Not that I'm complaining.
![Crying or Very sad :cry:](./images/smilies/icon_cry.gif)
The first 2665 I downloaded for my 3.2GHz machine failed at 0% with a NaN. (P2665/1/888/117) Miraculously, it cleaned up after itself and downloaded a new unit.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
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Thanks for your advice on doing a search. I did search and didn't find anything that confirmed the poor performance of the A1 core in a manner similar to what I find on my machines. The A1 core really sucks.toTOW wrote:Search on the forum ... it's a normal behavior for the A1 core.
I think you've missed the point. After spending a considerable amount of time on processing the A1 units, they both failed to complete writing the results to disk and thus could not be uploaded. So at the minimum spending 21 hours in one instance and 1d and several minutes in another and not getting to upload the units and also not getting points for them seems to me to be a MONUMENTAL waste. I would love to know how else to categorize spending that much time for nothing. Thanks for your view on this.7im wrote:Nothing fah related is a waste of computer time. A1's came first, and still need to be completed to finish the scientific work. A2s are an improvement. Instead of bashing A1s for going slower, you should, IMO, be thanking the project for making improvements in the A2 to better use your computing resources/donation.
Indeed I have moved on to A2 units. In the amount of time expended on the A1 units which reached 100% in two instances, I could have done two A2 units per processor and completed them successfully most likely as have the previous 96 A2 units. My systems check out on every stability check I can find. I think 96 successful A2s proves that. Once again, thanks for your comments and ideas.7im wrote:I agree, WUs that fail, whatever the core version, are a waste of resources in some regard. But a few bad WUs are always expected with any core type. Part of the game.
On the bright side, you probably moved on to some A2 work units after these A1s failed, and you're machines are back to using 100% CPU sooner than if you had finished those WUs normally.
Then again, we have to ask if these were actually bad WUs, or if too much overclocking a CPU or memory is the cause? NaNs are most often caused by bad or unstable hardware configurations, but not always.
Well somebody got the message. I don't mind a little underutilization of my machines. I have recently spent $800 building machines to fold for FAH. But when programs complete slowly and then don't write the data to the disk correctly thus not affording an upload, I think I have a valid objection. As for the weather, I live in Chicago and we always say just wait a few minutes it will change (not always for the better). I think I can beat your 15% sucdess rate. Mine is zero.shdbcamping wrote:I believe the complaint would be relating to the extremely high failure rate of the 2665 class WU's, whether under VM or SMP folding. They are very problematic and will even crash a system. I have less than 15% success with these on 3 different machines. Sometimes it just feels good to complain about the weather