Author

Topic: [Guide] Dogie's Comprehensive XBTec Pacific 1250 Setup [HD] (Read 8394 times)

legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Hello
Guys i need help
I need a image of operatin system for XBTEC Pacific 1250,my SD card is dead
Please help

You'll likely have to contact them for an image, I don't have one saved.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
Hello
Guys i need help
I need a image of operatin system for XBTEC Pacific 1250,my SD card is dead
Please help
legendary
Activity: 2030
Merit: 1076
A humble Siberian miner
Why not make a web-interface to configure and monitor the miner?..
full member
Activity: 169
Merit: 100
How to change ip

1. To change ip, subnet mask you have to modify file that located at:
Code:
/etc/network/interfaces

You may also choose from "dhcp" or "static"

2. To change the pool and worker settings you have to modify file that located at:
Code:
/root/.cgminer/cgminer.conf

NOTE: .cgminer is hidden folder.
you also have to have ext4 extension. You may use Paragon software or kind of that

3. Finally you have to modify gateway. The file that located at:
Code:
/etc/resov.conf
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
How to change ip

I'm not sure what version of the software you have. I've got a super early one, you may have the new retail one.
member
Activity: 82
Merit: 10
How to change ip
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Nice guide Dogie. Appreciate the work you put into it.

What will happen to the miner you received for review? Are you sending it back or did you get to keep it?Smiley

There's no point shipping 30kg miners round the world twice, and I need the unit to be able to help others.
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
Nice guide Dogie. Appreciate the work you put into it.

What will happen to the miner you received for review? Are you sending it back or did you get to keep it?Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Thanks a lot for this review! It's well done, as always and gives us a good overview over the new XBTec miner! Do you have any guess how many miners they're able to churn out every week? Can anyone make an educated guess?

I don't think anyone ever can. There isn't really bottlenecks to manufacture any more, chips are in hand, PCBs are easy, assembly is easy...
sr. member
Activity: 350
Merit: 250
Honest 80s business!
Thanks a lot for this review! It's well done, as always and gives us a good overview over the new XBTec miner! Do you have any guess how many miners they're able to churn out every week? Can anyone make an educated guess?
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
Obviously I wouldn´t suggest anyone builds a datacenter without ventilation.

It was merely meant as an example that the miners should be fine on max fan settings, if there are (temporary) cooling problems at the hosting site.
full member
Activity: 169
Merit: 100
Well, it is good to see a unit which is properly optimised for free air cooling, even in the toughest environments.

They have a very solid cooling design, I find that most professionally built units from China are built with demanding climates in mind, as their hot and humid summers put a lot of pressure on miners.


Basically, the unit should still run fine on max fans even if your datacenter ventilation completely fails, which is a nice feature.
Dynamic fan adjustment would obviously have been better, but this option should also do the trick nicely.

We have a huge fans in our farm to prevent overheating.

hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
Well, it is good to see a unit which is properly optimised for free air cooling, even in the toughest environments.

They have a very solid cooling design, I find that most professionally built units from China are built with demanding climates in mind, as their hot and humid summers put a lot of pressure on miners.


Basically, the unit should still run fine on max fans even if your datacenter ventilation completely fails, which is a nice feature.
Dynamic fan adjustment would obviously have been better, but this option should also do the trick nicely.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Its worth noting that the high fan mode was just added for people wanting to OC
Well, how can it be overclocked? Does the error rate remains the same at any of that three pools or may vary from pool to pool?

Its got BFGminer on a known controller on a known chip, it won't be long before people give it a go. I test everything on BTCGuild, rarely GHIO if there is a problem. Pool variance isn't relevant in a hardware scenario.


Ah okay, so you are basically stress-testing the unit.
The quoted 45°C temperature might presume that you would use the 5000rpm fan mode though Wink

Are you planning on testing the overclockability tomorrow?

They've said they don't use it even in their 40C farm, and performance is absolutely fine.
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
Ah okay, so you are basically stress-testing the unit.
The quoted 45°C temperature might presume that you would use the 5000rpm fan mode though Wink

Are you planning on testing the overclockability tomorrow?
legendary
Activity: 2030
Merit: 1076
A humble Siberian miner
Its worth noting that the high fan mode was just added for people wanting to OC
Well, how can it be overclocked? Does the error rate remains the same at any of that three pools or may vary from pool to pool?
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Thank you, does that put the total error rate at 5.9% aka ~1176GH at the pool?

It would be very nice if we could get an update after 24h, to have a good average.

37°C also seems rather brutal (at 2500 fans that is), do you have access to hosting at a cooler facility?

No its post reject, so I'm getting 1.26 at the pool after 6 hours. I've lowered the difficulty to 512 which effectively doubles the run time of the test by reducing luck variance. The hardware isn't shifting at all.

I'm forcing the test cell hot because they quote operating range up to 45C, so its only fair to see what happens at that range. At 25C it was overperforming at 1.30. Its worth noting that the high fan mode was just added for people wanting to OC or who live in the centre of the sun etc, you don't actually need it. Its one of the significant advantages of the BE200 people didn't really notice.
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
Thank you, does that put the total error rate at 5.9% aka ~1176GH at the pool?

It would be very nice if we could get an update after 24h, to have a good average.

37°C also seems rather brutal (at 2500 fans that is), do you have access to hosting at a cooler facility?
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Nice review and pics, Dogie.

Have you done any mid/long-term testing to find out the average hardware error rate / poolside performance?

Are you going to provide screenshots from the hashing unit or is the GUI still so ugly you would rather not have anyone see it?


I never take screenshots of software because they go out of date so quickly, and people tend to refer to them over the instructions and then get stuck. Error rate @ 37C ambient and normal fans is averaging 5.4% after 5 hours, 0.75% HW. Stats are taken directly from the BFGminer inbuilt so pool side is identical or above.
legendary
Activity: 1593
Merit: 1004
Anxious to see some screen shots of performance Dogie.  Solid instructions as always.  I like your consistency in an erratic industry. 

I did not mean to make that rhyme.
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
Nice review and pics, Dogie.

Have you done any mid/long-term testing to find out the average hardware error rate / poolside performance?

Are you going to provide screenshots from the hashing unit or is the GUI still so ugly you would rather not have anyone see it?
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
Dogie's Miner Setup Guides:
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___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


Nicely formatted version available at dogiecoin.com!



Contents:
0a) What to Expect
0b) What You Need
1) Powering
2) Cooling
3) Case
4) Configuration
5) Troubleshooting
6) Where to buy



0a) What to Expect (top)
XBTec is jumping straight in at the deep end with a large 1.25TH unit of ASICMiner's generation 3 chips across 9 blades. Each blade plugs into a backpane
motherboard and sits upright within a 4U chassis. A Raspberry Pi is included internally as the controller. This is the V1 Pacific 1250, and a V2 is due very soon with a number of improvements built in.

Chips126x ASICMiner Gen3
Hashrate1250GH
Rated Voltage12V
Rated Current104A
Power.Consumption~1250W

 

      

      
 

0b) What You Need (top)
You will need a few accessories to get started.


                             Click your flag to find everything you need to get started at Amazon!             
                    
                                         


1) Powering (top)
Pacific 1250s come with a custom made 1600W PSU in an unusual formfactor, although they can be replaced with an external PSU. You will require 5 PCI-E
cables and a micro USB power cable for the included Raspberry Pi.

      
 
       
 

2) Cooling (top)
Three 120mm Fan-Cooling FD12038BD1 fans are used to drive air through the unit, and are manually controlled at two speed settings. Three red switches at
the back of the unit bump the fan speeds from 50% to 100% for high ambient applications. The rear of each module features a full cover, aluminium heatsink.

Noise levels are extremely reasonable at 50%, while 100% fans are loud. It should be noted that no consumer should ever need the 100% mode as it is
designed for farm use only.

      

      
 



3) Case (top)
The Pacific 1250's case is extremely thick steel and almost impervious to damage, although at the same time is very heavy. The case is designed to be rack
mountable in a 19" wide rack (482.6mm), or stacked vertically. External dimensions of the case are 550 x 430 x 176mm.

      
 
      


4) Configuration (top)
Configuration is relatively straight forward, although this is a very early alpha consumer build so some steps may change.

Wiring:
  • Plug in an ethernet cable from the Pacific 1250 to you router.
  • Plug in a power cable from the mains to the PSU. The unit will automatically power on.

Configuration:
  • Navigate to your router and find the list of devices.
  • Using a browser, navigate to the IP assigned to the Pacific 1250 by your router.
  • Login using "Pi" as the username and "raspberyy" as the password.
  • Navigate to "Pools", and click "Add New". Enter Your miner information in the below format click save.
  • Click "switch" to your new pool, and "remove" to any other default pool.
  • Navigate to "Dashboard" to check mining has started.

Antpool Register!
Code:
Servers : stratum.antpool.com:3333
User    : username.worker or username_worker - auto creates workers!
Password: anypassword
BTCGuild Register!
Code:
Servers : stratum.btcguild.com:3333
User    : username_worker
Password: anypassword
GHash IO Register!
Code:
Servers : us1.ghash.io:3333
User    : username.worker  - auto creates workers!
Password: anypassword

      




5) Troubleshooting (top)
TBD as problems arise.

      
 

Legal disclaimer: This information is for general guidance and does not constitute expert advice. We are not responsible if you, your property or a third
party is injured or damaged as a result of any interaction with this information, and no warranty is provided. All text and images are covered by copyright.

6) Where to buy (top)

                    
            

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