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Topic: {[Rig Help]} Help me pick parts for a $550-$570 mining rig? (Read 486 times)

member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
x1 7970 | Aprox. 587 kh/s
Would it be possible to get up to 600 mh/s in my price range or is that pushing it? I'm fine with 4 older cards, just as long as they pump out a good hash rate.
member
Activity: 105
Merit: 59
When I was GPU mining on Linux, it was much better to *not* have them in cross fire, but that was 18 months ago. You can have multiple cards in a system with crossfire disabled.
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
Single card is good too. The real luxury of a well configured crossfire system, is you have a card, if one fails. Or you have flexibility to sell one, and apply it to some kind of upgrade.

The question wasn't as much about what is the smartest design(which varies for the users knowledge and situation). The question was more about what parts to work within the budget. $560 is tough, because you're right below a FGPA price range in the same has territory, and under a single card setup that would get you a similar hashrate.

Just because you have two cards, doesn't mean they are in crossfire. Hense, my question. Is there any benefit to having them in crossfire? My understanding is that only helps out with framerates on a single monitor. (If you run dual monitors, I think its better to not run them in crossfire).
member
Activity: 109
Merit: 10
Has anyone sat down and done the math behind what $BTC has to get to in order for buying a rig to be profitable?  With the massive increase in difficulty that ASIC miners can fuel, I'd imagine it would be extreemly high.

There are a few sites that allow you to plug in numbers and give you a good idea of expected profits. Of course, the ASIC mining anticipation makes it hard to predict exactly what will happen when availability and costs are better, therefore most of the estimations factor in what is on the market now between all of the different methods and current farms/ASIC/CUDA/openGL...
member
Activity: 109
Merit: 10
Single card is good too. The real luxury of a well configured crossfire system, is you have a card, if one fails. Or you have flexibility to sell one, and apply it to some kind of upgrade.

The question wasn't as much about what is the smartest design(which varies for the users knowledge and situation). The question was more about what parts to work within the budget. $560 is tough, because you're right below a FGPA price range in the same has territory, and under a single card setup that would get you a similar hashrate.
newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 0
Has anyone sat down and done the math behind what $BTC has to get to in order for buying a rig to be profitable?  With the massive increase in difficulty that ASIC miners can fuel, I'd imagine it would be extreemly high.
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
Is there any advantage to actually doing them in crossfire? Why not just independent?
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
x1 7970 | Aprox. 587 kh/s
Thanks for that!

Any other opinions or ideas? Id like to hear more Cheesy
member
Activity: 109
Merit: 10
Hello eveyone. I would like to start litecoin mining. I have about $550 - $570 to spend on a rig. As you can imagine I want to get the most mh/s (or is it kh/s??) for the price I dont need a case or HDD (I'll use a flash drive + linux). Thanks in advance!

And hello to everyone on the forums!


2x 7770 in crossfire. $220
A6 + board combo deal for about $140
2GB ram  $20
$60 for a decent 680w crossfire ready PSU

~500 Mhash/s off GPU

another ~40 off APU
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
x1 7970 | Aprox. 587 kh/s
Hello eveyone. I would like to start litecoin mining. I have about $550 - $570 to spend on a rig. As you can imagine I want to get the most mh/s (or is it kh/s??) for the price I dont need a case or HDD (I'll use a flash drive + linux). Thanks in advance!

And hello to everyone on the forums!
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