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[QUOTE=LaurV;555241]Which is 1.3MWh, and he said 75%. :smile:
Anyhow, as I posted repeatedly in the past, I really envy you guys living in cold climate, haha. (grrr... where's the smiley with the green envy face??)[/QUOTE] I know, my problem was the voltage not the kWh, MWh conversions. Do not envy us for living in a cold place, when you get older the best is to retire in a warm place where you don’t suffer with cold, no pain in bones, etc. For us below 20 degC is already a nightmare, always blowing nose, cough, etc |
[QUOTE=storm5510;555116]I want this to be the [U]last one[/U] I ever build. ... I am rapidly closing in on age 65.[/QUOTE]
In that case, I wish you well-being for many years, maybe you then might consider building [I]another[/I] machine then (or buying a pre-built one). |
up until now I had T4 (1700 GHz/D) and K80 (400 GHz/D) on notebook.
Today, I got a Tesla P100-PCIE-16GB (1150 GHz/D). Is this new? |
[QUOTE=LaurV;555232]He's in US, V=120.[/QUOTE]
Canada, not the US. But most of North America shares the globally oddball 120 volt nominal general purpose circuit.. [QUOTE=LaurV;555241]Which is 1.3MWh, and he said 75%. :smile: Anyhow, as I posted repeatedly in the past, I really envy you guys living in cold climate, haha. (grrr... where's the smiley with the green envy face??)[/QUOTE] Depending on where you live in Canada, it's only cold enough to snow for a short part of the year. Toronto summers are usually in the 20° to 35° range for months on end. Definitely not cold. That's why I can use a MWh in a month just cooling an apartment. But tomorrow I start a move to a new semi-detached place where I'll only have to fight the heat creation of one neighbour. |
[QUOTE=firejuggler;555247]up until now I had T4 (1700 GHz/D) and K80 (400 GHz/D) on notebook.
Today, I got a Tesla P100-PCIE-16GB (1150 GHz/D). Is this new?[/QUOTE] No. I've been getting those for months. |
[QUOTE=firejuggler;555247]Today, I got a Tesla P100-PCIE-16GB (1150 GHz/D). Is this new?[/QUOTE]
No... The P100's have been on Colab since we started this adventure (and, as I understand it, is the only GPU given to paid Colab accounts). One thing I've noticed, though, is P4s appear to no longer be in the fleet. I haven't seen one for weeks. |
[QUOTE=Mark Rose;555252]But most of North America shares the globally oddball 120 volt nominal general purpose circuit..[/QUOTE]
Barbados is 110V @ 50 Hz. I think only Japan shares that standard. |
[QUOTE=chalsall;555258]Barbados is 110V @ 50 Hz. I think only Japan shares that standard.[/QUOTE]
You may be unique. Japan uses 100V mains. |
[QUOTE=Mark Rose;555252]Depending on where you live in Canada, it's only cold enough to snow for a short part of the year. Toronto...[/QUOTE]And when it does you [url=https://www.cbc.ca/archives/when-toronto-declared-war-on-snow-and-called-in-the-army-1.4950600]call in the army[/url] to plow the streets? :leaving:
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[QUOTE=chalsall;555258]Barbados is 110V @ 50 Hz. I think only Japan shares that standard.[/QUOTE]According to the handy [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mains_electricity_by_country#Table_of_mains_voltages,_frequencies,_and_plugs]Wikipedia table[/url], Barbados is 115V @ 50Hz, as is (partially) Bolivia. Jamaica is the only one listed at 110V @ 50Hz (but perhaps also Guyana and/or North Korea, depending how you interpret the table).
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[QUOTE=LaurV;555241]Which is 1.3MWh, and he said 75%. :smile:
[/QUOTE] And considering that circuit breakers are only rated for 80% under a continuous load (more than 8 hours), He is really talking about 90%. |
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