gawminers-falcon-scrypt-asic-miner

Today we did took thermal images in order to be able to see how well does the GAWMiners Falcon Scrypt ASIC miner deal with the heat, since we have an unbranded Falcon unit it is essentially the same as the standard ZeusMiner THUNDER X3 inside. With a power consumption of over 900W you might worry a bit about the thermal performance of the device, or at least be a bit curious how good is the cooling and if you are able to possibly improve it would that bring the level of HW errors down a bit.

gawminers-falcon-thermal-image-1

As you can see from the thermal images on the outside the Falcon is pretty cool with the hottest areas barely getting up to about 42 degrees Celsius. The device uses two large 120mm fans that pull the hot air through the case of the miner over the large aluminum coolers inside the case, these fans are very powerful and a bit noisy. In fact they are so powerful that they cause some vibrations of the whole case of the miner and since there are no rubber feet at the bottom of the case the miner might sound noisier if the surface it is placed on picks up the vibrations and amplifies them. Not that the fans are that cool, they are a bit noisy, butt they do their job very well in keeping the device cooler and operating without heat problems of any kind. Actually what you should be more careful with is the cables from the power supply that go to the miner as they may get hot due to the significant power being transferred through them. If they are cool or just slightly hot to the touch they are most likely fine, but if they start to get hotter after you turn on the miner, then you might need to think about getting a better power supply.

gawminers-falcon-thermal-image-2

Opening the case of the Falcon Scrypt ASIC while it is operating may not be the wisest thing to do, especially for longer periods of time as it may permanently damage the device due to overheating. The fact that you have fans pulling air from inside the case means that when you open the top the efficiency of the cooling of the device drops a lot and everything starts to get hotter and hotter very quickly. We did it remove it very quickly just to take the thermal photos and put back together the case in order to measure the temperatures as close as possible to the actual ones while the miner is working normally. As you can see on the left image the four big aluminum heatsinks remain very cool at about 30-35 degrees Celsius while the fans are pulling a lot of air though them. Looking at the boards with the ASIC chips on them things do seem a bit hotter as to be expected, the chips are pretty hot as the design of the miner uses the back of the PCB to transfer the heat to the heatsinks and the chips do not have coolers placed on top of them. Temperatures of about 60-70 degrees Celsius are apparently something that is not a problem for them, though you should be careful not to get the temperatures much higher like for example leaving the miner to work open for some time. The power modules of the boards do seem cooler than the ASIC chips, though they do get a bit hot as well. So there is the possibility for some improvements to the cooling of the device to be improved further and now that we have some thermal images we know where we should focus on, you are also welcome to use these images to work on improving the cooling and possibly the performance of the device.

coinking-multipool

Today, checking out the PoolPicker multipool profitability monitoring service, that has received a complete makeover, we found out about a new interesting automatic profit based coin switching pool. It is called CoinKing and offers multipool capabilities for mining Scrypt, Scrypt-N, SHA256, X11 and X13 coins giving you a good chance to profit the most of your mining hardware, regardless if it is in the form of ASIC miners or GPUs. It caught our eye due to the fact that according to PoolPicker it is currently the most profitable multipool for Scrypt, X11 and SHA-256 coins and we have decided to check it out. Not that we are not happy from LTC Rabbit or ScryptGuild, however a multipool needs to constantly add new coins and have many profitable options available in order to maximize your profits as a miner…

The thing is that older pools do tend to keep for long coins that are no longer profitable to mine and do not add new profitable coins that often. That is why it is a good idea to be on the lookout for new services that might offer better profitability if you do not want to risk it mining new crypto coins that are currently launching. With so many new coins launched that turn out to be scams from developers that want to make some quick cash by pumping and dumping premined or IPOed coins it is no wonder that more people get back to multipools as a safer alternative for better profit than directly mining for a fixed coin. We’ll be doing a more detailed review of this multipool soon as we have just started testing and playing with it, but so far it looks very promising and profitable especially for owners of Scrypt or SHA256 ASIC miners.

For more information about the CoinKing multipool and to try it out yourself…

ccminer-1-2-windows

The ccMiner Nvidia CUDA miner has just been updated to version 1.2 with the source code getting support for the community contributed X13 and Diamond Groestl support. We have compiled a windows binary version from the source that includes the recently released optimizations called “Killer Groestl” that improves the performance of Groestl and all coins that use the algorithm supported by ccMiner. If you are using tsiv’s fork of ccMiner for mining X13 then it is recommended to download this new update as it will bring an extra performance improvement in x13 mining hashrate. Our tests show that on a GeForce GTX 750 Ti you can expect to get from about 1700 KHS to close to 2100 KHS mining X13 with the new ccMiner 1.2 as X13 does rely on Groestl as well.

Do note that the windows binary you can download below is compiled for Compute 3.0 and Compute 3.5-5.0 cards (32-bit version only), so it will not work on older cards. If you are unsure what version of Compute does your video card support check the included GPU Compute Capabilities List file. It is also compiled with Visual Studio 2012, so if you do not already have Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2012 you will have to download and install it, otherwise you may be getting error for a missing DLL library.

To download the new ccMiner 1.2 beta with official x13 support for Windows OS…

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