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Topic: What is your cooling setup? (small/medium/large miners) (Read 1302 times)

sr. member
Activity: 546
Merit: 254
ʕʘ̅͜ʘ̅ʔ
just for some Inspiration i leave you this here :



something like this should cool your rigs once you reach a certain amount of miners xD

but let me be real for a second.
the real question is:

how much power are you going to put into air movement.

if you can Keep your ambient temperature between 20 - 40 °c then everything is fine.

sr. member
Activity: 504
Merit: 250
My miner is on carports loft and the roof isnt sealed around it so its ideal for mining! I use a standard desk fan to cool my rig other than the standard fans Smiley Works well during summer, and now, when its colder outside the heat is no issue at all!
full member
Activity: 402
Merit: 116
I think even if someone has a kickass cooling setup, they wouldn't share it here on the internet. It would be one of those "trick of the trade" kind of deal.

Because lets face it, Cooling and Maintainance is literally what makes or break a miner these days.
full member
Activity: 490
Merit: 100
Hello;  I am interested in finding out how you have been dealing with HVAC/cooling for your mining setups?   If you are mining Bitcoins you will find that the Bitmain S9 likes to be around the 20-25 degrees range.   If you have a couple hundred of them that means it is pumping out 1.1M of BTU/hr.    What are you doing to eliminate the heat and keep everything running nice and cool?  

Most of the large mining outfits seem to use a forced intake/exhaust system to eliminate on A/C overhead costs and to run a leaner mine.  Which may be good for the pocket but not necessarily for the gear itself.  

- Recirculated air from A/C unit?
- Forced intake with filters/exhaust?
- Evaporation condensed coolers?  
- Geothermal?
- Other?

Please share.  This is an important topic as it relates to performance and setups.
That is one of the biggest obstacles faced by bitcoin miners, both young and old, the setup for the cooling system of your mining farm matters a lot if you’re ever going to keep making profits from transactions.
sr. member
Activity: 324
Merit: 250
If you have a large enough capital then A / C is the best choice. A / C has a very good cooling system. All areas can be covered because A / C has a very good circulation system. The problem now is the cost of building an A / C system in the room. We have to buy and spend money to pay a fairly high operational costs. The A / C has enough electricity to operate.

Correct... Adding a proper A/C setup will consume + add 10-30% of your electricity and electrical bill.   The problem there is you may not be able to run longer than the chinese ones that don't use A/C due to overhead costs.

I would not use A/C. As i mentioned earlier, these miners dont need to be "cold" they need the bare minimum to keep them within normal operating temperatures. A/C significantly increases electricity costs which increases time to ROI and reduces profitability. If you cannot operate your miners within normal thresholds without A/C you need to find a different location or send them off to be hosted. In my opinion A/C is not an option.
sr. member
Activity: 324
Merit: 250
How are you also getting those cool temps in there when the temperature outside would be say 90degrees?  Do you have this in a warehouse/garage door setup?

My particular setup is unique due to the design of my basement. In short, i'm able to have a somewhat natural hot aisle cold aisle containment system where half of my basement pulls ambient temp air from one side while the other side exhausts hot air out. i have three 5000+ cfm fans that help keep the air moving.
sr. member
Activity: 324
Merit: 250
I think its a common misconception that these miners need to be kept "cool." With S9's if you can keep chip temps in the high 70's low 80's you should be good to go. I have been able to achieve this for over a year including the summer months by using industrial barrel fans as intake and exhaust air movers to help get the hot air out and ambient temp air in. Gigawatt up in Washinton State does something similar with their POD design. No air conditioning, just moving massive amounts of air.

Plus, most mining equipment isn't made to last 4 years reliably, even if it does, it most likely wont be profitable to run 4 years. There are also no hard drives which is one of the reasons traditional data centers focus on cooling so much.

Do you know if they have posted pictures anywhere of their setup?

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfrjhflKGzQ
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
Its possible to use radiator in mining rig?

Like a water/evap cooling system?   Or immersion fed?
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
If you have a large enough capital then A / C is the best choice. A / C has a very good cooling system. All areas can be covered because A / C has a very good circulation system. The problem now is the cost of building an A / C system in the room. We have to buy and spend money to pay a fairly high operational costs. The A / C has enough electricity to operate.

Correct... Adding a proper A/C setup will consume + add 10-30% of your electricity and electrical bill.   The problem there is you may not be able to run longer than the chinese ones that don't use A/C due to overhead costs.
newbie
Activity: 4
Merit: 0
Its possible to use radiator in mining rig?
legendary
Activity: 1526
Merit: 1001
If you have a large enough capital then A / C is the best choice. A / C has a very good cooling system. All areas can be covered because A / C has a very good circulation system. The problem now is the cost of building an A / C system in the room. We have to buy and spend money to pay a fairly high operational costs. The A / C has enough electricity to operate.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
are fans and AC enough for 3 sets of miners? TIA!

Absolutely.  You could have A/C blowing down on the front and fans on the back dissipating the heat and moving it away/out. 
full member
Activity: 254
Merit: 100
Blockchain with solar energy
are fans and AC enough for 3 sets of miners? TIA!
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
How are you also getting those cool temps in there when the temperature outside would be say 90degrees?  Do you have this in a warehouse/garage door setup?
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
I think its a common misconception that these miners need to be kept "cool." With S9's if you can keep chip temps in the high 70's low 80's you should be good to go. I have been able to achieve this for over a year including the summer months by using industrial barrel fans as intake and exhaust air movers to help get the hot air out and ambient temp air in. Gigawatt up in Washinton State does something similar with their POD design. No air conditioning, just moving massive amounts of air.

Plus, most mining equipment isn't made to last 4 years reliably, even if it does, it most likely wont be profitable to run 4 years. There are also no hard drives which is one of the reasons traditional data centers focus on cooling so much.

Do you know if they have posted pictures anywhere of their setup?

 
sr. member
Activity: 324
Merit: 250
Hello;  I am interested in finding out how you have been dealing with HVAC/cooling for your mining setups?   If you are mining Bitcoins you will find that the Bitmain S9 likes to be around the 20-25 degrees range.   If you have a couple hundred of them that means it is pumping out 1.1M of BTU/hr.    What are you doing to eliminate the heat and keep everything running nice and cool?   

Most of the large mining outfits seem to use a forced intake/exhaust system to eliminate on A/C overhead costs and to run a leaner mine.  Which may be good for the pocket but not necessarily for the gear itself. 

- Recirculated air from A/C unit?
- Forced intake with filters/exhaust?
- Evaporation condensed coolers? 
- Geothermal?
- Other?

Please share.  This is an important topic as it relates to performance and setups.

I think its a common misconception that these miners need to be kept "cool." With S9's if you can keep chip temps in the high 70's low 80's you should be good to go. I have been able to achieve this for over a year including the summer months by using industrial barrel fans as intake and exhaust air movers to help get the hot air out and ambient temp air in. Gigawatt up in Washinton State does something similar with their POD design. No air conditioning, just moving massive amounts of air.

Plus, most mining equipment isn't made to last 4 years reliably, even if it does, it most likely wont be profitable to run 4 years. There are also no hard drives which is one of the reasons traditional data centers focus on cooling so much.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
Hello;  I am interested in finding out how you have been dealing with HVAC/cooling for your mining setups?   If you are mining Bitcoins you will find that the Bitmain S9 likes to be around the 20-25 degrees range.   If you have a couple hundred of them that means it is pumping out 1.1M of BTU/hr.    What are you doing to eliminate the heat and keep everything running nice and cool?   

Most of the large mining outfits seem to use a forced intake/exhaust system to eliminate on A/C overhead costs and to run a leaner mine.  Which may be good for the pocket but not necessarily for the gear itself. 

- Recirculated air from A/C unit?
- Forced intake with filters/exhaust?
- Evaporation condensed coolers? 
- Geothermal?
- Other?

Please share.  This is an important topic as it relates to performance and setups.
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