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Topic: Electricity sorting first before building a rig (Read 126 times)

member
Activity: 61
Merit: 10
The most efficient graphic card for mining today is AMD RX6600 XT using 6 of these bad boys will cost you 440watts at 191MH I've never seen any build this good.
Then you haven't seen A2000 Nvidia graphic card, it uses no extra 6pin cable like other cards and it hash on ETH @ 41MH using 66watt only.
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 152
I am sure that you wrote the answer by analyzing the data in calculators Smiley
Further, you do not consider the cost of taxes, the risks of equipment breakdowns, the cost of renting or equipping the premises.
This question is more complex, so it's better to write a link to a calculator.
I don't like to use mining calculators at all because they can't predict the future. If I buy equipment today, I care about what the profit will be in the next 1-2 years, not what Whattomine says the profit is today. Instead, I like to look at profit data from the past 5 years, like Bitinfocharts.

If anything, tax reduces the cost of equipment and electricity, at least in the U.S. (Section 179). The failure rate of hardware is no more than 4%/year. As for rent, leasing a small warehouse costs extra, but it pays off when you consider the cheaper power as long as you have at least 300 video cards.
legendary
Activity: 1876
Merit: 1138
A mining calculator isn't the best answer here. The profitability will change a lot in the coming months. The OP wants to know if GPU mining is a good idea in the long run.

To answer the question, 10¢/kWh is a decent price for power when it comes to GPU mining. That's better than average for U.S. residential prices. You'll do perfectly fine even during a coin recession or after ETH PoS. The only rate where GPU mining doesn't make sense in the long run is > 16¢/kWh.

However, 10 cents sucks for ASIC mining, so don't buy any ASIC machines except for low-power Goldshells. 5.5-6¢/kWh is average for ASIC farms.
I am sure that you wrote the answer by analyzing the data in calculators Smiley
Further, you do not consider the cost of taxes, the risks of equipment breakdowns, the cost of renting or equipping the premises.
This question is more complex, so it's better to write a link to a calculator.
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 403
DGbet.fun - Crypto Sportsbook
The most efficient graphic card for mining today is AMD RX6600 XT using 6 of these bad boys will cost you 440watts at 191MH I've never seen any build this good.
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 152
A mining calculator isn't the best answer here. The profitability will change a lot in the coming months. The OP wants to know if GPU mining is a good idea in the long run.

To answer the question, 10¢/kWh is a decent price for power when it comes to GPU mining. That's better than average for U.S. residential prices. You'll do perfectly fine even during a coin recession or after ETH PoS. The only rate where GPU mining doesn't make sense in the long run is > 16¢/kWh.

However, 10 cents sucks for ASIC mining, so don't buy any ASIC machines except for low-power Goldshells. 5.5-6¢/kWh is average for ASIC farms.
legendary
Activity: 1876
Merit: 1138
How bad can mining be for someone who pays 0.1USD per Kwh on electricity be? Even when mining isn't profitable again isn't this electricity bill worth none stop mining?
Learn to use calculators
https://whattomine.com/gpus
https://www.kryptex.org/en/mining-calculator?
member
Activity: 325
Merit: 42
How bad can mining be for someone who pays 0.1USD per Kwh on electricity be? Even when mining isn't profitable again isn't this electricity bill worth none stop mining?

As a european I pay over US$.0.37 p.Kwh at the moment so mining ETH is more or less the only option. If it is no longer viable I'll just stop mining for the time being.
member
Activity: 61
Merit: 10
How bad can mining be for someone who pays 0.1USD per Kwh on electricity be? Even when mining isn't profitable again isn't this electricity bill worth none stop mining?
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