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Topic: Klondike - 16 chip ASIC Open Source Board - Preliminary - page 105. (Read 435369 times)

full member
Activity: 180
Merit: 100
That being said, it's very easy to put the Avalon chips on the board by hand (using an iron or a hot-air rework gun).  I could attach 16 QFN chips in less than 16 minutes.

Enigma

Unless you're working with an oven, that's a complete bullshit..
I'm not talking about in an oven - I'm talking about using a hot-air rework gun.  If it took one of our rework techs more than two minutes to replace a QFN48, they'd be fired.

Enigma

Please, stay on track with the thread.
You took it off track and called my answer bullshit.  I design and hand build electronics every day - professionally.  Please take your self-righteous nonsense and pack it deep into your ass.  Enjoy your day.

Enigma
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
Mining hardware assembler and administrator.
I'm not talking about in an oven - I'm talking about using a hot-air rework gun.  If it took one of our rework techs more than two minutes to replace a QFN48, they'd be fired.

Enigma

Please, stay on track with the thread.
sr. member
Activity: 446
Merit: 250
Has anyone got a link for the I2C cables, having a little trouble sourcing them?
member
Activity: 77
Merit: 10

Yes, but they are proving to be rather bitchy, at least without a proper PCB.
Constructing the test harness for it took hours of very careful soldering under a microscope.
Maybe my clock source has to much jitter, or the PLL core voltage is too noisy for it to lock.
I will continue testing though.


Hmm seems the dead-bug style testing might not be very easy with this chip, at least for burnin there's currently some issues.
newbie
Activity: 33
Merit: 0
Hi Bkk,

I´m looking at Nano sch and I guess that L1 must be tied to pin 3 (SW) instead of pin1 (BST) according to the AP6502A datasheet. Please confirm that.

Best regards!
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
Hey Bkkcoins,

Just so you know who/what you are dealing with regarding Terrahash.

I hate to see people's hard work being taken advantage of.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/TerraHash-ASIC-Bitcoin-Miner-4-5GH-sec-Preorder-like-BFL-bitforce-/140997880557?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item20d420eaed

Holy crap, there's a photo of an assembled board on ebay and BKK is still driving to pick his parts.  This is a dog eat dog business for sure.

No mention of a heatsink.

The picture on ebay was downloaded directly from a thread here on bitcointalk and put up by some random person.  It's not a functional board yet, all they did was use BKK's board specs and BOM to assemble one.  Check the Terrahash and BKK threads for more details.
full member
Activity: 176
Merit: 100
Hey Bkkcoins,

Just so you know who/what you are dealing with regarding Terrahash.

I hate to see people's hard work being taken advantage of.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/TerraHash-ASIC-Bitcoin-Miner-4-5GH-sec-Preorder-like-BFL-bitforce-/140997880557?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item20d420eaed

Holy crap, there's a photo of an assembled board on ebay and BKK is still driving to pick his parts.  This is a dog eat dog business for sure.

No mention of a heatsink.
full member
Activity: 180
Merit: 100
That being said, it's very easy to put the Avalon chips on the board by hand (using an iron or a hot-air rework gun).  I could attach 16 QFN chips in less than 16 minutes.

Enigma

Unless you're working with an oven, that's a complete bullshit..

I'm not talking about in an oven - I'm talking about using a hot-air rework gun.  If it took one of our rework techs more than two minutes to replace a QFN48, they'd be fired.

Enigma
newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 0

Hmm, they have samples in tray. I got samples in small blue box. Maybe bigger orders (20k? vs. 10k) have better samples Wink

Btw. Avalon-ref tell precalc needs on page 7. Pseudocode have for(í=0;i<64;i++) and if's i=0,1,2. Is three round precalc enough or miss I something?

And asic's seems to go popular so difficulty rise. It renders K16 (&etc desings) too expensive (too much parts/cost per one asic).  Sorry.
 Controller should have more IO lines to drive many asic chains. Like pic32MX795F512L 85pcs IO for ~8$.
Asic chains should be longer. Avalon used 10pcs length K16 use 8pcs. What broblems can arise if asic chain are 16pcs lenght? How long it can be?

full member
Activity: 176
Merit: 100
BKK: I'm not sure if you saw it but Yifu posted on another thread (where someone got an Avalon clone board working with a sample chip) this:

Quote from: BitSyncom
hint hint: the chip has a much higher clock cap.

I don't think anyone knows details yet, so just an fyi.

I hope he means capability and not capacitance!

ps. lets close the thread above and keep this OT, we need to help BKK to focus.
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
Mining hardware assembler and administrator.
That being said, it's very easy to put the Avalon chips on the board by hand (using an iron or a hot-air rework gun).  I could attach 16 QFN chips in less than 16 minutes.

Enigma

Unless you're working with an oven, that's a complete bullshit..
member
Activity: 89
Merit: 10
The Thru-Hole components likely would melt.  That is one of the reasons why Thru-Hole assembly is (nearly) always done after surface mount.  Temperatures inside a reflow oven reach as much as 260 degrees c.  Thru-Hole components do not get that hot during assembly, so there is generally no reason to use plastic that can survive those types of temperatures.

That being said, it's very easy to put the Avalon chips on the board by hand (using an iron or a hot-air rework gun).  I could attach 16 QFN chips in less than 16 minutes.

Enigma
With standard QFN packages I agree, it is quite easy and fast with hot-air. However, these particular chips have a large thermal pad at the bottom. It complicates things somewhat.

+1 on through-hole comments.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
That being said, it's very easy to put the Avalon chips on the board by hand (using an iron or a hot-air rework gun).  I could attach 16 QFN chips in less than 16 minutes.

Enigma

Please do tell us how you'd solder 1 QFN/minute.

http://store.curiousinventor.com/guides/Surface_Mount_Soldering/QFN
full member
Activity: 180
Merit: 100
Ideally, I'd like to get pre-assembled boards that just need chips, so that they're ready to just flow the chips in, when they arrive.

That said, I'm interested in kits if that's not an option.

I suspect it would be somewhat of a challenge to solder another chip to a board that already has a lot of other stuff soldered... (that's unless you're looking for manually soldering it, which isn't necessarily any easier but likely has a better probability of success Smiley)

Why would it be difficult? That's literally WHY they make re-flow ovens, and why they call them "Reflow" ovens.

Although I agree that it isn't impossible it would add way too many ifs to the equation. Not all components have the same (reflow) temperature characteristics, some require to be kept at various temperatures for short times while others may need longer times. Then if you have any through-whole components and connectors, especially some plastic materials - they may be affected by that process.

So - yes, it is possible, but you really have to design the whole board for that from the very beginning. And even then you may have to wait until you add all chips and then finish the board and add some of the other components. In other words - you wont be able (at least easily) to really "finish" the board and just wait to solder the last chip.

Are you joking? How would you flow the board in the first place, if that were an issue?

The Thru-Hole components likely would melt.  That is one of the reasons why Thru-Hole assembly is (nearly) always done after surface mount.  Temperatures inside a reflow oven reach as much as 260 degrees c.  Thru-Hole components do not get that hot during assembly, so there is generally no reason to use plastic that can survive those types of temperatures.

That being said, it's very easy to put the Avalon chips on the board by hand (using an iron or a hot-air rework gun).  I could attach 16 QFN chips in less than 16 minutes.

Enigma
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Ideally, I'd like to get pre-assembled boards that just need chips, so that they're ready to just flow the chips in, when they arrive.

That said, I'm interested in kits if that's not an option.

I suspect it would be somewhat of a challenge to solder another chip to a board that already has a lot of other stuff soldered... (that's unless you're looking for manually soldering it, which isn't necessarily any easier but likely has a better probability of success Smiley)

Why would it be difficult? That's literally WHY they make re-flow ovens, and why they call them "Reflow" ovens.

Although I agree that it isn't impossible it would add way too many ifs to the equation. Not all components have the same (reflow) temperature characteristics, some require to be kept at various temperatures for short times while others may need longer times. Then if you have any through-whole components and connectors, especially some plastic materials - they may be affected by that process.

So - yes, it is possible, but you really have to design the whole board for that from the very beginning. And even then you may have to wait until you add all chips and then finish the board and add some of the other components. In other words - you wont be able (at least easily) to really "finish" the board and just wait to solder the last chip.

Are you joking? How would you flow the board in the first place, if that were an issue?
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
Hey Bkkcoins,

Just so you know who/what you are dealing with regarding Terrahash.

I hate to see people's hard work being taken advantage of.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/TerraHash-ASIC-Bitcoin-Miner-4-5GH-sec-Preorder-like-BFL-bitforce-/140997880557?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item20d420eaed



Keep your unsourced blind accusations with no evidence in your own thread.  No need to spam it all over the custom hardware forum.
vs3
hero member
Activity: 622
Merit: 500
Ideally, I'd like to get pre-assembled boards that just need chips, so that they're ready to just flow the chips in, when they arrive.

That said, I'm interested in kits if that's not an option.

I suspect it would be somewhat of a challenge to solder another chip to a board that already has a lot of other stuff soldered... (that's unless you're looking for manually soldering it, which isn't necessarily any easier but likely has a better probability of success Smiley)

Why would it be difficult? That's literally WHY they make re-flow ovens, and why they call them "Reflow" ovens.

Although I agree that it isn't impossible it would add way too many ifs to the equation. Not all components have the same (reflow) temperature characteristics, some require to be kept at various temperatures for short times while others may need longer times. Then if you have any through-whole components and connectors, especially some plastic materials - they may be affected by that process.

So - yes, it is possible, but you really have to design the whole board for that from the very beginning. And even then you may have to wait until you add all chips and then finish the board and add some of the other components. In other words - you wont be able (at least easily) to really "finish" the board and just wait to solder the last chip.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Ideally, I'd like to get pre-assembled boards that just need chips, so that they're ready to just flow the chips in, when they arrive.

That said, I'm interested in kits if that's not an option.

I suspect it would be somewhat of a challenge to solder another chip to a board that already has a lot of other stuff soldered... (that's unless you're looking for manually soldering it, which isn't necessarily any easier but likely has a better probability of success Smiley)

Why would it be difficult? That's literally WHY they make re-flow ovens, and why they call them "Reflow" ovens.
vs3
hero member
Activity: 622
Merit: 500
Ideally, I'd like to get pre-assembled boards that just need chips, so that they're ready to just flow the chips in, when they arrive.

That said, I'm interested in kits if that's not an option.

I suspect it would be somewhat of a challenge to solder another chip to a board that already has a lot of other stuff soldered... (that's unless you're looking for manually soldering it, which isn't necessarily any easier but likely has a better probability of success Smiley)
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Ideally, I'd like to get pre-assembled boards that just need chips, so that they're ready to just flow the chips in, when they arrive.

That said, I'm interested in kits if that's not an option.
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