Chain# ASIC# Frequency GH/S(RT) HW Temp(PCB) Temp(Chip) ASIC status
1 60 537 6583.55 6 53 73 oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooo
2 60 537 6291.02 753 51 69 oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooo
3 where is chani 3
in other mines show 3 Chain#
Try with lower frequency 537 is to much, don´t know why bitmain do it, but there are to much HW-Errors and the Miner get mostime to hot, too
When you run the Miner with 220-240V then try 506
with 120V try something around 450
can't help but throw this in again, doesn't matter if you are 240 or 120 it matters what your psu can do without strain. *IF* you are using an old server psu where at 220 it is producing 1200w and at 110 it is producing 900 w THAT will make a difference - but if you have a 1500w psu that can run on either, then 1500 is the max you are looking at.. the 220 vs 110 is only going to change the amps going *IN* to the psu (less heat on your cord or ability to use a smaller cord maybe less strain on the psu in the way of heat) but that will in no way affect what setting you can put on the miner itself, from the psu out 12v at whatever amps is going to be 12v at whatever amps.. doesn't matter AT ALL if it is 110 or 220 coming in. - thickness of the individual wires in the 6-pin makes a difference, the amps your psu can handle on it's 12v rail makes a difference.. but the miner doesn't care at all. not even the tiniest bit- if you have issues at 120v with 537 then either you have a miner with issues (plenty of them out there) or you need a better psu.