Hey everyone!
I'm Lightfoot, and I've spent the last few weeks boosting my Jalapeno from 5gh to 7.3gh to 20gh and hopefully by this weekend to 28gh. A thread on this is over here, and I'm having fun with it:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/hacking-a-bfl-jalapeno-to-32gh-and-beyond-336782So I'm starting to get a good understanding of these boards. And I have a concern forming in my head for people with the Singles, specifically the 60gh ones.
Basically people have been hacking the Jallies to boost performance by overclocking. Which is fine; the Jallies were built on little_single boards and have a lot of room to play in. You can run them at higher clocks, leave dead engines online (they use full power and heat for nothing), and so forth in the quest to wring out the max hashes.
You can even be nuts like me and stick more chips on your Jally. I'm up to 5 chips now, going to 7, and I have learned a lot. You can tweak a Jally. It's fun and all that. But note this carefully, it is my opinion that:
YOU CAN'T DO THIS WITH A 30GH SINGLE OR A 60GH UNIT.
Here's my thoughts and reasons why:
The Singles appear to be similar to the little_single boards with updated FETs, more heat sinks, and of course 16 chips capacity. They both use the same 1 volt power supply to power the main part of the hashing chips, and each chip pulls 12-13 watts, which at 1 volt is 12-13 amps. Normally. When you overclock, they pull a lot more power, and I have seen this by greatly increased temps, which means more heat. Heat comes from only two places: Volcanoes under your mining rig, and the chips burning more power. It's usually the latter.
Anyway, the more power you pull, the more you stress those FETs. BFL uses 4 banks of them in a 60, each bank composing six FETs in a 3 way push/pull configuration. Overload these FETs and they will fail.
When they fail, they will fail shorted and crash your unit. I think they also blow the fuse in the power supply. Fixing this is a pain, but if you hook up a power supply without a fuse, your unit
will burn the board and make smoke-like smells and boom like sounds. Board will be toast.
This failure mode is not unusual: Curtis controllers for electric cars are known for shorting the FETs and blowing up the controllers on 150 volt/600 amp systems when overloaded. Lot of boom and smoke. The fact that it's only 1 volt is irrelevant, these things are pulling 160 amps at 1 volt and that will make smokies.
This is why BFL has the code in the 1.2.8 and 1.2.9 releases that includes a DO NOT EXCEED 60gh thing. I thought it was them being a bit dick-headed, but I think the real reason is that this keeps the chips from driving the FETs into overload.
I'm seeing this on my jalapeno; every chip I add boosts the temps on my FETs. I've already got stick-on heat sinks; and I think the reason that BFL switched the board design was because a full set of 8 chips would cause the FETs to go foom too often. So they built the bigger board, balanced the load, put heat sinks and fans on those chips (explains the fans in the ends of the boxes; I have a vornado pointing at mine) and keeps the unit at 60gh.
If you go beyond, I think you are risking your unit.
So what it my unit is blown?If you have already blown up your unit and you flashed it with hot code, I'd be willing to buy it. Now, I'm not going to start a home for wayward mining rigs, and I'm not irrational like ebay people. So I'll offer the following bitcoin formula:
Price is based on delivery 1 month hence (time for me to get it and repair) * .33% of it's total residual mining value as measured by mining.thegenesisblock.com using default values, 15c for power, 60gh for the hash rate, and 240 watts for the power use. As an example, my price right now for a 60gh, December mining date, unit would be:
.984 BTC *.33=.3276 BTC.
http://mining.thegenesisblock.com/a/17a5fd6db2Note, I boosted the number from 20% to 33% because I believe a single/60 has a better than even chance of firing up as a 30. It is however better than nothing, and as time goes on the residual value keeps going down on these things. Ah well.
Anyway, I hope this helps people. My personal motto is "mine like hell" and I'd rather see people mining than nursing dead equipment.
C