Where are you seeing 105c temps when mining?Yeah, but those 105c temps... How long is this card going to last mining around the clock?
Where are you seeing 105c temps when mining?Yeah, but those 105c temps... How long is this card going to last mining around the clock?
I haven't read every review out there, but the few I did read had the Radeon VII peaking at about 85c in stress tests (though even that would be too high for 24/7 mining and would need to be dialed back). If someone is seeing 105c then that is unacceptable, but I don't think that's what people should be expecting based on what I've seen.That's how hot the Radeon 7 is said to get under load. Though I suppose you could undervolt for mining. Never the less, it is likely going to be quite the scorcher compared to most GPUs. It is for that reason that it would not surprise me if it died sooner than most cards if operated continuously in the same fashion.
I forgot where I heard 105c now, I think youtube. But here is an excerpt from Gamespot's review where they were running 104c. Quite a long shot from 85c.I haven't read every review out there, but the few I did read had the Radeon VII peaking at about 85c in stress tests (though even that would be too high for 24/7 mining and would need to be dialed back). If someone is seeing 105c then that is unacceptable, but I don't think that's what people should be expecting based on what I've seen.
I forgot where I heard 105c now, I think youtube. But here is an excerpt from Gamespot's review where they were running 104c. Quite a long shot from 85c.
"Of all five cards in our review, the Radeon VII unfortunately takes the cake when it comes to load temperature. When accounting for Radeon VII's high TDP, it would be expected for it to run hot, but with a whopping peak load temperature of 104 C, it surpasses every other card by a longshot. Thankfully, this didn't result in any functional issues, but those who want to run a cool system should take note. Radeon VII's cooling solution may not the best for keeping temperatures down, but its fans stay fairly quiet. "
https://www.gamespot.com/articles/radeon-vii-review-can-amds-new-card-handle-4k-pc-g/1100-6464872/
Yeah, but those 105c temps... How long is this card going to last mining around the clock?
Anyone mining Grin?
This might be mistaken.That's how hot the Radeon 7 is said to get under load. Though I suppose you could undervolt for mining. Never the less, it is likely going to be quite the scorcher compared to most GPUs. It is for that reason that it would not surprise me if it died sooner than most cards if operated continuously in the same fashion.
Still mining eth with my 2 1070's. Got a wooping 1.5879 eth so far which is about $248.57 as I type this. I have not actually sad down to calculate it but I imagine it might be JUST covering hydro costs. Definitly did not pay off even 1 card. They were like $800. They're still going for like $300-$500 now on ebay it's kind of crazy.
Going to keep going for now. Eventually repurpose the rig for something else. Though it is tempting to sell one card while they are still expensive, and then just keep the other for my gaming machine. Been wanting to experiment with a different VM solution than vmware and I believe the cpu I'm using has VT-D so it would make a decent VM server.
Sorry it didn't work out better for you. On the plus side, that 1.5879 ETH might be worth more in a year's time. I'd hold on to it for a minute to see how that goes. I don't think it's going to go down any further. In fact the whole market is jumping over the last 24 hours so who know's what's going on there?
Because it's what me pappy did and his pappy before em'.why are people still mining ?
If mining has hurt so many people, and the video card market has died for them, why are people still mining ?
Because it's what me pappy did and his pappy before em'.
I know you're not a fan of mining, but that's a bit hyperbolic to suggest mining has hurt many people. Mining serves a useful purpose, for now at least, for a technology that many believe will revolutionize large aspects of society once it has matured a little bit more. It's part of the process of improvement.If mining has hurt so many people, and the video card market has died for them, why are people still mining ?
It is understood that the goal is PoW, which should alleviate much of this,
PoS (Proof of Stake) actually, but I get where you're coming from.
Providing security for the blockchain you're mining on is intrinsically valuable. It isn't just in theoretical stages - Ethereum is running numerous valuable and innovative applications today, even though it still needs future scaling upgrades for most of them to really go mainstream.Blockchain is good.
Mining via GPU is fantastically stupid if the processes don't actually produce anything of value intrinsically. Those that leverage for protein folding etc are exceptions.
It's a well understood issue with power waste and is poorly timed considering fossiil fuel issues, climate change, infrastructure strain, etc.
It is understood that the goal is PoW, which should alleviate much of this, or move to ASICs that are an order of magnitude more efficient, but the interim has been pretty bad for most everyone that hasn't seen direct profits from this stage. It distresses me that so much computing power has been dedicated to basically nonsense, when at the very least it could have been harnessed to do beneficial medical or scientific research to 'mine' instead. And one cannot compare mining to gaming. A gamer might average a few hours a day at most, and probably the majority less than that, compared to miners running 24/7/365, sometimes with dozens, hundreds, or even many thousands+ of GPUs. All essentially running like power viruses solving worthless math (outside of the blockchain maintenance itself, a pittance by contrast).
Sometimes I still wonder why they never tried doing more to limit hashrate per user or hashrate per address. Some kind of a privatized KYC system along with random blockchain rewards that don't necessarily reward you for having more hashrate on the blockchain.
Just don't cash out low.
If mining profits go negative, a small scale miner should absolutely turn off their gear. You can still believe in the long term viability of the technology and want to bet on the future of it that's fine, but if it costs you $1 to make 90 cents of a coin, it's better to idle your gear and just buy $1 of that coin.A lot of people who are still mining are also doing it because they already invested the time and money in the hardware. May as well put it to use. I never understood this notion that you have to shut down everything the minute profits are down. You see that even with real mining, like gold, oil etc. You know damn well the product is not always going to be low, it only makes sense to keep operations going until it goes back up. Just don't cash out low.