I'll start, And this is why we don't run more than 1 mining rig off a socket!!!! note to self, check where cables are plugged in before putting new miners in!!


Yes very serious!!Foxx wrote:that is potentially serious. burn the freakin' house down serious.
you got to put the specifics with your post. what were you running? what size wire was it on? things like that.
what gauge wire are you running from that 50A breaker? copper or aluminum? what is the distance of the run from breaker to receptacle? typical house wiring is copper so 6ga wire would be the minimum. also, most breakers are only rated for a continuous load of 80% so you would not want to load more than 40 amps unto it.djliss wrote:Yes very serious!!Foxx wrote:that is potentially serious. burn the freakin' house down serious.
you got to put the specifics with your post. what were you running? what size wire was it on? things like that.
thankfully i have a dedicated 50A feed to the loft on its own rcd which tripped out.
I had left the kettle leads plugged in after i removed some kit, a firewall, switch and pc which can happily run on a triple socket, this was a few months ago.
fast forward till a few days ago and i added 2 V9's, i had no bitmain psu's left only some HP server PSUs and breakout boards (2 x 6 PCIe and 1 x 10 PCIe), capable of 3KW together.
I bet you can tell where this is going now!! plugged the miners into the breakout boards and looked around for some power leads and to my surprise found 3 on the floor already powered, so picked em up, plugged em into the PSU's (completely forgetting what kit was plugged in originally) and left the loft to configure them.
moral of the story here is to check where your god dam cables are plugged in, this could have potentially been very nasty