster
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Big Time Coin
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October 19, 2011, 08:37:47 AM |
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Wow cool that is a nice setup - where do you intake/exhaust the power supply fans though? How many psu are you using?
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Big time, I'm on my way I'm making it, big time, oh yes - Peter Gabriel
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m3sSh3aD
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October 19, 2011, 08:54:44 AM |
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The Catfish Bitcoin Mining Shelf Rig Mk II - nearly complete: Remaining things to do - remove CD-ROM (was only there for installing Linux on the three boards), screw in another wooden support for the hard drives, secure the PSUs where they currently sit (under the temporary boarding that the HDs sit on), and add two front doors - open mesh (like a rabbit hutch) or perspex frame with a single row of PC case fans horizontally down the centre, to blow air *onto* the top of the GPUs. The aim is to get a furniture-like modular piece that can be moved anywhere and vents the majority of the hot air upwards, where it could be collected in an airbox and extracted using an extractor fan (or used to heat the house). This one is consuming 2000W at the wall and is running really cool for air - haven't started overclocking in earnest yet but there's loads of headroom to come. I've finally come to a design I'm satisfied with, and will be rebuilding my Mk I Shelf Rig into the same design (I've got another two boards and 12 cards to use)... Catfish my man Looking nice indeed. Them cards look really close, sure heat isnt a issue..... What are them cards? i can see the wood blocking some of the air holes on some of them completly (to the left), I can see issues man YOu got me itching want make another one now
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m3sSh3aD
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October 20, 2011, 09:44:58 AM |
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I dont know anything about these things (not much anyways, is it ASIC?FPGA? heard a few acranims). Can you lead me to some info on this kind of thing as im very interested but dont understand how it all works etc. I want to know Thanks
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fizzisist
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October 20, 2011, 07:26:26 PM Last edit: October 21, 2011, 10:15:41 AM by fizzisist |
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I dont know anything about these things (not much anyways, is it ASIC?FPGA? heard a few acranims). Can you lead me to some info on this kind of thing as im very interested but dont understand how it all works etc. I want to know Thanks It's an FPGA miner. There are two FPGAs on the board (Spartan 6 LX150-3) and they communicate with the computer over USB. We designed this board and will be selling it very soon. ^^ With similar curiosity - I have two questions only:
1. How much does a complete kit cost (i.e. board, heatsinks, necessary special cables, etc.)?
2. Can I run the mining software on a pool without needing to know VHDL or assembly-level code?
Actually, there's a third question. Assuming that this is an FPGA board, and from the hash rate you quote, it sounds like a fairly decent spec FPGA - how much does the software licence cost in order to load the BTC Miner gate logic onto the FPGA? I don't know much about this level of engineering, but have heard many stories about requiring proprietary software to load your own 'code' onto the FPGA itself, and that this proprietary software costs an absolute fortune.
Good questions! 1. The basic board is $610 $580, including heatsinks. You need only a USB mini B cable and a spare Molex "peripheral" power connector, or a basic AC adapter (aka wall wart). The boards along with cables and power supplies will be for sale on Cablesaurus.com. 2. Running the software is as easy as running phoenix or similar mining software. You just have to download the code and plug it in. Right now, the software isn't as slick as phoenix or especially GUI miner, but that should get better with time. 3. You only need an expensive software license if you want to develop new VHDL/Verilog code. The Xilinx software will synthesize the source code into a "bitstream" that is loaded onto the FPGA. The bitstream is the equivalent of a binary for a computer. As long as someone else will build the bitstream for you (we will), you have no need for the expensive software. The best place for information is the thread: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=40058.0
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m3sSh3aD
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October 21, 2011, 08:59:04 AM Last edit: October 21, 2011, 04:53:10 PM by m3sSh3aD |
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So yours is basically 2 of these on 1 card? http://shop.ztex.de/product_info.php?products_id=66&language=enThere excellent little things but there massivly expensive even with there small ££££ per joul/hour. Weird this popped up as a friend of mine messaged me yesterday about using a JTAG'd xbox 360 with these things. It as a very powerful 3 core processor that workd simalar to the G4/G5 PowerPC chip also which is what catfish was saying be interesting use. Im a little over my head but im following @Catfish - I just noticed how close the cards are means that your extenders are REALLY close, wont you suffer from interfierence? I did with mine a little and had to sort it out with some 'protection/shielding' on the cables. Just a thought if you get some unusal readings on any of the cards
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likuidxd
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October 23, 2011, 09:33:35 PM |
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MSI Big Bang Marshal B3 w/ 8x 5870's running BAMT 3.2GHs
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stellan0r
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October 24, 2011, 04:53:34 PM |
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MSI Big Bang Marshal B3 w/ 8x 5870's running BAMT 3.2GHs Temperature and noise must be insane... Looks like meltdown to me if run on full power
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Allgemeine Gesundheitsberatung gegen Bitcoin-Zahlung. Bei Fragen einfach eine PM schicken! If you want to send a thank you: BTC "1PZJvKvarRviQRQWejpvXW2j4e1xbT8MZb"
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likuidxd
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October 24, 2011, 06:50:16 PM Last edit: October 25, 2011, 01:23:32 PM by likuidxd |
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MSI Big Bang Marshal B3 w/ 8x 5870's running BAMT 3.2GHs
whats the price per slot ? Not quite sure what you mean by this
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likuidxd
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October 24, 2011, 06:54:05 PM Last edit: October 25, 2011, 01:23:53 PM by likuidxd |
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MSI Big Bang Marshal B3 w/ 8x 5870's running BAMT 3.2GHs
Temperature and noise must be insane... Looks like meltdown to me if run on full power Noise is insane, fans are at 75%. GPU cores hover at only 60C though, not bad! There are 3 3000rpm fans at the intake of the cards. They do run at full power +, the 5870's are clocked at 900/600 and output is power is ~ 1550W, 124V & 15A. Still tweaking a lot to get power consumption down on the board, cpu and ram but for now I'm pretty satisfied at 2.06 Hashes per watt
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Transisto
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October 25, 2011, 04:34:22 AM Last edit: October 25, 2011, 04:46:20 AM by Transisto |
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Please remove images when using quotes.
Noise is insane, fans are at 75%. GPU cores hover at only 60C though, not bad! There are 3 3000rpm fans at the intake of the cards. They do run at full power +, the 5870's are clocked at 900/600 and output is power is ~ 1550W, 124V & 15A. Still tweaking a lot to get power consumption down on the board, cpu and ram but for now I'm pretty satisfied at 2.06 Hashes per watt
This is a really neat setup. My 5870 2gb run cool at 40% fan speed, To spread the card I suggest that you use a smaller heatsink and place a GPU over it, then add a 2nd extender to the card on the right, (use shielded extender and provide 12v to it) Did you feed any riser with 12v ?
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likuidxd
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October 25, 2011, 01:34:01 PM Last edit: October 25, 2011, 07:37:20 PM by likuidxd |
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Please remove images when using quotes.
Noise is insane, fans are at 75%. GPU cores hover at only 60C though, not bad! There are 3 3000rpm fans at the intake of the cards. They do run at full power +, the 5870's are clocked at 900/600 and output is power is ~ 1550W, 124V & 15A. Still tweaking a lot to get power consumption down on the board, cpu and ram but for now I'm pretty satisfied at 2.06 Hashes per watt
This is a really neat setup. My 5870 2gb run cool at 40% fan speed, To spread the card I suggest that you use a smaller heatsink and place a GPU over it, then add a 2nd extender to the card on the right, (use shielded extender and provide 12v to it) Did you feed any riser with 12v ? I don't feed any risers with 12v molex. I may use a lower profile heatsink later, that was one I had sitting around. I can lower the fan speeds 25% and get on 5-8 degrees higher, but it is in my utility room so I really don't notice it. Why add a second powered riser? I've been curios as to what these are used for.
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Transisto
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October 25, 2011, 08:44:59 PM |
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Why add a second powered riser? I've been curios as to what these are used for.
I'm really curious to see what would happen in the long run. Touch the single 12v wire going to your motherboard connector to see if it's hot, It may be providing ~45 watt per GPU, or 30 amp on one wire. (rated for ~8amp) (45w according to http://blog.zorinaq.com/?e=42 using 5970) I personally use powered extender when going past 5 gpus.
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likuidxd
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October 25, 2011, 09:01:50 PM |
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Why add a second powered riser? I've been curios as to what these are used for.
I'm really curious to see what would happen in the long run. Touch the single 12v wire going to your motherboard connector to see if it's hot, It may be providing ~45 watt per GPU, or 30 amp on one wire. (rated for ~8amp) (45w according to http://blog.zorinaq.com/?e=42 using 5970) I personally use powered extender when going past 5 gpus. I'll check it out when I get home, you've got me curious now. This board does allow me to run 2, 8 pin 12V ATX power. I don't have the second plugged in right now, never thought about it
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