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Topic: Is anyone actually turning a profit with BURST mining? - page 2. (Read 22758 times)

sr. member
Activity: 2604
Merit: 338
Vave.com - Crypto Casino
If you did ride on even or buying or mining BURST since january then you will surely making some serious cash as of now the price has increased just like what OP have been assumed. It does increase and for sure he is on profits now when he still holds up those burst coins. HDD nowadays in my country is quiet expensive thats why i didnt decide to jump in on this HDD mining but i would say its much more hassle free than those in GPU mining.
member
Activity: 64
Merit: 10
Is it still worth it to try to mine burst with hdd?
full member
Activity: 233
Merit: 100
Andrius | Junior Business developer at Unboxed ICO
not worth anymore
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
Blago doesn't use java and is specifically for CPUs.


legendary
Activity: 2408
Merit: 1102
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
I love Burst, its an amazing project with a great GUI wallet

 Which reminds me - I've never had that "great GUI wallet" ever work. PERIOD.

 It appears to require you to have IE installed on your machine - I don't allow IE to exist on my machines due to it being NOTHING MORE THAN A GIANT SECURITY HOLE.

 The web wallet works, but is a PITA compared to most wallets I've used.




 Mining does actually stress the drive - but only for a short time usually every few minutes, and doesn't appear to be heavy stress - no worse than a lot of games put on a drive.

 Also, don't believe the calculators - due apparently to how the network is set up, they seem to CONSISTANTLY underestimate the "total network size" and overestimate the rewards you can expect on average.

 In a month and a half of mining, I've seen "more than the expected reward per day" exactly 3 times - and *ALL THREE* of those days were days I managed to mint a block. My AVERAGE has been consistantly less than 70% of what the calculators estimate (and that was more like 60% prior to my minting 2 blocks in the last week or so, which put me close to the "average time to mint a block" calculation.


 I suspect the "total network size" issue is due to the pools not being able to account correctly for multiple machines mining to one address - they only count the SINGLE "most valuable" machine as of the most recent block you submitted a rewardable nonce for.



what tool are u using to mine? i tried the miner on the java wallet but its stupid unstable and loses connection often

is there a C based miner that does not use java for cpu?
full member
Activity: 184
Merit: 100
I've been mining BURST for about eight months now and found 214 blocks as of today.  http://burstcoin.biz/address/17643277032552720391

Built a multi-coin mining rig with three video cards and 60TBs of drives shoehorned in a full tower case.  ETH or ZEC on the GPUs, BURST on the HDD, and whatever is profitable on the CPU.  That tower is also staking CLAMs and running various Poloniex bots!

Most of the drives I found cheap on eBay.  Spent more than I should on a few enterprise-grade drives but they keep their resale.  The payout per day in dollars is low and getting lower.  Block reward drops 5% every month.  Like all things the rich are those who got in early.  I tend not to keep the coins but prefer to either invest in the BURST marketplace or flip them on Polo.  Bots ignore BURST as it isn't traded on margin.  I'll flip any given amount by 1.5-2% every few hours when the market is sideways.  Converting to BTC isn't all bad as long as you find another way to reinvest the BTC.

BURST is energy efficient as long as the computer is already on for other reasons.  Don't power a PC for BURST alone.  Mining on a phone is dumb - you'll see way more from faucets. 

No moral to this story; just sharing my experience.
Since January, price increased by 36x
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
I love Burst, its an amazing project with a great GUI wallet

 Which reminds me - I've never had that "great GUI wallet" ever work. PERIOD.

 It appears to require you to have IE installed on your machine - I don't allow IE to exist on my machines due to it being NOTHING MORE THAN A GIANT SECURITY HOLE.

 The web wallet works, but is a PITA compared to most wallets I've used.




 Mining does actually stress the drive - but only for a short time usually every few minutes, and doesn't appear to be heavy stress - no worse than a lot of games put on a drive.

 Also, don't believe the calculators - due apparently to how the network is set up, they seem to CONSISTANTLY underestimate the "total network size" and overestimate the rewards you can expect on average.

 In a month and a half of mining, I've seen "more than the expected reward per day" exactly 3 times - and *ALL THREE* of those days were days I managed to mint a block. My AVERAGE has been consistantly less than 70% of what the calculators estimate (and that was more like 60% prior to my minting 2 blocks in the last week or so, which put me close to the "average time to mint a block" calculation.


 I suspect the "total network size" issue is due to the pools not being able to account correctly for multiple machines mining to one address - they only count the SINGLE "most valuable" machine as of the most recent block you submitted a rewardable nonce for.


member
Activity: 136
Merit: 16
You're using the BURST marketplace to buy thing or investing on the BURST asset exchange to get a ROI? 

Yes to both.  BURST mining is a source of capitol.  I'm running a PC for GPU mining, might as well maximize the power efficiency.  I sell on Polo then rebuy a few sats lower and sell again.  Repeat.  A lending bot keeps it the cash active if I'm not around.  All the secondary trading makes it impossible for me to figure ROI.  It's more of a curiosity, really.

To your other point, no, it doesn't stress the drive at all beyond writing plots.  The only stress is the constant spinning motor.  SSDs are cost prohibitive unless you already have free space.  Mining software skims the data every four minutes on average, reading only a few megabytes of data for every hundred gigabyte.

I wish I had gotten in the beginning when block rewards were 10,000.  Now it's under 3,000/block.  -5% every month.
sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
It's worth doing if you already have the spare hard drive space, but it does NOT make sense to buy additional drives for BURST mining - even the low-cost-per-TH drives like the Seagate Archive series (which should work VERY well on Burst) would take FOREVER to pay off, with a significant chance of "dead drive" before it managed to do so.


I guess it depends on short term vs long term perspective and where one thinks BURST is going.

By dead drive...you mean strictly from mining BURST?  I know of people that have resold drives after mining a ton of BURST over time.   So that has to be factored in as well. 

 Not specifically from mining burst, but just that drives DIE over time - and drives made in the last decade seem to be a bit less reliable on a long-term basis vs many older drives.
 Burst doesn't seem to put a lot of load on the drive once it's plotted.






Yeah...I don't think at all based on my experience. 
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
It's worth doing if you already have the spare hard drive space, but it does NOT make sense to buy additional drives for BURST mining - even the low-cost-per-TH drives like the Seagate Archive series (which should work VERY well on Burst) would take FOREVER to pay off, with a significant chance of "dead drive" before it managed to do so.


I guess it depends on short term vs long term perspective and where one thinks BURST is going.

By dead drive...you mean strictly from mining BURST?  I know of people that have resold drives after mining a ton of BURST over time.   So that has to be factored in as well. 

 Not specifically from mining burst, but just that drives DIE over time - and drives made in the last decade seem to be a bit less reliable on a long-term basis vs many older drives.
 Burst doesn't seem to put a lot of load on the drive once it's plotted.



sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
I've been mining BURST for about eight months now and found 214 blocks as of today.  http://burstcoin.biz/address/17643277032552720391

Built a multi-coin mining rig with three video cards and 60TBs of drives shoehorned in a full tower case.  ETH or ZEC on the GPUs, BURST on the HDD, and whatever is profitable on the CPU.  That tower is also staking CLAMs and running various Poloniex bots!

Most of the drives I found cheap on eBay.  Spent more than I should on a few enterprise-grade drives but they keep their resale.  The payout per day in dollars is low and getting lower.  Block reward drops 5% every month.  Like all things the rich are those who got in early.  I tend not to keep the coins but prefer to either invest in the BURST marketplace or flip them on Polo.  Bots ignore BURST as it isn't traded on margin.  I'll flip any given amount by 1.5-2% every few hours when the market is sideways.  Converting to BTC isn't all bad as long as you find another way to reinvest the BTC.

BURST is energy efficient as long as the computer is already on for other reasons.  Don't power a PC for BURST alone.  Mining on a phone is dumb - you'll see way more from faucets. 

No moral to this story; just sharing my experience.

You're using the BURST marketplace to buy thing or investing on the BURST asset exchange to get a ROI? 
member
Activity: 136
Merit: 16
I've been mining BURST for about eight months now and found 214 blocks as of today.  http://burstcoin.biz/address/17643277032552720391

Built a multi-coin mining rig with three video cards and 60TBs of drives shoehorned in a full tower case.  ETH or ZEC on the GPUs, BURST on the HDD, and whatever is profitable on the CPU.  That tower is also staking CLAMs and running various Poloniex bots!

Most of the drives I found cheap on eBay.  Spent more than I should on a few enterprise-grade drives but they keep their resale.  The payout per day in dollars is low and getting lower.  Block reward drops 5% every month.  Like all things the rich are those who got in early.  I tend not to keep the coins but prefer to either invest in the BURST marketplace or flip them on Polo.  Bots ignore BURST as it isn't traded on margin.  I'll flip any given amount by 1.5-2% every few hours when the market is sideways.  Converting to BTC isn't all bad as long as you find another way to reinvest the BTC.

BURST is energy efficient as long as the computer is already on for other reasons.  Don't power a PC for BURST alone.  Mining on a phone is dumb - you'll see way more from faucets. 

No moral to this story; just sharing my experience.
legendary
Activity: 1894
Merit: 1087
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
Yes...if your just looking to mine and dump  BUSRT the price is not that high today.  But I happen to think it's a project with great potential and the price may rise significantly in the future.  Just my opinion.  

Yes Burst is way more developed and (IMO) a better project than lots of other coins that currently have a higher price.
My goal is to get 1 million Burst for the (small) chance that it one day becomes worth something. Even at ten cents that would be a big return on the investment.
And if the price ever hit $1 I would look like a genius!
full member
Activity: 207
Merit: 100
NoizChain
I bought 2 HDD 3+2TB for burst mining, cost me 100$, In the first days the earning were great 0.5$-0.7$ per day, I was mining at a pool, but then suddenly the profit dropped to 0.05$ per day, I'm not sure why, maybe difficulty or the pool had only luck in the first days... So I have mined about 10$ so far which I invested all to assets... Now I'm considering to try luck on solomining or just to sell my hdd... (Storj X, maid, sia are coming  Grin)
sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
It's worth doing if you already have the spare hard drive space, but it does NOT make sense to buy additional drives for BURST mining - even the low-cost-per-TH drives like the Seagate Archive series (which should work VERY well on Burst) would take FOREVER to pay off, with a significant chance of "dead drive" before it managed to do so.

 If the price doubled, that would change, but at this point the ROI payoff is measured in YEARS.

 If you're building a new machine anyway, it might make sense to "oversize" the drive a bit, but otherwise no IMO.


 On the up side, for those few of us that still have some 32-bit OS machines, the Java client WILL work on a 32-bit Java installation - one of the very FEW coins mineable at all on a 32-bit system.



I guess it depends on short term vs long term perspective and where one thinks BURST is going.

By dead drive...you mean strictly from mining BURST?  I know of people that have resold drives after mining a ton of BURST over time.   So that has to be factored in as well. 
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1030
It's worth doing if you already have the spare hard drive space, but it does NOT make sense to buy additional drives for BURST mining - even the low-cost-per-TH drives like the Seagate Archive series (which should work VERY well on Burst) would take FOREVER to pay off, with a significant chance of "dead drive" before it managed to do so.

 If the price doubled, that would change, but at this point the ROI payoff is measured in YEARS.

 If you're building a new machine anyway, it might make sense to "oversize" the drive a bit, but otherwise no IMO.


 On the up side, for those few of us that still have some 32-bit OS machines, the Java client WILL work on a 32-bit Java installation - one of the very FEW coins mineable at all on a 32-bit system.

sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
So I have to allocate loads of storage for mining, but not for the burst coins themselves correct?

I could easily plug up 2TB's into my computer for but unless this has promise to grow in value it doesn't seem like its worth setting up

Not you don't store the coins on your computer.  It does take some time to plot your hard drive but overall I found it very easy.  I mine 24/7 and even mine BURST in the background of one of my work computers I use day to day.  Have mined about 80,000 coin in about 3 months.

To others.  Yes...if your just looking to mine and dump  BUSRT the price is not that high today.  But I happen to think it's a project with great potential and the price may rise significantly in the future.  Just my opinion. 



if you think so then just buy the coin, no need to waste time and money for few satoshi

you can easily buy 100k burst with 0.075 btc and wait for the pump

I have bought a bunch of it as well.  Mining is a fun way to participate in the community for me...although I may ramp up my TB (currently only 12 TB)  significantly at some point.
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
So I have to allocate loads of storage for mining, but not for the burst coins themselves correct?

I could easily plug up 2TB's into my computer for but unless this has promise to grow in value it doesn't seem like its worth setting up

Not you don't store the coins on your computer.  It does take some time to plot your hard drive but overall I found it very easy.  I mine 24/7 and even mine BURST in the background of one of my work computers I use day to day.  Have mined about 80,000 coin in about 3 months.

To others.  Yes...if your just looking to mine and dump  BUSRT the price is not that high today.  But I happen to think it's a project with great potential and the price may rise significantly in the future.  Just my opinion. 



if you think so then just buy the coin, no need to waste time and money for few satoshi

you can easily buy 100k burst with 0.075 btc and wait for the pump
sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
So I have to allocate loads of storage for mining, but not for the burst coins themselves correct?

I could easily plug up 2TB's into my computer for but unless this has promise to grow in value it doesn't seem like its worth setting up

No you don't store the coins on your computer.  It does take some time to plot your hard drive but overall I found it very easy.  I mine 24/7 and even mine BURST in the background of one of my work computers I use day to day.  Have mined about 80,000 coin in about 3 months.

To others.  Yes...if your just looking to mine and dump  BUSRT the price is not that high today.  But I happen to think it's a project with great potential and the price may rise significantly in the future.  Just my opinion.  

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