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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday August 24 2017, @07:46PM   Printer-friendly
from the miner-49er dept.

ASUS will sell a motherboard that can support 19 GPUs. The product is intended for cryptocurrency mining:

ASUS this week teased the new "B250 Mining Expert" which boasts all those slots because – as the name implies – its role in life is mining cryptocurrency.

The board can't do it all itself, of course. ASUS' preferred GPU is the P106, a variant of NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 1060), 1,280-CUDA-core, 1,506MHz affair that can surge to 1,708 MHz when required and boasts 6GB of RAM. ASUS' version is shorn of anything to do with displaying video so that it can smoke hashes to cook cryptocurrency.

Do the math: 19 GPUS, 1,280 cores apiece ... this motherboard could end up hosting 24,320 cores before you fill the Intel LGA 1511 socket with a Skylake, Kaby Lake or Coffee Lake CPU. That chip's half-dozen or so cores are hardly worth counting!

The board is also equipped to slurp three power supplies, because all those GPUs are thirsty. There's also a capacitor dedicated to each PCIe slot to make sure the juice doesn't fluctuate and upset the precious mining machines. A mining-specific BIOS that lets you manage all those GPUs rounds things out.

What do you do with this after cryptocurrency mining is dead?


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by c0lo on Thursday August 24 2017, @08:26PM (8 children)

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 24 2017, @08:26PM (#558575) Journal

    2.2-2.5kW at full power. (GeForce GTX 1060 [geforce.co.uk] is speced at max 120W, have 19 of those, add a CPU and some RAM - somewhere there).

    Doubles up as a pottery kiln - granted, a small one, for hobbyists perhaps. Or as a water preheater in a thermal power plant.
    Just don't use it in Arizona's summer time.

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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
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  • (Score: 2) by forkazoo on Thursday August 24 2017, @09:22PM (4 children)

    by forkazoo (2561) on Thursday August 24 2017, @09:22PM (#558609)

    So, assume another ~ 2 kilowatts worth of air conditioning sitting right next to it.

    The average home only uses like 1 kilowatt. (It spikes much higher, but on average the fridge isn't running while the dryer is going while you are watching TV, etc.)

    • (Score: 3, Funny) by c0lo on Thursday August 24 2017, @09:32PM

      by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 24 2017, @09:32PM (#558616) Journal

      The average home only uses like 1 kilowatt.

      I suspect the incidence of failed raids for hydro-weed may climb sharply - high energy consumption all the time with localized IR patterns, regular deposits on bank accounts or just significantly big ones from time to time (from exchanging the mined crypto-$).

      --
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
    • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Thursday August 24 2017, @09:43PM

      by bob_super (1357) on Thursday August 24 2017, @09:43PM (#558622)

      According to SCE, I only average 300W, but then again my bill is half to a quarter of my neighbors', and we don't live in total-AC-land or total-frost-land, so we can have Euro-style energy usage.
      I previously ranted about it being too low, and they won't let me put solar panels.

    • (Score: 3, Informative) by drussell on Friday August 25 2017, @05:09AM (1 child)

      by drussell (2678) on Friday August 25 2017, @05:09AM (#558735) Journal

      So, assume another ~ 2 kilowatts worth of air conditioning sitting right next to it.

      No, air conditioning is a heat pump. It only takes about 1/3 the power to move the heat in most systems, so a typical 5000 BTU window air conditioner moves that heat (5000 BTU is about 1500 Watts of heat) from one side to the other using about 500 Watts of power.

      You're looking at about 750-800 watts or so if you needed to pump that heat outside from a fully loaded rig.

      Of course, if you're somewhere like here where we heat instead of cool, then it just reduces your heating (gas/oil/coal/wood/etc.) bill while raising your electricity bill.

      Of course, if you already heat with electricity (egads! that must be expensive!) then it makes no difference. :)

      • (Score: 2) by forkazoo on Friday August 25 2017, @11:49PM

        by forkazoo (2561) on Friday August 25 2017, @11:49PM (#559158)

        It only takes about 1/3 the power to move the heat in most systems,

        There are enough inefficiencies that a lot of real world data centers are shockingly close to the 1:1 rule of thumb, even if it can theoretically be much better. If you have an air conditioning unit on the top of a nine story building that pushes air down to a second floor data center and back up to an exhaust on the top, you use more energy than just the heat pump. You may say that's a stupid design, but a lot of things are both stupid and exist. /shrug.

        Of course, if you already heat with electricity (egads! that must be expensive!) then it makes no difference. :)

        Indeed, the general wisdom is that computers are almost 100% perfectly efficient electric heaters, that leak a very small amount of energy as math!

  • (Score: 2, Informative) by fustakrakich on Thursday August 24 2017, @10:30PM

    by fustakrakich (6150) on Thursday August 24 2017, @10:30PM (#558628) Journal

    Arizona would be the best place. The damn thing will only make money if it's solar powered, otherwise it all goes to the power company

    --
    La politica e i criminali sono la stessa cosa..
  • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Friday August 25 2017, @08:59AM (1 child)

    by TheRaven (270) on Friday August 25 2017, @08:59AM (#558782) Journal
    2.5kW is the power of a small fan heater. Those GPUs are going to need to to extract the heat at the rate that it's generated and keep the temperatures low inside. I doubt that air cooling will do it.
    --
    sudo mod me up
    • (Score: 2) by c0lo on Friday August 25 2017, @12:14PM

      by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Friday August 25 2017, @12:14PM (#558817) Journal

      Depends on the temperature and flow.
      Pump the air at -50C and it shouldn't be a problem.

      --
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford