Author

Topic: Node size (7nm, 5nm, etc) is now pointless (Read 310 times)

legendary
Activity: 3822
Merit: 2703
Evil beware: We have waffles!
August 27, 2020, 03:02:51 PM
#10
Further reading to prove my point about using just "node size" now being a pointless measure of what a chip's performance can be and why the Semiconductor industry working on a better descriptor:

On replacing Si with Ge as the semiconductor

On using entirely different principal of switching transistor operation

On using an entirely different type of transistor geometry vs current FinFET's

The 1st 2 papers are not exactly recent but still very valid examples of what is being worked on. The last paper is from last year.
All are very good reads that give a lot of insight into how chips operate and are made along with the difficulties that have been mitigated to be where we are currently at and those that have yet to be overcome to advance further/faster.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 1221
August 22, 2020, 12:12:39 PM
#9

Nah, thats just the normal (non-pro) 1166 - 68TH @ 47J/TH or this: https://canaan.io/product/avalonminera119

The 1166-Pro - 81TH @ 42J/TH or this: https://canaan.io/product/avalonminer-1166-pro isn't showing on the Blokforge site. And of course Canaan are only interested in bulk orders  Sad

https://canaan.io/products/avalonminer
legendary
Activity: 3822
Merit: 2703
Evil beware: We have waffles!
August 20, 2020, 07:58:00 AM
#8
Anyone know how much the 1166 Pro is? Its not for sale on Blokforge.

Well sorta maybe is? https://blokforge.com/product/canaan-avalon-1166-68-th-s-bitcoin-miner-w-psu-february-2020-batch/. Says it still uses 16nm chips Wink
legendary
Activity: 4326
Merit: 8950
'The right to privacy matters'
August 19, 2020, 09:14:42 AM
#7
Yeah and a gas engine for a car won't do better than 50 mpg.

They may have reached the best a 16nm can do.

Down the road a bit pow mining of sha 256 will have other issues. Even with a 300th 3000watt unit When block size is 0.78125 or 1.5625 coins we will need proper tx fee setup and or 100k coins.
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 6320
Crypto Swap Exchange
August 19, 2020, 08:29:11 AM
#6
Is now pointless is a bit extreme. Is pointless at the moment is probably better. You will get performance increases and you will get energy savings. IF it's done properly. There are other ways to get performance and energy savings but there are limits. Once you hit those limits you will have to go smaller / more efficient. OR go another way entirely.

Think of the car world, gas engines have gotten more and more efficient. Then came hybrids / electric. There might be a better way lets say hydrogen fuel cell, but there are other issues such as filling stations. If you go for same analogy. Canaan and MicroBt have gone for more efficient gas engines. The smaller node size is electric. We don't know who has hydrogen waiting to be shown.

-Dave
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 1221
August 19, 2020, 07:55:45 AM
#5
Anyone know how much the 1166 Pro is? Its not for sale on Blokforge.
legendary
Activity: 3822
Merit: 2703
Evil beware: We have waffles!
August 18, 2020, 01:52:02 PM
#4
Ja, both Canaan and MicroBt have really pushed 16nm node (transistor 'gate size') performance to its probable maximum. As I said, my guess is that they did it by using smaller/thinner metal layers made economically possible by the advances needed for the lower nodes.
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1714
Electrical engineer. Mining since 2014.
August 18, 2020, 12:52:37 PM
#3
It's quite impressing what Canaan has been able to reach with 16nm tech and their A1166 Pro miner.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 1221
August 18, 2020, 04:29:39 AM
#2
AFAIK the M30x from MicroBT use what, 12nm chips?

8nm Samsung
legendary
Activity: 3822
Merit: 2703
Evil beware: We have waffles!
August 17, 2020, 03:10:02 PM
#1
As insiders have known for many years now, a chips' node size has become a pointless and erroneous measure of what the dimensions inside of a chip actually are and not-so-useful in defining what the chip performance can be.

Looks like a new definition is in the works to better reflect actual progress being made. ref https://read.nxtbook.com/ieee/spectrum/spectrum_na_august_2020/the_node_is_nonsense.html

My take on it is that companies like MicroBt and Canaan made the right choice by staying at 16nm for so long and relying on the fact that the Market forces driving the quest for lower 'node size' for things like memory, CPU's, GPU's etc as well as mining chips are at the same time benefiting the higher nodes. How?

Easy - use for example the '16nm node' that MicroBt and Canaan used for their respective M10/M20 and A10xx series miners. My guess is that TSMC applied lower-node metal interconnect tech to the now much cheaper 16nm node. Smaller/thinner metalization interconnect layers means lower switching losses improving efficiency while still using the larger (and cheaper, fully mature) 16nm gate size. It keeps the long ago paid for 16nm foundries busy while providing decent performance chips at far lower cost than cutting edge chips like BM's 7nm and now their bleeding-edge 5nm node size...

AFAIK the M30x from MicroBT use what, 12nm 8nm chips? I know Canaan is still smarting from the 7nm A921 debacle: They and/or Samsung rather blew it on that chip so even now their latest A1066 is still a brick of 16nm chips sourced from TSMC.

Edit: Earlier this year Canaan mentioned an A1166 but not sure what 'node size' it is/was supposed to be. They've been mighty quiet about it ever since.
Edit edit: The A11's specs say it has 342 of their A3205 16nm ASIC
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