Intel Motherboard Lands With 32 SATA Ports For Farming Chia

Chinese motherboard manufacturer Onda (via ZOL) has launched the brand's new Chia-D32H-D4 motherboard. The model name alone is enough to tell you that this motherboard is aimed at farming Chia cryptocurrency, which has already caused hard drive price spikes in Asia.

Designed for mining, rather than to compete with the best motherboards for gaming, the Chia-D32H-D4 is most likely a rebranded version of Onda's existing B365 D32-D4 motherboard. It measures 530 x 310mm, so the Chia-D32H-D4 isn't your typical motherboard. In fact, Onda has produced a special case with an included power supply for this specific model. The unspecified 800W power supply arrives with the 80Plus Gold certification, while the case features five cooling fans.

Zhiye Liu
News Editor and Memory Reviewer

Zhiye Liu is a news editor and memory reviewer at Tom’s Hardware. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.

  • atomicWAR
    Outside of farming chia, you could make one heck of a nas with that.
    Reply
  • hotaru.hino
    atomicWAR said:
    Outside of farming chia, you could make one heck of a nas with that.
    I can see Linus drooling over getting one of these for a joke storinator.
    Reply
  • velocityg4
    Been thinking of upgrading my file server with a 14TB HDD. Now I'm starting to think I should bite the bullet. Get one now before prices skyrocket.
    Reply
  • bigdragon
    I've been surprised at how cheap mining-focused motherboards are. GPU mining mobos sell for a fraction of the price of the GPUs themselves. Seems like the heart of the system should sell for so much more given the huge returns people are seeing in crypto.
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    velocityg4 said:
    Been thinking of upgrading my file server with a 14TB HDD. Now I'm starting to think I should bite the bullet. Get one now before prices skyrocket.
    I did the other day with a 16TB. Will be here tomorrow.

    It will replace an 8TB which will replace a 2TB.
    Bumping overall space from 50TB to 64TB.
    Reply
  • Krotow
    hotaru.hino said:
    I can see Linus drooling over getting one of these for a joke storinator.

    Linus had a video about very similar board a while ago when Chia was not around yet. It needed separate power supply for all those SATA drives too. By the way seems very like to poor man's RAID board :)
    Reply
  • spongiemaster
    atomicWAR said:
    Outside of farming chia, you could make one heck of a nas with that.
    It would make more sense for most people to buy a couple server pulls LSI/Adaptec 16 port SAS HBA's off Ebay that would work in pretty much any old system you have lying around. Would cost about $100-150 for two plus the cost of the eight SAS->4 SATA splitter cables.
    Reply
  • atomicWAR
    spongiemaster said:
    It would make more sense for most people to buy a couple server pulls LSI/Adaptec 16 port SAS HBA's off Ebay that would work in pretty much any old system you have lying around. Would cost about $100-150 for two plus the cost of the eight SAS->4 SATA splitter cables.

    I use a combo of SATA and eSATA with enclosures to host 32TB of storage on my NAS, my Desktop as all SATA 32TB as well....so I would agree with you. I am just saying though, it be fun to tinker with it as a NAS all the same.
    Reply
  • atomicWAR
    USAFRet said:
    I did the other day with a 16TB. Will be here tomorrow.

    It will replace an 8TB which will replace a 2TB.
    Bumping overall space from 50TB to 64TB.

    We have similar storage needs it sounds like though I spilt my 64TB as two 32TB storage pools in two different machines for duplication/isolation purposes. Those larger drives make life much easier. I remember what it was like having that much storage with only 2TB and 4TB drives. I had 12ish drives I think at one point for just one 32TB pool. Now I am down to 4 drives per machine max or so (mix of 8TB and 12TB drives now).
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    Yeah, multiple pools.

    Currently, 12 drives in 3 enclosures.
    3 pools, and then 4 random small individual drives.

    Still deciding how I want to reconfigure.
    Reply