Has anyone experimented with running an s19j with one of its boards actually taken out? I've heard that this setup usually leads to cooling problems in older models, but I managed to do it during the winter without any issues at all.
What do you all think? Any experiences to share?
Testing an s19 with a board taken out
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farm_stakeMember
Posts: 17 · Reputation: 214
#2Oct 14, 2020, 10:12 AM
I am researching this topic.
Can you share more about your experience doing it?
What was the power draw? Efficiency about the same as running the full unit?
Would love to find a way to control just a single s19 hashboard with my Apllo controller.
Running with missing one hashboard, is not good idea if you don't have very good anbient temp ... with only two, the pressure of fan is droping, so, drop cooling efficiency ...
this reflextion is available for ALL miners
Spot on and merit given for that. Just like any fluid, (yes, for flow modeling air is considered a fluid) air flows through the path of least resistance so putting a large gap in the system means most of the air is going to flow through the gap and that drastically reduces airflow over and through the heatsinks.
There is also an easy kludge to get around that problem: In place of the removed hash board, put a sheet of fireproof rigid fiberglass with the same dimensions as the board into where it was. That should re-balance the airflow over the heatsinks on the boards still in the miner.
coin_sigmaLegendary
Posts: 1275 · Reputation: 5553
#5Oct 14, 2020, 04:23 PM
Are you talking about the controller from Futurebit Apollo controller?
I think each s19 hashboard can draw around 900w to 1100w and efficiency depends on how you overclock or underclock the unit. I don't know to those who make modified firmware how they succeed in modifying firmware with a high hash rate and efficiency.
Got a driver the the ASIC used in a s19? I doubt it...
There there is the issue of the Apollo miner code being closed source so even if you did write a driver for the chip ya still cannot edit the Apollo code to use it.
There are about 800 s19 110t in my mine, and some of them only have two hashboards working due to maintenance reasons. They have been running normally for two months without any issues.
Thank you for the only useful reply. Talked to some other people on the issue and they said the same
All that these fine gentlemen said is true, it's simple physics which nobody can argue about, but (a big one) the effect of removing one hash board isn't exactly that huge, the impact on temps isn't all that bad, the two boards will run cooler if a 3rd dead hashboard is there (better airflow + the heatsinks on the head board will absorb some of the heat from the other working hash boards), but the two boards will still run cool enough regardless, they do get less airflow compared to a full miner, but the heat that was generated by the 3rd board is no longer there which helps to balance things out.
I tried that on tens of S9s, the effect on temps is little to nothing, nothing major that had me modify anything, so really, the only way to know would be to test your miner, do a before and after test, I highly doubt the temps will vary widely, but just to be safe.
No shit captain obvious, thanks for repeating the same shit as everyone else and not addressing my original question of a single board specifically removed from an s19j. Locking topic so you reply guys can get your post count up on different threads