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Topic: Repair a fried Antminer S4 beaglebone card (Read 6058 times)

legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1001
aka "whocares"
December 10, 2015, 12:40:11 AM
#27
I honestly cannot remember, this thread is over a year old and it was one of my first times actually busting open a miner and messing with it.  I do appreciate bringing it back up for old times sake. 
hero member
Activity: 754
Merit: 500
1xBit the largest casino
December 09, 2015, 07:58:12 AM
#26
Before i start I want to give out thanks:
1) I want to thank cryptocrane.com for quick delivery and being stand up and helping with the Antminer problems-- super cool
2) I want to thank Antminer for making a defective unit and being absolutely no help in resolving the problem, even though silmilar problems are written about on these forums from the S2.
3) I cannot remember who it was but a guide was written about the beaglebone issues on the S2 and how to replace the card--thanks

A quick introduction, I am new to BTC and come from a background of extreme overclocking etc.  I have followed BTC for years and decided it was time to play with some mining hardware. ( I know, a little late to the party).  I purchased 2 Antminer S4's about 2 weeks ago from http://cryptocrane.com and received my rigs 2 days after purchase.  Within 2 days one of the miners was dead.  It had the dreaded amber light on the PSU.  

This is a simple repair of a fried BB board.  It may or may not be easier to replace the BB board for $60.

After a little searching I realized the PSU issue and opened the unit and replaced it with 2 Corsair units that I had in my possession.  The unit was still dead and after playing around with it I got the LCD to at least come on but then realized I had a dead beaglebone card.  None of the beaglebone LED's were lighting up.  

I continued looking online and found the guide to replace the beaglebone card and update the SD card etc.  So i ordered a couple of beaglebone cards.  This is after getting no assistance from Bitmain. The guys at cryptocrane.com were replacing the PSU's and helping troubleshoot.

The problem with ordering parts is I have to wait--- not my strong point.  So i took out the parts and went to work.  

Again- these mods were on the non working BB board and I would not suggest doing these mods on a new BB card as it would be unnecessary.

I am still not sure if the PSU or the beaglebone card went first but I would bet the PSU shorted the beaglebone card.


good friends , I have a antminer s4 + , she lights the network cable connector but no red lights and green lights in front, also i can not do a factory reset , and access it to configure , is fried the BEAGLEBONE ?


Sounds like your controller is fried and not the BBB as you get connection from the BBB but not controller.
hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 500
December 09, 2015, 03:02:07 AM
#25
What do you believe was damaged on the old board, that the fix bypasses or replaces?

The short is located between the PSU 6 pin connector on the green board and Pins 1-8 on the expansion interface closest to the 6-pin connector  (1-8 of P9 on the BB board).  The repair actually bypasses the 6-pin connector supplying the power to the BB board and therefore bypasses the short.  I will upload some pics of the multimeter readings tomorrow showing the short etc.  I think when the PSU died it caused the short but thats just my $.02--

So how do you think the short got there and why did you not just remove the short?


Rich
newbie
Activity: 3
Merit: 0
December 08, 2015, 11:04:16 PM
#24
Before i start I want to give out thanks:
1) I want to thank cryptocrane.com for quick delivery and being stand up and helping with the Antminer problems-- super cool
2) I want to thank Antminer for making a defective unit and being absolutely no help in resolving the problem, even though silmilar problems are written about on these forums from the S2.
3) I cannot remember who it was but a guide was written about the beaglebone issues on the S2 and how to replace the card--thanks

A quick introduction, I am new to BTC and come from a background of extreme overclocking etc.  I have followed BTC for years and decided it was time to play with some mining hardware. ( I know, a little late to the party).  I purchased 2 Antminer S4's about 2 weeks ago from http://cryptocrane.com and received my rigs 2 days after purchase.  Within 2 days one of the miners was dead.  It had the dreaded amber light on the PSU.  

This is a simple repair of a fried BB board.  It may or may not be easier to replace the BB board for $60.

After a little searching I realized the PSU issue and opened the unit and replaced it with 2 Corsair units that I had in my possession.  The unit was still dead and after playing around with it I got the LCD to at least come on but then realized I had a dead beaglebone card.  None of the beaglebone LED's were lighting up.  

I continued looking online and found the guide to replace the beaglebone card and update the SD card etc.  So i ordered a couple of beaglebone cards.  This is after getting no assistance from Bitmain. The guys at cryptocrane.com were replacing the PSU's and helping troubleshoot.

The problem with ordering parts is I have to wait--- not my strong point.  So i took out the parts and went to work.  

Again- these mods were on the non working BB board and I would not suggest doing these mods on a new BB card as it would be unnecessary.

I am still not sure if the PSU or the beaglebone card went first but I would bet the PSU shorted the beaglebone card.


good friends , I have a antminer s4 + , she lights the network cable connector but no red lights and green lights in front, also i can not do a factory reset , and access it to configure , is fried the BEAGLEBONE ?
full member
Activity: 213
Merit: 100
Hope it bits the in the ass one day with the support being So F'ed Up. Someone read them 101 on companies with bad support.
donator
Activity: 792
Merit: 510
October 27, 2014, 03:27:14 PM
#22
Currently, the direct warranty is provided to the customers who purchased the miner direct from http://www.bitmaintech.com , http://www.bitmain.com , http://www.bitmain.us

The warranty is valid for the original purchaser only and it does not transfer to the second hand owner.  The original 90-days warranty is valid while the 2nd hand or even the 3rd hand owner continue to own the miner, however, the warranty has to be serviced by the person/business reselling the miners.  (Meaning, non-direct purchaser has to contact the person/business who bought it from to deal with the warranty service)

OP stated in the POST#1 that OP purchased the miner from other than the URL managed by Bitmain.

ASIC Miner Company and other manufactures provide the very similar warranty service and this seems to be the norm of the industry at this time.  After Sale Service is being improved at this time and accepting any opinions, suggestions and comments, please PM.

Hope this clarify.



Before i start I want to give out thanks:
1) I want to thank cryptocrane.com for quick delivery and being stand up and helping with the Antminer problems-- super cool


Thanks guys for the support, here is the email they sent me when I was asking for help...


sr. member
Activity: 358
Merit: 255
October 27, 2014, 02:36:29 PM
#21
That's not good customer support.
Glad you were able to get it shorted.
legendary
Activity: 2744
Merit: 1193
I don't believe in denial.
October 26, 2014, 08:26:15 AM
#20
@kilo17,

Thank you for sharing the info!!

If the Beagle Bone was fried, when the PSU went down, your unit is covered under the warranty.  Please contact Bitmain or tech support and the tech can arrange you the replacement Beagle Bone.

We have beagle bones and the control PCB in stock for RMA needs!



So, you refuse to help the guy when he first asks you, leaving him to work out a fix for himself. Then, after he's done so & posted about it and your lack of help - you then decide to offer help for him?  Roll Eyes Bit late don't you think?

Well, frankly... he did:

Quote from: kilo17
[...] purchased it from a third party [...]
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
WANTED: Active dev to fix & re-write p2pool in C
October 26, 2014, 07:59:55 AM
#19
@kilo17,

Thank you for sharing the info!!

If the Beagle Bone was fried, when the PSU went down, your unit is covered under the warranty.  Please contact Bitmain or tech support and the tech can arrange you the replacement Beagle Bone.

We have beagle bones and the control PCB in stock for RMA needs!



So, you refuse to help the guy when he first asks you, leaving him to work out a fix for himself. Then, after he's done so & posted about it and your lack of help - you then decide to offer help for him?  Roll Eyes Bit late don't you think?
donator
Activity: 792
Merit: 510
October 25, 2014, 11:56:41 PM
#18
@kilo17,

Thank you for sharing the info!!

If the Beagle Bone was fried, when the PSU went down, your unit is covered under the warranty.  Please contact Bitmain or tech support and the tech can arrange you the replacement Beagle Bone.

We have beagle bones and the control PCB in stock for RMA needs!

sr. member
Activity: 358
Merit: 255
October 25, 2014, 08:34:39 PM
#17
Did you have to get a replacement BBB or the actual card it sits on? If its the actual card it sits on how do you get one of these? Is it direct from Bitmain and how much was it?

thanks
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1001
aka "whocares"
October 25, 2014, 03:33:39 AM
#16
What do you believe was damaged on the old board, that the fix bypasses or replaces?

The short is located between the PSU 6 pin connector on the green board and Pins 1-8 on the expansion interface closest to the 6-pin connector  (1-8 of P9 on the BB board).  The repair actually bypasses the 6-pin connector supplying the power to the BB board and therefore bypasses the short.  I will upload some pics of the multimeter readings tomorrow showing the short etc.  I think when the PSU died it caused the short but thats just my $.02--
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
October 25, 2014, 02:37:41 AM
#15
What do you believe was damaged on the old board, that the fix bypasses or replaces?
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1001
aka "whocares"
October 25, 2014, 01:28:23 AM
#14
@kilo17
It worth to check the beaglebone's docs and use a multimeter to determine the proper position of wires instead of try&burn your replacement board.

I think I was way to vague, sorry.  This is not the replacement BB board, this is a repair of the fried BB board. 

I did use the doc's from beaglebone and check with a multimeter, I should have mentioned that.  I used the pin outs and power rec. from the BB docs...I was trying to keep it simple and staright forward, i may have over simplified it.

Then could you please edit your post regarding this so no inexperienced user would do this mistake.
Thank you

Thanks Bee7 and Dogie for bringing the confusion to my attention... I have updated the opening post and the Title to make it more clear what is being accomplished.
hero member
Activity: 574
Merit: 523
October 25, 2014, 01:16:58 AM
#13
@kilo17
It worth to check the beaglebone's docs and use a multimeter to determine the proper position of wires instead of try&burn your replacement board.

I think I was way to vague, sorry.  This is not the replacement BB board, this is a repair of the fried BB board. 

I did use the doc's from beaglebone and check with a multimeter, I should have mentioned that.  I used the pin outs and power rec. from the BB docs...I was trying to keep it simple and staright forward, i may have over simplified it.

Then could you please edit your post regarding this so no inexperienced user would do this mistake.
Thank you
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1001
aka "whocares"
October 25, 2014, 01:14:13 AM
#12
@kilo17
It worth to check the beaglebone's docs and use a multimeter to determine the proper position of wires instead of try&burn your replacement board.

I think I was way to vague, sorry.  This is not the replacement BB board, this is a repair of the fried BB board. 

I did use the doc's from beaglebone and check with a multimeter, I should have mentioned that.  I used the pin outs and power rec. from the BB docs...I was trying to keep it simple and staright forward, i may have over simplified it.
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1001
aka "whocares"
October 25, 2014, 01:06:38 AM
#11
Sorry, thought you were hazing (lol).  I saw there were issues with flashing etc on the S2 and wasn't sure if that would be an issue on the S4 as well.  Also these units being my first 2 mining rigs I was excited to have them running.  I simply repaired it while I was waiting for the new BB cards to arrive.  It is running great so I have not used the new cards.  I think the bigger benefit would be for people that do not have an extra $50-70 to spend on a new BB card or wait weeks to get a replacement from Bitmain (which I suspect would be a long process since they did not want to deal with me since I purchased it from a third party).  Thanks
hero member
Activity: 574
Merit: 523
October 25, 2014, 01:05:32 AM
#10
@kilo17
It worth to check the beaglebone's docs and use a multimeter to determine the proper position of wires instead of try&burn your replacement board.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
October 25, 2014, 12:56:45 AM
#9
May you please explain why you didn't just swap out the dead BB with a new BB? What specifically is the mod solving?

Really?....are you "that guy" that likes to crap on others work--every forum has one...this mod saves time and money....

:/ I'm just asking, because I don't understand what it achieved or is aiming to achieve.
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1001
aka "whocares"
October 25, 2014, 12:45:35 AM
#8
May you please explain why you didn't just swap out the dead BB with a new BB? What specifically is the mod solving?

Really?....are you "that guy" that likes to crap on others work--every forum has one...this mod saves time and money....
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