Author

Topic: Ever considered using a miner as a home heater? (Read 203 times)

newbie
Activity: 12
Merit: 0
Simple answer is electric heaters don't do anything special to make extra heat, it's just the normal heat output from wattage expenditure.
jr. member
Activity: 182
Merit: 7
No noise. No hustle. Quiet as whisper. Comino.
Ventilator or liquid-cooled GPU?
they are asus strixs and zotac amp extreme 3 fan cards,dont really trust liquid cooling(yeah i know that i am probably wrong but thats just my opinion man Grin)Last year i had room full with rx cards and i can tell you it was a living hell durring july-august period Grin

More noise then? And overheated cards? Seems to me that liquid cooling is more effective. July and August is always a living hell
full member
Activity: 602
Merit: 106
Basically using my rig for heating is exactly what I did in winter. I turned off the radiator and let my 1.2kW monster provide the much-needed heat Smiley
member
Activity: 154
Merit: 10
Ventilator or liquid-cooled GPU?
they are asus strixs and zotac amp extreme 3 fan cards,dont really trust liquid cooling(yeah i know that i am probably wrong but thats just my opinion man Grin)Last year i had room full with rx cards and i can tell you it was a living hell durring july-august period Grin
jr. member
Activity: 182
Merit: 7
No noise. No hustle. Quiet as whisper. Comino.
Ventilator or liquid-cooled GPU?
member
Activity: 154
Merit: 10
I already did that this winter,0 $ spent on gas for heating my appartment of 62 m2 Grin And before anyone says that i am hurting the environment my heat was coming from green sources- 10x1080ti cards,currently i am at 28c with windows opened for freash air.Gonna be a fun spring Cool
legendary
Activity: 1624
Merit: 1130
Bitcoin FTW!
I’m able to heat my entire bedroom during the winter with a couple RX 470s running in my room, and when the temperatures come up in the spring like what’s happening right now where I live, I move them to my garage. Simple, easy, relatively quiet, and I don’t lose anything from this sort of setup.
legendary
Activity: 1862
Merit: 1505
All the winters are spent good with miner-heating for me. I literally don't have to switch on the home heater, my 3 rigs of 3 cards (XFX RX 480 8 GB) each are enough to heat up at least 2 rooms pretty good.

In summers, I just switch off the miners and pack them up, and then take them out back again in Winters. So it's like 6 months of mining and 6 months of resting for the GPUs. Smiley
jr. member
Activity: 182
Merit: 7
No noise. No hustle. Quiet as whisper. Comino.
Been doing that for past 3 years works like charm, for 80 m2 2x6 card rigs makes wonders. Since im not using any centrally provided heating options , before i had to spend electricity to heat up my apartment anyway , now im earning and at same time heating my place up. When spring comes im moving my heaters to farm location where rest of my rigs reside.

Just make sure not to cheap out on cards (im usings nvidia strix for home heating) , use 6 pin risers , use good psus , dont overload them and forget about splitters , molex , sata cables for risers etc. , just to be on safe side , you dont want any warm cables or shity connectors.

That's exactly what i meant! ASUS P106−100 6G, ventilators 3 NOCTUA NF-A14 PPC-2000 PWM, radiator Black Ice NEMESIS GTX420 and powerblocks Chieftech PROTON BDF-750C 750. The review: https://thenextweb.com/hardfork/2017/12/25/cryptocurrency-miner-ethereum-heater

For sure you don't need a heater in a warm climate, then you shoul better open a mining facility in the mountains like the Chinese  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
member
Activity: 247
Merit: 59
Yes. From Oct - Feb my furnace only ran for 14 hours total for a 3,500 sqft house. I have a rather large farm in the basement. In the summer I vent everything outside, however I just installed a hybrid hot water heater that uses a heat pump to heat the water so I have that sourcing it's air from my mining room and exhausting it's cool air into my mining room.
member
Activity: 142
Merit: 10
Been doint that for past 3 years works like charm, for 80 m2 2x6 card rigs makes wonders. Since im not using any centrally provided heating options , before i had to spend electricity to heat up my apartment anyway , now im earning and at same time heating my place up. When spring comes im moving my heaters to farm location where rest of my rigs reside.

Just make sure not to cheap out on cards (im usings nvidia strix for home heating) , use 6 pin risers , use good psus , dont overload them and forget about splitters , molex , sata cables for risers etc. , just to be on safe side , you dont want any warm cables or shity connectors.
member
Activity: 924
Merit: 15
for the last 5 months, all my apartment did not need any type of heating.

But.....in summer, OMG , my air conditioning will work hard, really hard. also my fans for moving the air into the room.
newbie
Activity: 88
Merit: 0
If you use an electrictricity to heat your room or house, crypto mining rigs of any type are a great iea:
As 99.999% of the electricity ut into a mining rig is turned into heat; any coin you mine is essentially free.

A # of manufacturers are aware of this and have produced 'heaters' that also mine:
https://www.extremetech.com/computing/265364-french-startup-unveils-heater-doubles-cryptocurrency-miner

If you use gas or some other hydrocarbon fuel to heat your home, the above is not as true:
Electricity produced from heat by burning a fuel is not not 100% efficient.
Most turbines are only 40% efficient IIRC and then there are transmission line losses etc.
This means that only ~ 35% of the fuel burned to make the electricity arrives at  your mining rig to e turned back into heat, (and crypto) while 100% of locally burned fuel is turned into heat...
So in a gas heated home mining crypto for heat is only 35% as efficient as the gas heater...

jr. member
Activity: 182
Merit: 7
No noise. No hustle. Quiet as whisper. Comino.
If a mining device is quite enough, did you ever consider using it as an additional heating home appliance? Of course, that is also a climate issue.
Jump to: