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Topic: 2 BFL 60gh in cold weather (Read 2000 times)

full member
Activity: 167
Merit: 100
December 11, 2013, 04:05:43 AM
#21
BFL units run WAY cooler w/ the covers taken off and a larger fan used on them will keep noise down.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
December 10, 2013, 08:47:29 PM
#20
I need to make room for my sister and there's no room left in the house to put these mining rigs because they make so much noise. I was wondering if it would be okay if I put them outside in one of these expensive pre-built sheds that kind of looks like a mini house. It has electricity and snow never gets inside it. I'm just worried it'll get too cold, I live in upstate ny. I was thinking of setting up the 2 bfl's and have a crappy laptop right in front of it so the laptop doesn't get cold. Would this work?

Allow me to fix your thinking for you.

Buy a sleeping bag and put the sister in the shed.

Nothing personal.  Just business!

Wink

and the sleeping bag will be included into the hardware cost?  Grin

Why not?

Just another cost of doing business!

Wink
newbie
Activity: 37
Merit: 0
December 10, 2013, 07:30:37 PM
#19
I need to make room for my sister and there's no room left in the house to put these mining rigs because they make so much noise. I was wondering if it would be okay if I put them outside in one of these expensive pre-built sheds that kind of looks like a mini house. It has electricity and snow never gets inside it. I'm just worried it'll get too cold, I live in upstate ny. I was thinking of setting up the 2 bfl's and have a crappy laptop right in front of it so the laptop doesn't get cold. Would this work?

Allow me to fix your thinking for you.

Buy a sleeping bag and put the sister in the shed.

Nothing personal.  Just business!

Wink

and the sleeping bag will be included into the hardware cost?  Grin
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
December 10, 2013, 04:40:13 PM
#18
I need to make room for my sister and there's no room left in the house to put these mining rigs because they make so much noise. I was wondering if it would be okay if I put them outside in one of these expensive pre-built sheds that kind of looks like a mini house. It has electricity and snow never gets inside it. I'm just worried it'll get too cold, I live in upstate ny. I was thinking of setting up the 2 bfl's and have a crappy laptop right in front of it so the laptop doesn't get cold. Would this work?

Allow me to fix your thinking for you.

Buy a sleeping bag and put the sister in the shed.

Nothing personal.  Just business!

Wink
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
December 10, 2013, 04:37:04 PM
#17
I'm running a bunch of rigs in my garage in -40. No problems just nice cool GPU's mining loads of sexcoins Smiley
member
Activity: 66
Merit: 10
December 10, 2013, 03:56:24 PM
#16
Don't know how cold you are talking about.

I would think twice and research it more if I were to do it, but I am in Monteal, it's common to average -10, we see as low as -30

I would worry about it at -30.

As someone else said, as long as it's dry and above -5, I think it should be fine
hero member
Activity: 1246
Merit: 501
December 10, 2013, 05:46:25 AM
#15
Will be fine.  Electronics run outside all the time (traffic lights controllers, FiOS cabinets,  CCTV cameras).   

Heck, in my old house I ran my server in the attic, and it had temps between -25C and 50C, server ran fine for 3 years like that, apart from a little surface rust on the edges of the elcheapo case.   It ran 8 drives, and I never lost one.  Only stopped using that machine as it was old and slow (Pentium 3 class Celeron 1GHz, 8x160GB Seagate IDE drives, 1GB RAM).
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
December 10, 2013, 02:55:13 AM
#14
Did you know there is usually more moisture in the air in your house than outside in the winter? Yet your stuff runs fine.

People throw around "condensation" without know what they are talking about. Ever see moisture condense on the outside of a hot cup of coffee? What about the outside of a cold glass of milk? Think about it.
I mined my gpu's outside 2 years ago for months on end. The only problem I had with them was it actually got too cold sometimes, starting around -15C/5F. Some of my heatpipe-based gpu coolers actually froze up, so they couldn't transfer heat effectively. But otherwise, no, there was no condensation problems, because that's not how physics work.

Damn you.... i was having fun with the noobs....

Arrggg thanks for ruining it.


Look ma.... condensation on your forehead , stop walking outside pls.
sr. member
Activity: 356
Merit: 250
Dock.io
December 10, 2013, 01:31:11 AM
#13
I would tell my sister to fuc*ing deal with it!  (and then buy here a gyftcard)  Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 1344
Merit: 1004
December 09, 2013, 11:40:36 PM
#12
Did you know there is usually more moisture in the air in your house than outside in the winter? Yet your stuff runs fine.

People throw around "condensation" without know what they are talking about. Ever see moisture condense on the outside of a hot cup of coffee? What about the outside of a cold glass of milk? Think about it.
I mined my gpu's outside 2 years ago for months on end. The only problem I had with them was it actually got too cold sometimes, starting around -15C/5F. Some of my heatpipe-based gpu coolers actually froze up, so they couldn't transfer heat effectively. But otherwise, no, there was no condensation problems, because that's not how physics work.
donator
Activity: 686
Merit: 519
It's for the children!
December 09, 2013, 09:47:16 PM
#11
The only thing I would worry about is moisture, might not be a bad idea to put some plastic wrap as a sort of tent around them, but otherwise if your WiFi reaches out there you should be good to go.  I wouldn't worry about them getting "too cold"

what does moisture have anything to do with this?

please dont make me laugh.... seriously.


condensation aka moisture is water which is bad for most electrical devices.
LOL

see i told you dont make me laugh....

Do you know how condensation is formed?




Don't do it.   It's going to be a sh*t show with facts and learning and stuff.

The fans in the device will pull in dust and moisture (and hair) and blow it over the cooling fins.  Some of that air will also flow around the PCB leaving some (water particles) moisture and dust/dirt/grime/whatever the F people make into a particulate around their house shed garage etc.  This gums up cooling fans and can cause issues if the board gets a coating.  especially if you get a good moist dusty bunny coating and then the device turns off making it ice up and then heats up again and "doesn't like it."

That is All.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
December 09, 2013, 08:50:16 PM
#10
The only thing I would worry about is moisture, might not be a bad idea to put some plastic wrap as a sort of tent around them, but otherwise if your WiFi reaches out there you should be good to go.  I wouldn't worry about them getting "too cold"

what does moisture have anything to do with this?

please dont make me laugh.... seriously.


condensation aka moisture is water which is bad for most electrical devices.
LOL

see i told you dont make me laugh....

Do you know how condensation is formed?


legendary
Activity: 2800
Merit: 1012
Get Paid Crypto To Walk or Drive
December 09, 2013, 08:21:39 PM
#9
The only thing I would worry about is moisture, might not be a bad idea to put some plastic wrap as a sort of tent around them, but otherwise if your WiFi reaches out there you should be good to go.  I wouldn't worry about them getting "too cold"

what does moisture have anything to do with this?

please dont make me laugh.... seriously.


condensation aka moisture is water which is bad for most electrical devices.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
December 09, 2013, 07:49:37 PM
#8
The only thing I would worry about is moisture, might not be a bad idea to put some plastic wrap as a sort of tent around them, but otherwise if your WiFi reaches out there you should be good to go.  I wouldn't worry about them getting "too cold"

what does moisture have anything to do with this?

please dont make me laugh.... seriously.
donator
Activity: 686
Merit: 519
It's for the children!
December 09, 2013, 06:23:38 PM
#7
I need to make room for my sister and there's no room left in the house to put these mining rigs because they make so much noise. I was wondering if it would be okay if I put them outside in one of these expensive pre-built sheds that kind of looks like a mini house. It has electricity and snow never gets inside it. I'm just worried it'll get too cold, I live in upstate ny. I was thinking of setting up the 2 bfl's and have a crappy laptop right in front of it so the laptop doesn't get cold. Would this work?

WTF.  I've seen BFL's left outside, in garages, in sheds, etc.   Seems like a great idea.  (not so much)

legendary
Activity: 1960
Merit: 1062
One coin to rule them all
December 09, 2013, 05:00:07 PM
#6
thanks, I just thought about it more, I think I'll put it in the garage and throw up some tarps around it, so no snow gets to it.

I would also be a bit carfull with the tarps, be sure its not completely enclosing the device, since the chassis itself is important to release heat - so you need some space "like a tent" as mentioned before.
legendary
Activity: 1960
Merit: 1062
One coin to rule them all
December 09, 2013, 04:57:23 PM
#5
If you live in a area high with humidity I would be a bit worried about condense. You have to make sure that the device has a constant temperature, and should not be cold when you start it up outside. The laptop might get some problems if the temperature goes below 0 degree Celsius, since most consumer items are not designed for sub zero environment, I believe the harddrive and LCD would be compromised.  
newbie
Activity: 34
Merit: 0
December 09, 2013, 04:50:24 PM
#4
thanks, I just thought about it more, I think I'll put it in the garage and throw up some tarps around it, so no snow gets to it.
legendary
Activity: 2800
Merit: 1012
Get Paid Crypto To Walk or Drive
December 09, 2013, 04:43:25 PM
#3
The only thing I would worry about is moisture, might not be a bad idea to put some plastic wrap as a sort of tent around them, but otherwise if your WiFi reaches out there you should be good to go.  I wouldn't worry about them getting "too cold"
newbie
Activity: 34
Merit: 0
December 09, 2013, 04:41:14 PM
#2
or maybe the garage? I kind of don't want to put it in the garage because when I open the garage door, snow will blow inside.
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