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Topic: Europe out of the mining game? (Read 7885 times)

legendary
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1002
September 14, 2011, 04:13:39 PM
#76
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There are essentially two core mining strategies; mine and liquidate or mine and hold....
There's no reason to mine if you're in a loss situation. Might as well just buy what you would spend on electricity investing in bitcoin.

If you're mining and holding, you're speculating. You should view yourself as being in two separate businesses = producing and speculating - and should account for each of those separately. Each may be profitable or unprofitable, and should be continued or stopped on its own merits.
sr. member
Activity: 392
Merit: 250
September 14, 2011, 04:07:16 PM
#75
It says he's mining at BTC guild, but he's offline right now.

Maybe he's grounded today, or mom & dad got their first post-mining electric bill?
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
September 14, 2011, 01:45:50 PM
#74
my parents pay my electricity bills (i'm 13!)

100% profit lol!
And I think your allowance will drop a little bit when they get their electricity bill  Grin

i don't get allowance

Your parents might not notice the extra electricity cost, as you only have 276 MH/s.

But neither are you making very much -- only 1/7th of a BTC per day. What, about 80 cents?

Don't spend it all in one place kid Smiley


Hell, better than nothing... one coin's worth per week to blow in the local arcade or mall... nice Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 392
Merit: 250
September 12, 2011, 02:15:28 PM
#73
my parents pay my electricity bills (i'm 13!)

100% profit lol!
And I think your allowance will drop a little bit when they get their electricity bill  Grin

i don't get allowance

Your parents might not notice the extra electricity cost, as you only have 276 MH/s.

But neither are you making very much -- only 1/7th of a BTC per day. What, about 80 cents?

Don't spend it all in one place kid Smiley
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
September 11, 2011, 09:32:42 PM
#72
According to my rough figuring at the price of electricity in Europe (18 - 40 cents/kWH?) shouldn't there be a lot of European miners turning off their rigs now?

Either you lose money or hope and pray that Bitcoins move back up in price again before too long.

I'm in Scandinavia, I'm at 0.06USD/kWH. Break even point for me is USD/BTC = 2.2.
hero member
Activity: 683
Merit: 500
September 11, 2011, 07:43:49 PM
#71
my parents pay my electricity bills (i'm 13!)

100% profit lol!
And I think your allowance will drop a little bit when they get their electricity bill  Grin
legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1005
September 11, 2011, 12:01:28 PM
#70
[bla bla bla....]

And if diff keeps going up (lets say only 2% a month), you will dig less and less BTC every month.

[bla bla bla...]
But it is going down now... You clearly lack reading skills. Please review my post again.

Your mining calculator link is useless because of the reasons I explained. Please use the chart I linked instead to get an overview of when/how mining is profitable. "Any prediction" is not equal to any other prediction, so don't beat on my prediction then claim yours are superior somehow, even after you agree with me that the price and difficulty are unpredictable. What is predictable is the profitability ratio, clearly seen in the graphs I linked to. I predict that the average mining costs will not exceed long term values 200% of a bitcoin's value, and they will also not go below 20%.

It is thus IRRELEVANT how much absolute BTC your machine makes and using bitcoin value (as your bitcoin supply is absolutely fixed) as an indicator if it's good or bad to do x or y, is an exercise of imagination and should not be used in a rational decision.

It is completely RELEVANT to know the ratio of price/cost of your produced BTC to make decision calls about your present and future mining activities, as this ratio is co-dependent of both the price and network hash rate.

And please, refrain from being a dick, I did not ask you to leave nor did I imply that you are a substance abuser.
legendary
Activity: 910
Merit: 1000
Quality Printing Services by Federal Reserve Bank
September 11, 2011, 10:33:02 AM
#69
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....
www.bitcoinx.com/charts/

How did your difficulty reach 3 million, when it is currently dropping? You can pull numbers out of the assholes and make it appear any way you want. You will NEVER know the future difficulty or the future bitcoin price, your assumptions are based on telling me you know both factors withing marginal error. What you could do at most is offer a probabily scenario involving some possible value ranges for the two factors and offer analysis for specific values.

BombaUcigasa, no need to get all hysterical and start stuffing dynamite up your ass.

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...are based on telling me you know both factors withing marginal error

Are you on crack? I just posted a scenario, where diff crawls 2% per month. Relax, adjust your tinfoil hat and next time read the post twice, before you start screaming. 

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How did your difficulty reach 3 million...?

Lets me write that out for you in larger letters and let me also add some nice bold fonts for you.

And if diff keeps going up (lets say only 2% a month), you will dig less and less BTC every month.

Its just a prediction and as good/bad as any other hypothetical scenario.
5 months ago diff was around ~0.7mill, now its at ~1.7 mill! ~245%? in 5 months.
5 months ago people where certain that by September 2011, the price will be 60+ USD IF the diff keeps going up at same rate.
Doh. we are at sub 6 USD bid Smiley

Go and have fun with this calculator and if you have problems with the results,  go and act like a shit bird over at this thread. https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/new-mining-calculator-with-growth-consideration-17350

Here is one more cool calculator http://bitcoinx.com/profit/index.php

legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1005
September 11, 2011, 08:07:21 AM
#68
Let me give you a depressing calculation here (BTC price is kept same for simplicity)
This is calculation is based on a 400Mhas 24/7 mining.  http://striketeam.ath.cx/btccalc/btccalc.php

Code:
Month BTC USD Difficulty
1 6.69 38.133 1849596.57107
2 6.39 36.423 1924320.27255
3 6.11 34.827 2002062.81156
4 5.83 33.231 2124605.07213
5 5.57 31.749 2210439.11704
6 5.33 30.381 2299740.85737
7 5.09 29.013 2440503.39577
8 4.86 27.702 2539099.73296
9 4.65 26.505 2641679.36217
10 4.44 25.308 2803371.27257
11 4.24 24.168 2916627.47198
12 4.05 23.085 3034459.22185

 
Total 63.24 BTC  360.468 USD 
     

All that bullshit for 360.468 USD minus expenses? Smiley


www.bitcoinx.com/charts/

How did your difficulty reach 3 million, when it is currently dropping? You can pull numbers out of the assholes and make it appear any way you want. You will NEVER know the future difficulty or the future bitcoin price, your assumptions are based on telling me you know both factors withing marginal error. What you could do at most is offer a probabily scenario involving some possible value ranges for the two factors and offer analysis for specific values.
legendary
Activity: 910
Merit: 1000
Quality Printing Services by Federal Reserve Bank
September 09, 2011, 09:29:09 AM
#67
That doesn't make any sense.

If you think bitcoins are going to go up in value why mine at a loss when you can buy "at cost"?

Simply put mininig isn't "free" bitcoins you are buying bitcoins indirectly via electrical power (and ammortized hardware costs).

Lets pretend hardware is free.  If your cost to mine 1 BTC is $7.20 and you can buy one for $7.00 why would you mine one?

Even if you believe BTC will go to $50 next year it would be more profitable to simply buy BTC rather than buy electricity and turn them into BTC at a loss.

Quote
And mine is only really a matter of faith in a future jump of BTC value (mine with a 400MHash/sec hw can produce 5-6BTC/month at current difficulty but costs you easily 50-60£/month)

So you could spend 60£ ($96) on electricity and mine 6 BTC for a cost of $16 per BTC.
Alternative you could stop mining take the $96 and simply buy BTC (currenly $6.7 5.70 ea) getting 1616.84BTC.

Same expenditure one yield 10 more BTC.  So why are you mining again?

+100 :)

And if diff keeps going up (lets say only 2% a month), you will dig less and less BTC every month.

Let me give you a depressing calculation here (BTC price is kept same for simplicity)
This is calculation is based on a 400Mhas 24/7 mining.  http://striketeam.ath.cx/btccalc/btccalc.php

Code:
Month BTC USD Difficulty
1 6.69 38.133 1849596.57107
2 6.39 36.423 1924320.27255
3 6.11 34.827 2002062.81156
4 5.83 33.231 2124605.07213
5 5.57 31.749 2210439.11704
6 5.33 30.381 2299740.85737
7 5.09 29.013 2440503.39577
8 4.86 27.702 2539099.73296
9 4.65 26.505 2641679.36217
10 4.44 25.308 2803371.27257
11 4.24 24.168 2916627.47198
12 4.05 23.085 3034459.22185

 
Total 63.24 BTC  360.468 USD 
     

All that bullshit for 360.468 USD minus expenses? :)
sr. member
Activity: 303
Merit: 250
September 08, 2011, 09:20:07 AM
#66
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You got me in one thing, i don't know how to calculate power usage, i just tried to figure it out on my own, i thought that since it is the amount of kW consumed in an hour then it must be KW/h. is that wrong? please correct me if it is.

Non-snarky answer.  kW is a measure of power.  No different than horsepower for cars. kWh is a measure of work.

kW by themselves do nothing.  It is an instantaneous measurement.  So if you have a video card which draws 300W continually then at any point it time it drawing 300W of power.  Power without time doesn't accomplish anything.  Freeze time.  How much work is your video card doing?  In exactly 0 seconds how many hashes can your video card compute?  None right.  Work requires time.

Work = (power) * (time)

For electrical work will call it energy:
Energy = (power) * (time)
Energy = (KW) * (hours)
Energy = kWh

You definitely have the gift of teaching, thanks for your explanation, i knew i'd heard it somewhere b4... high-school feels like it was a million years ago
legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1005
September 06, 2011, 01:24:48 PM
#65
So you could spend 60£ ($96) on electricity and mine 6 BTC for a cost of $16 per BTC.
Alternative you could stop mining take the $96 and simply buy BTC (currenly $6.7ea) getting 16BTC.

Same expenditure one yield 10 more BTC.  So why are you mining again?
The core point of mining is not yielding BTC.
sr. member
Activity: 303
Merit: 250
September 06, 2011, 11:01:11 AM
#64
you guys are lucky too, here i f i want to buy a high-end graphics card i need to spend 20days of income
legendary
Activity: 938
Merit: 1000
September 06, 2011, 05:22:28 AM
#63
From someone in the UK paying £1.40/litre for petrol and £0.18/kWh I can't express how jealous I am right now.  Cheesy

I feel your pain apart from its £1.30/litre where I am Smiley

you lucky guys  Wink
Petrol is "only" 1.35£/litre  but energy is over £0,22/Kwh here
And mine is only really a matter of faith in a future jump of BTC value (mine with a 400MHash/sec hw can produce 5-6BTC/month at current difficulty but costs you easily 50-60£/month)
sr. member
Activity: 464
Merit: 250
September 06, 2011, 02:03:07 AM
#62
From someone in the UK paying £1.40/litre for petrol and £0.18/kWh I can't express how jealous I am right now.  Cheesy

I feel your pain apart from its £1.30/litre where I am Smiley
hero member
Activity: 927
Merit: 1000
฿itcoin ฿itcoin ฿itcoin
September 06, 2011, 01:54:47 AM
#61
From someone in the UK paying £1.40/litre for petrol and £0.18/kWh I can't express how jealous I am right now.  Cheesy

Mining for me will become unprofitable very soon but that doesn't phase me, I will still continue to support the network, sometimes it not always about the money. I've been running F@H for near on 3 years now.
sr. member
Activity: 303
Merit: 250
September 06, 2011, 12:29:09 AM
#60
coming close to 30% inflation, but i don't think it hurts mining at all when you buy hardware in USD/BTC. i buy mostly at amazon since its the only one accepting non-us credit cards.

i think i can keep mining down to $1/BTC before pulling the plug at current difficulty
mrb
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1028
September 05, 2011, 10:49:11 PM
#59
Ok.

So even after these fixed taxes, your effective rate is $0.024/kWh assuming the official VEF/USD exchange rate, or $0.012/kWh assuming the black market one. This is indeed heaven for a miner. You can thank your country's gigantic petroleum reserves for that Smiley I guess the only risks/unknowns of setting up a massive mining operation in Venezuela would be availability of GPUs and other computer hardware (I know nothing of it), and stability of hardware & electricity prices (I heard of a +20% inflation rate?)
sr. member
Activity: 303
Merit: 250
September 05, 2011, 10:44:49 PM
#58
OFF-TOPIC

Wink This is scarily low

gasoline is way cheaper than water here, we have more gasoline than water though

"Jaua told a news conference that residential customers will be charged an additional fee..."
but you say they it won't affect residential customers. Even if you paid double it's still damn cheap.

he said that, he will not execute, election year, populism, politics, i don't want to talk about it.

about it being a good place to mine, i think it is. Maybe i should start offering those services i've seen around here were people rent their mining hardware, i could mine for someone in let's say latvia or germany and it could be profitable for both. haha
sr. member
Activity: 303
Merit: 250
September 05, 2011, 10:23:08 PM
#57
mrb, if you look at my first post you can see that what you just explained to me is exactly what i came up with, the only wrong thing was the nomenclature of the unit.

taking a look at the last power bill there are other charges, but they are fixed or non dependant on the amount of power billed, in a 103.67VEF bill for 986kWh, 4VEF for "fuel adjustment" whatever that means, and 1.06VEF from the billing service itself. No taxes
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