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Topic: How big a rig is too big? - page 2. (Read 3317 times)

sr. member
Activity: 330
Merit: 252
May 23, 2016, 08:44:24 AM
#31
it is 'nerd city' in my basement however

lostgonzo.imgur.com (10 cubes shown no pics of last 4 cube rig yet)

no gpu rig in there - but really nice and clean setup in your basement.
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
May 23, 2016, 06:28:38 AM
#30
i don't know about powered being better, i've always used the standard riser and nothing is even burned on my side

just be sure to power what the card need and be sure that this condition apply to the motherboard as well which is more tricky

some motherboard can not sustain all the power needed for many gpu without an additional molex, well we have the h81 pro btc so no problem there
legendary
Activity: 854
Merit: 1000
May 23, 2016, 05:31:49 AM
#29
@joblo, thanks for the corrections on the pcie x1 vs. x16 power delivery specs.  Correct information is what we want out there.

@Amph, you're right.  That's why i mentioned that using powered risers is really a must on "any card that takes more than what the x1 pci-e slot/ribbons (75w) + its pins are rated to provide."  If the rig is running a bunch of GTX 950s or R9 270s then fine.  OTOH, a bunch of 280Xs, 290s, 290Xs - that's playing with fire, literally.

Powered risers seem like a pain to hook up/use, and possibly even negative in light of the ROI question - but why take the risk of stuff burning up?

I don't mean to derail the thread here, but i feel this question of unpowered vs. powered risers is pertinent as a tertiary topic here!
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
May 23, 2016, 12:52:58 AM
#28
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

Bad advice @"if you have more than 6 cards, you need powered risers".

Always use a powered riser on any card that takes more than what the x1 pci-e slot/ribbons (75w) + its pins are rated to provide.

Manufacturers expect these cards to be used in full x16 slots (150w) and as such place the appropriate x4/x6/x8 pins on them.

That extra 75w has to be made up elsewhere, and if you're using anything more powerful than a R9 270/GTX 950, there's a good chance that extra power is gonna come through the pins / pcie slot.  Expect fire.  And sparks.  Lots of sparks.  Powered risers are usually not even more expensive than unpowered risers most of the time.  Be safe - this is your investment(s) at stake here.

An unrelated FYI: the one thing you do want to make sure of is that you do not overload any of your 5v lines if you hook your risers up to them (molex / sata connector etc).

those 75w will be drawed from the cables no problem as long as the gpu get its wattage that it need, it does not matter from where it come from

if you use a 8 pin and the gpu has a tdp of 180w, you are already good enough and you won't burn anything
hero member
Activity: 663
Merit: 501
May 22, 2016, 05:32:12 PM
#27
6 Card rigs. It's the way to go, bail on windows and run Ubuntu. Stable as a rock are the rigs that I sell. No lockups, no overheating. Simple really.
legendary
Activity: 1470
Merit: 1114
May 22, 2016, 04:58:37 PM
#26
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

Bad advice @"if you have more than 6 cards, you need powered risers".

Always use a powered riser on any card that takes more than what a x1 pci-e slot/ribbons (75w) + its pins provide.

Manufacturers expect these cards to be used in full x16 slots (150w) and as such place the appropriate x4/x6/x8 pins on them.

That extra 75w has to be made up elsewhere, and if you're using anything more powerful than a R9 270/GTX 950, there's a good chance that extra power is gonna come through the pins / pcie slot.  Expect fire.  And sparks.  Lots of sparks.  Powered risers are usually not even more expensive than unpowered risers most of the time.  Be safe - this is your investment(s) at stake here.

An unrelated FYI: the one thing you do want to make sure of is that you do not overload any of your 5v lines if you hook your risers up to them (molex / sata connector etc).

Agree completely with powered risers but I think you're a little confused about power from the bus. The bus power
is supplied by the part of the PCIe slot that is common regardless of the number of lanes. A x16  connector
can't carry any more power than x1.

What is different with x1 slots is they are intended only for 25W (x16 is 75W). Unless the mobo is designed for
high power to the x1 slots (ie H81) you're asking for trouble without powered risers in those slots. Either way the maximum
power from the slot connector is 75W.

If the GPU needs more it will have 6 or 8 pin auxiliary connectors to supply an additional 75 or 150W respectively.
If your PSU doesn't have enough connectors you can combine 2 Molex or 2 SATA power connectors to one 6 pin
75W connector for the GPU. If your GPU takes 8 pin or 2x6pin you will need 4 Molex or 4 SATA power connectors.
copper member
Activity: 2856
Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
May 22, 2016, 04:11:44 PM
#25
A big rig that is too big is one that is 1YHs (1 yotahashes).
The network difficulty is lower than that so it would push it up too high, though you would get most of the new bitcoin technically!
I'd assume that a domestic rig for hobby use should be no larger than 1000W.
legendary
Activity: 854
Merit: 1000
May 22, 2016, 04:08:23 PM
#24
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

Bad advice @"if you have more than 6 cards, you need powered risers".

Always use a powered riser on any card that takes more than what the x1 pci-e slot/ribbons (75w) + its pins are rated to provide.

Manufacturers expect these cards to be used in full x16 slots (150w) and as such place the appropriate x4/x6/x8 pins on them.

That extra 75w has to be made up elsewhere, and if you're using anything more powerful than a R9 270/GTX 950, there's a good chance that extra power is gonna come through the pins / pcie slot.  Expect fire.  And sparks.  Lots of sparks.  Powered risers are usually not even more expensive than unpowered risers most of the time.  Be safe - this is your investment(s) at stake here.

An unrelated FYI: the one thing you do want to make sure of is that you do not overload any of your 5v lines if you hook your risers up to them (molex / sata connector etc).
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Qtum • Value Transfer Protocol DAPP Platform
May 19, 2016, 03:46:22 PM
#23
My fork supports up to 16 gpu's in a single rig. But most bioses have problems with more than 8. This might change with the nvlink interface.
i cant imagine powering 16 Gpus. would be a nightmare. would a regular household put out that much?
newbie
Activity: 17
Merit: 0
May 19, 2016, 03:42:52 PM
#22
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

I have to disagree. Although the mobo can supply the power cheap risers sometimes can't. At least with powered risers
you're not trying to push 75W through a ribbon wire. It also reduces the overall power going through the mobo. The cost
difference is trivial, no more than .05 BTC with risers on all 6 cards.

If using two PSUs (not my thing) I believe you need powered risers to isolate them.

good thing about powered risers are you can put gpus far from each other for cooling. I have 5 gpus in a rig, if I change the distance just a few cms between them, i can see temperature change in a minute.
full member
Activity: 147
Merit: 100
RevolverCoin Team
May 19, 2016, 02:13:04 AM
#21
Even 6 cards gives a lot of troubles sometimes - rig hangs\miner crashes. In my experience each additional card increases efforts to achieve stability exponentially. 5-6 cards per rig is good.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 1022
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
May 19, 2016, 12:51:58 AM
#20
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

I have to disagree. Although the mobo can supply the power cheap risers sometimes can't. At least with powered risers
you're not trying to push 75W through a ribbon wire. It also reduces the overall power going through the mobo. The cost
difference is trivial, no more than .05 BTC with risers on all 6 cards.

If using two PSUs (not my thing) I believe you need powered risers to isolate them.

average wattage per card today, especially with new nvidia is very low, they consume 150w on average, very low as i said they will use the 8 pin if not enough current come from the x1 slot, i think you don't need to provide 75w fromt he slot, lol future gpu with 10nm or less, will consume so low that not even a 6 or 8 pin would be required, only the riser
legendary
Activity: 1470
Merit: 1114
May 18, 2016, 08:09:11 PM
#19
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

I have to disagree. Although the mobo can supply the power cheap risers sometimes can't. At least with powered risers
you're not trying to push 75W through a ribbon wire. It also reduces the overall power going through the mobo. The cost
difference is trivial, no more than .05 BTC with risers on all 6 cards.

If using two PSUs (not my thing) I believe you need powered risers to isolate them.
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
May 18, 2016, 06:33:35 PM
#18
I like 6 cards per rig, it's my happy medium.
sr. member
Activity: 719
Merit: 250
May 18, 2016, 02:36:59 AM
#17
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser

That is right. When I use the H61 or H81 pro btc motherboard, I do not use powered risers. It is just a waste.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 1022
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
May 18, 2016, 01:52:34 AM
#16
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.

powered riser are useless if you have asrock h81 with two molex, i always used ribbon standard risers and they work fine for every card out there, also cost less than powered riser
legendary
Activity: 854
Merit: 1000
May 17, 2016, 06:01:27 AM
#15
You'll be limited in the end by the OS card limits AND the make of card you're using (AMD or NVidia).

With Windows, it's usually 6-8 AMD cards (see lbr's AMD driver mods - tip him, plx) 

I have seen higher limits with *nix OS kernels, but that's with some serious hackery.

NVidia cards i am not sure about given my lack of experience with them and mining.
sp_
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1087
Team Black developer
May 17, 2016, 05:05:19 AM
#14
If you have more than 6 cards,you need powered risers . A 750ti draws 50-60 watt depending on what you mine. So a 16 cards rig will only draw around 1000W. The bios might need to be cracked to support 16 cards, and more than 8 cards in windows is a pain.  Have anyone tried 5 7990's in one single rig ? (10 gpu's)
You probobly need linux. Expensive PCIE splitters etc.
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
May 17, 2016, 04:59:55 AM
#13
Windows 10 is OFFICIALLY free (in at least one version) for a short while longer - if you don't mind issues with buggy driver versions etc.

 Seems like the only time Microsoft does a SERIOUS beta test of any of their OSs is right after they release a serious turkey (anyone remember MS-DOS 5 being the FIRST Microsoft OS with a wide beta release - after MS-DOS 4.0's issues with Smartdrive)?



windows 10 is not that good if you have nvidia and want to mine etheruem, even with the drivers fix, you still will not reach the same hash like in windows 7
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
May 17, 2016, 02:41:37 AM
#12
IMO the hassles of coordinating multiple power supplies isn't worth doing - so however many cards you can run from one PS would be where I set the limit.

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