DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
- 22,555
- 12,415
- 136
reb0rn, if you don't trust Vitalik and/or Ethereum then don't invest time/money. I'm not saying you're wrong (or right), it's just that everyone knows that something like Ethereum is speculative, so there's risk involved. At least for some of us, it's a hobby, and the profit is uh, secondary? Sort of? Mostly.
Anyway here's some data that hopefully someone can use.
Card baking
Despite running "only" 4 GPUs per system on open-air rig #1, I managed to damage at least one of my cards (MSI 390) by putting it in a position where it ran hotter than it should. It had unexpected instability issues, and for whatever reason, I wasn't checking its operating temperature like a hawk. Apparently one of my cards (an XFX 390) is kicking a lot of head out of its backplate, enough that there was a zone of hot air between it and the adjacent MSI 390. The hot air was going into the fans of the MSI card, and it was running hot and crashing/seizing up a lot (it did not do this in my Win10 daily driver). Also the MSI 390 cooler generally stinks. Running up the fans does not produce much extra cooling.
Aaaaanyway repeated overheats seem to have damaged the VRMs or something on the MSI 390 such that it sucks up maybe 20W more power than it should running the "max" stable settings for the card (-100mv, 1070 MHz GPU, 1250 MHz VRAM). All that extra power consumption is overwhelming the poor cooling solution causing it to run around 80C solo back in the Win10 machine, which is much hotter than it should be running. I've been forced to detune it (currently running 940 MHz GPU, 1250MHz VRAM -50% power limit, -100 mV) to get power consumption down in order to keep temps in an acceptable range. I have yet to deal with the hotspot, though moving the miner itself and/or the cards may solve the problem. For now, my old Pitcairn is in the hotspot, and it is not mining. So -17MH/s until I fix the problem. Bleh.
I also have a reference XFX 290 that has spontaneously developed a similar problem, despite the fact that it does not seem to have operated at high (75C+) temps on a consistent basis. It's at ~900 MHz GPU, 1250 MHz VRAM, -100 mV, -50% power limit. The sad thing is it's still pushing 72% on the blower fan to stay at 72C with those settings. I could probably tune it to run better at around those settings but I do not have the time for that right now.
It's also possible that some of these cards have TIM that is hardening/cracking which is something I saw on a pair of Sapphire r9 290s I have. That might explain some of the diminished cooling performance, though not the obnoxious extra power draw (observed on MSI 390).
Old miner boards
It might be useful to know which boards will and will not work as mining platforms, and to what extent. I'll provide some data on the boards I have used:
Asus A88x-Pro
I have used this board for mining in Win10 only. If you need to use 1x PCIe risers, only the 1x slots on the board will work in Win10 on their own. You might be able to do it in the 16x slots with extra wiring. Powered ribbon cable risers might be a better bet for the 16x slots in Windows. If you try 1x risers in the 16x slot, Windows simply refuses to acknowledge that a video card (or anything else) in "in the slot". Haven't tried Linux on the board for mining. I had to move my Linux drive to make room for a second full-length GPU.
Hooking up a card to the 1x slots via 1x PCIe risers does work, and you can even use that setup to flash the card BIOS. I have used my daily driver as a test-and-tune system to get cards prepped for use in other rigs. The iGPU on my 7700k means I am not dependent on dGPUs for display, which is nice. The downside is that having a GCN dGPU with a program like ethminer means that it's difficult/impossible to mine with the -t option without getting the dGPU involved in the mining. The solution to this is to mine with --opencl-device, and to run one client per card in separate logins.
Gigabyte GA-MA790X-UP4
I've used this board to mine with a Phenom 9750 + 2x4Gb DDR2 under Linux. All PCIe slots work with risers except the "last" 1x PCIe slot. Attempting to boot with a riser/card plugged into that slot causes Linux to hang while loading the desktop. Not exactly sure why. In any case, it's good for four cards, and this old piece of hardware has been (thus far) bulletproof. Also it has good enough voltage controls that you can undervolt your CPU with it. Sort-of a must with a Phenom 9750. The lag during mining startup is epic. Mining with the primary display device (a 2Gb R9 270) can cause the entire system to lock up for a minute or longer at the start. After that it's fine.
MSI k9a2 Platinum
These boards are rare and expensive for the most part. I got mine as a package deal which is the only reason I have one. Anyway, jury's still out on this thing. I haven't (yet) gotten a video signal out of cards plugged into PCIe slots via 1x risers, though granted, I haven't tried much. I can confirm that Linux will detect and configure individual cards connected via risers, though I have yet to get the system to actually mine through a riser. It mined once through a 290 plugged directly into a 16x slot, but now it just sort of loads the DAG and then sits there? I can't figure out what's wrong with it. Might be a problem related to my Sempron 140 which has had the crap beaten out of it and is now a bit on the unstable side, though at 2.2 GHz it should be fine. Nothing appears to be crashing, in any case . . .
NewEgg r9 290 refurb situation
I talked to a NewEgg rep on the phone yesterday and got a slightly more-positive resolution: the rep indicated that within a week or so, they expected more Tri-X refurbs to go into stock for their US site. She intimated that a direct exchange would be possible in which I returned my reference 290 for a Tri-X, though I can not confirm that they'll actually do that. She did say that if I call back and initiate a return over the phone, given the cirumstances, they'll replace the card and give me a paid shipping label (no restock fees either). So I'm going to wait a short while and look for the Tri-X refurbs to become available to see what happens.
(just an FYI, but the reference 290s they were selling marked down to $179 sold out on the US site)
Seeing as how the 'Egg is selling the Tri-X refurbs on their .ca site for the equivalent of ~$190, I see no reason why I should not be able to return my item 1 for 1 considering I paid $199 for it.
Anyway here's some data that hopefully someone can use.
Card baking
Despite running "only" 4 GPUs per system on open-air rig #1, I managed to damage at least one of my cards (MSI 390) by putting it in a position where it ran hotter than it should. It had unexpected instability issues, and for whatever reason, I wasn't checking its operating temperature like a hawk. Apparently one of my cards (an XFX 390) is kicking a lot of head out of its backplate, enough that there was a zone of hot air between it and the adjacent MSI 390. The hot air was going into the fans of the MSI card, and it was running hot and crashing/seizing up a lot (it did not do this in my Win10 daily driver). Also the MSI 390 cooler generally stinks. Running up the fans does not produce much extra cooling.
Aaaaanyway repeated overheats seem to have damaged the VRMs or something on the MSI 390 such that it sucks up maybe 20W more power than it should running the "max" stable settings for the card (-100mv, 1070 MHz GPU, 1250 MHz VRAM). All that extra power consumption is overwhelming the poor cooling solution causing it to run around 80C solo back in the Win10 machine, which is much hotter than it should be running. I've been forced to detune it (currently running 940 MHz GPU, 1250MHz VRAM -50% power limit, -100 mV) to get power consumption down in order to keep temps in an acceptable range. I have yet to deal with the hotspot, though moving the miner itself and/or the cards may solve the problem. For now, my old Pitcairn is in the hotspot, and it is not mining. So -17MH/s until I fix the problem. Bleh.
I also have a reference XFX 290 that has spontaneously developed a similar problem, despite the fact that it does not seem to have operated at high (75C+) temps on a consistent basis. It's at ~900 MHz GPU, 1250 MHz VRAM, -100 mV, -50% power limit. The sad thing is it's still pushing 72% on the blower fan to stay at 72C with those settings. I could probably tune it to run better at around those settings but I do not have the time for that right now.
It's also possible that some of these cards have TIM that is hardening/cracking which is something I saw on a pair of Sapphire r9 290s I have. That might explain some of the diminished cooling performance, though not the obnoxious extra power draw (observed on MSI 390).
Old miner boards
It might be useful to know which boards will and will not work as mining platforms, and to what extent. I'll provide some data on the boards I have used:
Asus A88x-Pro
I have used this board for mining in Win10 only. If you need to use 1x PCIe risers, only the 1x slots on the board will work in Win10 on their own. You might be able to do it in the 16x slots with extra wiring. Powered ribbon cable risers might be a better bet for the 16x slots in Windows. If you try 1x risers in the 16x slot, Windows simply refuses to acknowledge that a video card (or anything else) in "in the slot". Haven't tried Linux on the board for mining. I had to move my Linux drive to make room for a second full-length GPU.
Hooking up a card to the 1x slots via 1x PCIe risers does work, and you can even use that setup to flash the card BIOS. I have used my daily driver as a test-and-tune system to get cards prepped for use in other rigs. The iGPU on my 7700k means I am not dependent on dGPUs for display, which is nice. The downside is that having a GCN dGPU with a program like ethminer means that it's difficult/impossible to mine with the -t option without getting the dGPU involved in the mining. The solution to this is to mine with --opencl-device, and to run one client per card in separate logins.
Gigabyte GA-MA790X-UP4
I've used this board to mine with a Phenom 9750 + 2x4Gb DDR2 under Linux. All PCIe slots work with risers except the "last" 1x PCIe slot. Attempting to boot with a riser/card plugged into that slot causes Linux to hang while loading the desktop. Not exactly sure why. In any case, it's good for four cards, and this old piece of hardware has been (thus far) bulletproof. Also it has good enough voltage controls that you can undervolt your CPU with it. Sort-of a must with a Phenom 9750. The lag during mining startup is epic. Mining with the primary display device (a 2Gb R9 270) can cause the entire system to lock up for a minute or longer at the start. After that it's fine.
MSI k9a2 Platinum
These boards are rare and expensive for the most part. I got mine as a package deal which is the only reason I have one. Anyway, jury's still out on this thing. I haven't (yet) gotten a video signal out of cards plugged into PCIe slots via 1x risers, though granted, I haven't tried much. I can confirm that Linux will detect and configure individual cards connected via risers, though I have yet to get the system to actually mine through a riser. It mined once through a 290 plugged directly into a 16x slot, but now it just sort of loads the DAG and then sits there? I can't figure out what's wrong with it. Might be a problem related to my Sempron 140 which has had the crap beaten out of it and is now a bit on the unstable side, though at 2.2 GHz it should be fine. Nothing appears to be crashing, in any case . . .
NewEgg r9 290 refurb situation
I talked to a NewEgg rep on the phone yesterday and got a slightly more-positive resolution: the rep indicated that within a week or so, they expected more Tri-X refurbs to go into stock for their US site. She intimated that a direct exchange would be possible in which I returned my reference 290 for a Tri-X, though I can not confirm that they'll actually do that. She did say that if I call back and initiate a return over the phone, given the cirumstances, they'll replace the card and give me a paid shipping label (no restock fees either). So I'm going to wait a short while and look for the Tri-X refurbs to become available to see what happens.
(just an FYI, but the reference 290s they were selling marked down to $179 sold out on the US site)
Seeing as how the 'Egg is selling the Tri-X refurbs on their .ca site for the equivalent of ~$190, I see no reason why I should not be able to return my item 1 for 1 considering I paid $199 for it.
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