Page 1 of 1

Too doggone hot

Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 6:09 pm
by momus_98
I built my rig to crunch hard numbers.

However, it is July in Texas an it is too doggone hot to run the client. Can I do something else? Or do I just wait until it cools down a bit?

(I'm a home user, not a data center). Ideas?

Re: Too doggone hot

Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 7:02 pm
by bikeaddict
My dedicated machines are in the basement where I don't care how much heat or noise they give off. Just sitting on a folding table with ethernet plugged into a small switch with a wi-fi extender that connects to my home network.

But I idle them voluntarily for a few hours when my electric company has an event to conserve power on hotter days, just to be nice and help reduce the risk of a rolling brownout/blackout in my neighborhood. There was a storm a couple weeks ago that took out my power for 2.5 hours on a semi-hot evening and it was pretty unpleasant without even a fan to stay cool.

Re: Too doggone hot

Posted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 1:20 am
by kiore
Take a little time off strip down your gear, get the dust out, redo thermal paste, fix that cable management you've been meaning to do after the last hardware change. Restart on low power mode... stuff like this.

Re: Too doggone hot

Posted: Tue Sep 06, 2022 11:25 am
by kwthom
momus_98 wrote: Tue Jul 19, 2022 6:09 pm However, it is July in Texas an it is too doggone hot to run the client. Can I do something else? Or do I just wait until it cools down a bit?
Same here in southern Arizona.

A few CPU units per month during the hot times of year, just to continue my efforts in crunching.

My GPU just got a unit of effort last night that I'll finish here this morning. As it gets cooler I'll do a bit more crunching to keep this part of the house warm.

Re: Too doggone hot

Posted: Tue Sep 06, 2022 8:53 pm
by BobWilliams757
One of the plus sides to having a slow iGPU. When it's hot you don't care, because it still doesn't draw much power or make much heat. The downside is that it never will produce much in terms of PPD, but if they could make this newer tech more efficient in power use ranges and being able to adjust them for power max, it could be a decent idea.

I've decided against any major power cards for both noise and heat. For now I'm going to stay efficient and able to power limit on the main PC, and then maybe grab a power card that makes noise for down the road in another room where I don't care about the heat or noise.

Re: Too doggone hot

Posted: Wed Sep 07, 2022 2:08 pm
by Vester
I built my rig to crunch hard numbers.
So did I, but I started with a rack from my previous mining rig and a liquid cooler.

To help, we need more information. What is too hot, the room or the computer components? Make and model of the case? How many case fans? CPU cooler? Does it run cooler with the side removed from the case? Did you lap the heatsink? High quality thermal compound? Are you using HWMonitor to check your component temperatures? Does the computer fail to run fully loaded (crash)?