Yellowlaser
Member
- Location
- Los angeles
- Occupation
- Assistant manager
Hi Guys, I have a 200amp 120/208v 3-phase wye system at my warehouse. Each asic miner uses 3400 watts, how many asic miners can I have?
Another thing to consider is that the limiting factor may be in what the POCO provides. I wired up a grow a few years back in a warehouse and the 120/240 three phase "200 amp" service was feed with a 3x15kva bank. I loaded it up to about 50 KVA but didn't want to go much higher.200A x 208V x 1.732 = 72kVA of available power.
3400W / .8PF = 4.25kVA per miner required
72,000 / 4.25 = 16 miners.
But as zbang said, you must consider other loads like minimum occupancy required lights, plugs and the MASSIVE amount of air conditioning you will need. That will have to come from an HVAC person. My guess would be 10 miners, assuming nothing else is in that building. So start by telling your HVAC person to size the AC to handle 34kW of heat load for the worst case climate you are in, then see if that will need more than 38kW of electrical power. If it is less, you might be able to squeeze in another miner or two.
BitcoinWhat coin are we mining?
I have asked multiple electricians but getting different answers. Some are saying only 9 and others are saying 16. I just don't understand how trained electricians cant figure this out.Have you asked your electrician?
Also, remember that each watt going in needs to be removed by cooling, so that same 200a feed needs to power the HVAC (and lighting/incidental loads).
I have asked multiple electricians but getting different answers. Some are saying only 9 and others are saying 16. I just don't understand how trained electricians cant figure this out.
Agreed.At 4160 VA per unit that limits you 13 units
If you told POCO what the load was going to be and they only put a 45 kVA bank when you have 50 kVA of load - I think it is their problem.Another thing to consider is that the limiting factor may be in what the POCO provides. I wired up a grow a few years back in a warehouse and the 120/240 three phase "200 amp" service was feed with a 3x15kva bank. I loaded it up to about 50 KVA but didn't want to go much higher.
I wasn't very clear, but that service was existing. We also brought in a new 1200A 480 service.If you told POCO what the load was going to be and they only put a 45 kVA bank when you have 50 kVA of load - I think it is their problem.
That said it likely handles it in most cases, though something that is 24/7 continuous loaded (and in summer months) may not quite be good enough.
With my farm loads I have found is best to inform POCO of significant load additions. The customer may not be happy there is charges from POCO but they also usually get some credits based on loading. Wait until next time load is added and even more capacity is needed they don't get any credits related to the first load increase. This generally only applies to loads that run for longer periods. Add a load that is bigger but somewhat limited demand and it may not matter at all.I wasn't very clear, but that service was existing. We also brought in a new 1200A 480 service.
I think we are always supposed to inform POCO of load additions, but many people don't and assume they have full NEC service size capacity.