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Topic: How bad is breathing in air from GPU's? - page 2. (Read 2683 times)

newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
November 08, 2017, 12:03:15 PM
#56
If you live in a city, the air outside is way more toxic than any mining rigs. All your rigs are doing is circulating and heating up the air already in your rooms, dust may heat up too but you breathe that in every time so.

Don't worry about it! As long you're not got a breathing aide connected to the rigs I think you'll be fine. Just remember to open the windows and let some fresh air in from time to time.
sr. member
Activity: 337
Merit: 250
November 08, 2017, 11:50:15 AM
#55
Ok, but really - it is MUCH more unsafe if you breathe the laser printer air, or work near it if it's in use often.
full member
Activity: 406
Merit: 104
November 08, 2017, 10:40:58 AM
#54
The radiation can be an issue if you live close to a cell phone tower. Happened a year ago to some forum member. The cell phone company told him he must shut down his rigs because it causes interference.

Eh what?
I would've told them to move their fucking cell phone tower somewhere else.
member
Activity: 111
Merit: 10
Do or do not.
November 08, 2017, 10:34:52 AM
#53
I'm not a doctor, neither do I know anything about the science behind radiation or emission. But I've been in a large room with 20 rigs for multiple hours and was pretty wasted the day after. I think he combination of hot air + noise is pretty fucked up. So not a sustainable state at all.
member
Activity: 154
Merit: 10
November 08, 2017, 10:25:45 AM
#52
If you have a spare room where you could put all your mining rigs with ventilation this will be the best thing to do.
I would not recommend putting mining rigs in the same room where you sleep. There are two factors loud noise and heat.
And most badly is the dry air that will be in that room.
full member
Activity: 422
Merit: 100
November 08, 2017, 06:48:34 AM
#51
I see many people have mining rigs in their rooms, some with 6+ gpu's.  Is the air quality bad?  I know that heated solder is bad for you.  So, isn't it unhealthy to breath in too much of the air coming out of a mining rig?

Harmless. That small amount of solder never gets to the point of outputting any kind of particle. If the solder got too hot, the unit itself would decay quicker, as the connections would begin to loosen. The biggest environmental hazard would be the entire chassis, motherboard fans and all, putting dust out the back. And that dust was already in the room, just has been collected and blown out.

I agree. I have a few computers in my living room. Quite safe.
legendary
Activity: 1190
Merit: 1024
November 05, 2017, 01:32:29 PM
#50
I see many people have mining rigs in their rooms, some with 6+ gpu's.  Is the air quality bad?  I know that heated solder is bad for you.  So, isn't it unhealthy to breath in too much of the air coming out of a mining rig?

Harmless. That small amount of solder never gets to the point of outputting any kind of particle. If the solder got too hot, the unit itself would decay quicker, as the connections would begin to loosen. The biggest environmental hazard would be the entire chassis, motherboard fans and all, putting dust out the back. And that dust was already in the room, just has been collected and blown out.
full member
Activity: 405
Merit: 136
November 02, 2017, 01:30:02 AM
#49
I see many people have mining rigs in their rooms, some with 6+ gpu's.  Is the air quality bad?  I know that heated solder is bad for you.  So, isn't it unhealthy to breath in too much of the air coming out of a mining rig?

The placing working hardware in living room is of course unhealthy. Mining rigs influence to humidity, temperature and noise. Shoudn't do that.
Just check humidity, tempereature and noise standart paramters for living space and compare that with real parameters in your bedroom with mining rig. It can terrible effect on nervous system, respiratory apparatus etc. at long-term exposure.
full member
Activity: 336
Merit: 100
November 02, 2017, 01:19:36 AM
#48
I see many people have mining rigs in their rooms, some with 6+ gpu's.  Is the air quality bad?  I know that heated solder is bad for you.  So, isn't it unhealthy to breath in too much of the air coming out of a mining rig?

Heat is the problem.  Back in the early days of Bitcoin a guy had some computers mining BTC in his bedroom.  He closed the door and went to sleep.  He woke up the next day suffering from heat stroke.  He had to be taken to the hospital. Adequate ventilation and cooling needs to be considered as much as your GPU.

http://www.zdnet.com/article/a-minor-bitcoin-miner-injury/

Thanks for sharing.  I'm glad to see both points of view.  I do believe that there's a limit to how many rigs one should have in their room and am glad that my concern is a valid one.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
November 02, 2017, 12:21:25 AM
#47

Heat is the problem.  Back in the early days of Bitcoin a guy had some computers mining BTC in his bedroom.  He closed the door and went to sleep.  He woke up the next day suffering from heat stroke.  He had to be taken to the hospital. Adequate ventilation and cooling needs to be considered as much as your GPU.

http://www.zdnet.com/article/a-minor-bitcoin-miner-injury/

 Every time someone comes up with an "idiot-proof" idea, a worse grade of idiot shows up.

 Odds are, if it got THAT hot in the room, his rigs were overheating and thermal throttling too.


sr. member
Activity: 672
Merit: 252
Until the end
November 01, 2017, 10:12:27 PM
#46
I see many people have mining rigs in their rooms, some with 6+ gpu's.  Is the air quality bad?  I know that heated solder is bad for you.  So, isn't it unhealthy to breath in too much of the air coming out of a mining rig?

Heat is the problem.  Back in the early days of Bitcoin a guy had some computers mining BTC in his bedroom.  He closed the door and went to sleep.  He woke up the next day suffering from heat stroke.  He had to be taken to the hospital. Adequate ventilation and cooling needs to be considered as much as your GPU.

http://www.zdnet.com/article/a-minor-bitcoin-miner-injury/
full member
Activity: 616
Merit: 167
November 01, 2017, 08:44:22 PM
#45
The bigger worry than breathing the air is the fire risk involved when running miners in your house. That is way more likely to kill you than breathing the air. Dust/dirt build up, loose connections, overloaded components, excessive heat, placing miners too close to flammable materials, all far greater concerns than the air quality. The air quality issue (if there even is one) can be alleviated to a great extent by simply cracking a window or two to vent in fresh air, but the fire hazards are a lot harder to mitigate.

This. I'm far more focused on keeping my GPU's in the 70 C temp range tops, making sure there isn't anything flammable too close, touching connectors to make sure none are getting hot or playing up etc. Also have to try and stay on top of dust to make sure it doesn't build up and block your GPU fans from working as effectively. I'm more interested in keeping good air quality to keep the dust away from the rig than worrying about my 'health'!
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
November 01, 2017, 05:10:26 PM
#44
Humidity level TOO low dries out your sinuses and can cause health issues.

 Humidity level too high tends to cause mold buildup and is VERY bad for you to breath that stuff for extended periods of time.


 I'm not sure where the actual numbers on "too low" are, but I suspect they are probably under 20% and might be under 10%.

full member
Activity: 336
Merit: 100
November 01, 2017, 03:14:39 AM
#43
Humidity will be around %40 at its best when you have a rig in the room. Its not good for your health.

Can you explain a little more what you mean?  Everyone says it's ok for your health, I'd like to know a little more why you think it's not good
sr. member
Activity: 826
Merit: 263
October 29, 2017, 01:46:57 PM
#42
The bigger worry than breathing the air is the fire risk involved when running miners in your house. That is way more likely to kill you than breathing the air. Dust/dirt build up, loose connections, overloaded components, excessive heat, placing miners too close to flammable materials, all far greater concerns than the air quality. The air quality issue (if there even is one) can be alleviated to a great extent by simply cracking a window or two to vent in fresh air, but the fire hazards are a lot harder to mitigate.

Still we all using the electrical and electronic products in your anf my house. Since the hazardous release is from the material it contains the electrical wastages you will find the impure gases from that. You may avoid the heating issue by having your AC cooling in your home.
Breaking the windows making ventilation for that and all, we need to set up in the better air circulation.
newbie
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
October 29, 2017, 01:40:27 PM
#41
Humidity will be around %40 at its best when you have a rig in the room. Its not good for your health.
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1011
October 29, 2017, 01:38:27 PM
#40
The bigger worry than breathing the air is the fire risk involved when running miners in your house. That is way more likely to kill you than breathing the air. Dust/dirt build up, loose connections, overloaded components, excessive heat, placing miners too close to flammable materials, all far greater concerns than the air quality. The air quality issue (if there even is one) can be alleviated to a great extent by simply cracking a window or two to vent in fresh air, but the fire hazards are a lot harder to mitigate.
full member
Activity: 1123
Merit: 136
October 29, 2017, 01:23:18 PM
#39
If you live in a dusty area the gpu fans break the dust particles into fine particles which fill the air in the room. Breathing this air for an extended period of time might lead to health problems later due to the inability of the respiratory system filtering the fine dust particles.

This is the only response that made some sense.
newbie
Activity: 65
Merit: 0
October 29, 2017, 08:25:06 AM
#38
I think air is ok, but circulation can woke up dust from the floor, and overall air dryness is worse with prolonged finding near rigs
full member
Activity: 422
Merit: 100
October 29, 2017, 07:58:03 AM
#37
What about radiation or stuff like that? I have 20 GPUs in my apartment.

Yes, hot air mixed in with extremely toxic chemicals, beta and alpha radiation emissions due to the ghz frequencies, as well as proton emission decays due to the unique ethereum algorithm computation that happens inside the GPU will most likely fry your brain within a week if you stay within 100ft of more than 10 GPUs.

With 20 you should be dead already...

I guess I am lucky. Those 20 GPUs didn't kill me yet...

He just mentioned ETH mining. So it is safe for ZEC mining.
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