A $0 real world Chia setup
Posted: Tue Oct 26, 2021 10:52 am
I wanted to share a real world Chia setup. I wanted to prove that with no new hardware expensive you can setup a very functional Chia farm with parts you probably have setting around.
All the equipment listed was what I had setting on a shelf collecting dust. I guess it pays to be a pack rat
Setup is a two system configuration consisting of a full node and a harvester only node.
The full node:
This is an old Acer laptop. I install a small SSD sometime ago and it runs Windows 10 very well.
Intel P6100 @ 2.00GHz 2 cores
8GB RAM
120GB SSD
This system does not do any harvesting and absolutely no plotting.
The harvester:
This is a NEXBOX T9 (mini PC) Most are using as TV boxes.
Intel ATOM 5x-Z8300 @ 1.44GHz 4 cores
4GB Ram
64GB Built-in NCARD drive
Attached to the USB3.0 port is a Probox 4 bay enclosure with 4 3TB Seagate HDD’s (Plot Storage)
Both systems are running Windows 10 Home (latest release)
I have a total of 62 plots that are assigned to the harvester.
I have a separate plotter as it requires a little more that these system can provide, if you want to plot more that one every couple days but that is another story.
Both systems use very little CPU and RAM usage. The biggest thing to watch is the communication time when proofs are found. You have 28 second to send the proof to the timeload. Otherwise it gets rejected and you make $0. Ideally you want it less than 5 seconds to be safe. You can check this by setting you chia debug log file to INFO level. Look for lines that list the number of proofs found and what the send time is on that line in the log.
With the above mentioned setup my proof response times are under 1 sec. Once in awhile one will take close to 2 seconds but still acceptable.
So with hardware that most people would consider junk by todays standards, I was able to setup a nice little Chia farm.
Start raiding your hardware storage and build you a nice Chia farm. Or would that be called a farmette
All the equipment listed was what I had setting on a shelf collecting dust. I guess it pays to be a pack rat
Setup is a two system configuration consisting of a full node and a harvester only node.
The full node:
This is an old Acer laptop. I install a small SSD sometime ago and it runs Windows 10 very well.
Intel P6100 @ 2.00GHz 2 cores
8GB RAM
120GB SSD
This system does not do any harvesting and absolutely no plotting.
The harvester:
This is a NEXBOX T9 (mini PC) Most are using as TV boxes.
Intel ATOM 5x-Z8300 @ 1.44GHz 4 cores
4GB Ram
64GB Built-in NCARD drive
Attached to the USB3.0 port is a Probox 4 bay enclosure with 4 3TB Seagate HDD’s (Plot Storage)
Both systems are running Windows 10 Home (latest release)
I have a total of 62 plots that are assigned to the harvester.
I have a separate plotter as it requires a little more that these system can provide, if you want to plot more that one every couple days but that is another story.
Both systems use very little CPU and RAM usage. The biggest thing to watch is the communication time when proofs are found. You have 28 second to send the proof to the timeload. Otherwise it gets rejected and you make $0. Ideally you want it less than 5 seconds to be safe. You can check this by setting you chia debug log file to INFO level. Look for lines that list the number of proofs found and what the send time is on that line in the log.
With the above mentioned setup my proof response times are under 1 sec. Once in awhile one will take close to 2 seconds but still acceptable.
So with hardware that most people would consider junk by todays standards, I was able to setup a nice little Chia farm.
Start raiding your hardware storage and build you a nice Chia farm. Or would that be called a farmette