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Halfway to nowhere, and resting up before I start back. Glad I wasn't born old and poor: I've had to work hard to increase my poverty, but I'm working on spending my first million faster than it is coming in. I always thought I would be dead or rich before age 30. Wrong on both counts. I gave up on finding an effortless way to clean one inch size heat sinks from the antminer hashboards and gritting my toothless gums (too old and poor to get those $40,000 dentures ((or even the 2 grand affordable cheapies)) ), I spent 3 or four hours for hours on end (not really, just four or five days) whacking the heatsinks off one side of the boards (the larger heatsinks that had a black pad/glue/solder. With patient persistent and patience, I learned that it matters which end you whack from, but you don't know which end on which board until you give the first couple whacks. Sometimes, striking a sharp blow with the drywall trowel blade from the connector end makes half of them fall off. Other times, it knocks a few off, along with the tiny black pad, and tears the green coated copper, taking the tiny chip and a bit of copper with the heat sink. Striking the same board from the other end was also unpredictable, as it could knock half of the 60 heatsinks with one blow, or just a few, knocking some cleanly and others with the board rip attached. Some few boards that had gotten left in a tote with rainwater for a few days cleaned easily. No hope of making any of my stories short, but I wound up with 850 pounds of extrusion/aluminum...it brought the low end of the price range since it had the contamination where it was attached to the board. But since I could collect about 50 pounds per hour, I was making a wage about equal to that of a french fry fast food cook. With the sinks removed from one side, the boards are still midgrade at Boardsort. With the uncleaned other side, there is still about 1600 pound, but the volume has shrunk by about 3/8, or maybe 3/7, not real good at estimating fractions, since I can't see the whole thing. Since cold weather finally went south, or came south, and Boardsort is on Holiday Hours, looks like I will have a few weeks to slowly process the other side of the boards for coin. the side with the more compact heatsinks are soldered on with no black pad. Most will pop off with a harder blow, but some will sticktight and bend rather than pop. Probably half of those will clean easily enough, and then the rest brought in as midgrade. Since my mental capabilities have done a polar reversal, from fast learner/slow forgetter to fast forgetter/slow learner, it took a couple tries for me to figure out that knocking off the sinks in a gravel driveway made for difficult pickup of the ones which got away, and missed the tote/tub I had catching them. Hitting the sinks was almost like hitting a baseball, except a heatsink wasn't coming at you at 90 miles per hour. But the hitting was the same. A downward chop toward the bottom of the sink resulted in a grounder which was caught by the shortstop. A straight level swing made a line drive which mowed down several more in its path. A chop angle up toward the top of the sink could knock one out of the park. Don't you just hate it when a story just ends, without any summation or conclusion, or even a moral exhortation such as, young man, stay away from hashboards, as you see what they did to me.
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