Author

Topic: Swedish ASIC miner company kncminer.com - page 1740. (Read 3049501 times)

legendary
Activity: 4592
Merit: 1851
Linux since 1997 RedHat 4
August 31, 2013, 10:42:20 AM
Summer just ended here in Aus ... Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1022
Anarchy is not chaos.
August 31, 2013, 09:39:07 AM
Yeah well I know what the term ROI means but pretty much here assumes / acknowledges that it means profit past break even.

How that came to be? No idea but it beats writing

WHEre are the profits pAst break evEn? Where ArE da CHiPs??? etc  Cheesy Roll Eyes

Tongue
Noted. I come from a management background, and the precise use of the terms is important in that context. The way it's used here is a bit confusing. Obviously I did get it, though I still don't understand the people that want to breakeven the day they get their machine. Ok, I understand the desire, I just don't see how they can reasonably expect it. Early adopters, maybe, but those days were gone before I ever investigated bitcoin. Which is unfortunate for me, but it's my own ignorance and or lack of due diligence about three years back. I am not actually in the race on the first ones shipped, as I was unable to raise the money. I might be in for their November price drop, though, and I expect a fair ROI pretty quickly, with a breakeven within a year even reinvesting my earnings into more mining equipment. And that is even under the assumption that the hashrate and difficulty continue their parabolic climb for some time.

I want to be in this for the long run, as I find Bitcoin to be immensely interesting and possibly even to be a new way of exchanging goods and services outside of the ever present bankster/Government Cabal that currently drives business models. I think it has the potential to lead to a great deal of decentralization of small entrepreneurs and of money itself. I'll never see it as equivalent to precious metals as a store of value, but as a means of exchange and easy liquidity, it has pretty fantastic potential. It is my hope to make sufficient gains in both standard fiat and precious metals over the course of a year or so that I can start to use BTC as my primary means of acquisition of goods and services. I also hope to be better involved in promoting that very thing, thus creating wider acceptance of bitcoin. It's not a hobby, per se, but an extension of my agorist leanings and dislike of central authorities. I see bitcoin as very subversive to the established and decaying order, and therefore think it worth accepting even if there are short term losses.

That being said, I think most everyone who gets a large scale ASIC device is likely to make a profit in a very reasonable time frame.

I've also been awake for better than fifty hours, so I apologize if this is a bit disjointed Tongue
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
August 31, 2013, 09:32:56 AM
...
That's not merely ROI, which is in fact ANY income generated, it's a profit ABOVE breakeven, even given the cost of electricity. That time frame of breakeven and positive ROI is an accountant's wet dream, not a pessimistic outlook. Three months to see a profit above breakeven on expensive equipment is stupendous. You aren't merely spreading FUD here, you are showing a complete lack of any sort of business sense. ...

First, a simple ROI formula: ROI = (Gains – Cost)/Cost.  That's the definition.  The term is otherwise defined by context.  When ROI is given in dollars instead of percentage or fraction, assume ROI = Gains - Cost.

Breakeven in three month is great for investments which do not depreciate over time, or depreciate slowly.
Mining gear depreciates quickly.  
Its profitability over time also drops at an exponential rate.  If its costs are not completely recouped within three months, it is unlikely that the costs will ever be recouped.

Example for the math-challenged:

If you slaughter a cow, and take the beef to the market, most of your profits will happen in the first few hours.  At the end of the day, the meat will be suitable only for dogs, and profits will be insignificant.  Do not expect any more profits the following day, the day after that, or the day after that day -- your meat is rotten, no moar monyz 4 U.

If you do not make ROI on your slaughtered cow in the first day, you don't make ROI in a month, two months, or even a year.  

Math.
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 251
The realist
August 31, 2013, 09:27:49 AM
Yeah well I know what the term ROI means but pretty much here assumes / acknowledges that it means profit past break even.

How that came to be? No idea but it beats writing

WHEre are the profits pAst break evEn? Where ArE da CHiPs??? etc  Cheesy Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1022
Anarchy is not chaos.
August 31, 2013, 09:18:37 AM
Why even try to reason with a troll?  They're like Democrats - they don't let inconveinient things like facts interfere with their vision of reality...

On the other hand, as we all know Republicans are widely known for their rationality.

I consider it a good day when I manage to piss off a Democrat and a Republican in the same sentence. It usually involves logic Smiley
Your foto reminds me of Al Jourgensen  Cheesy

I really should know that name. But it's not coming to me Tongue Several people have told me I look like Tommy Shaw, and I'm good with that!  Cheesy
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1022
Anarchy is not chaos.
August 31, 2013, 09:14:40 AM
This argument has been going on quite a while, which I perceive as a good thing. It means that new people are still entering the bitcoin community.

The whole ROI discussion depends on your initial frame of reference.  If you are fiat centered then it is easy to get distorted by exchange rates and what not.

I prefer a BTC centric view when dealing with mining. 
Lets say you "invest" 50BTC at time t0 (roughly current Gox pricing for Jupiter to be on topic), and at the end of its useful life, t1 it has returned only 40 BTC. The miner investment was not a good decision as at time t0, you would have been better off in the long run (by 10 BTC) to have not "invested" in the miner. 

Now... if the hardware at the end of its useful life returns 60 BTC, then your investment was a good one and you made a 20% return.

If you start with a BTC frame of reference, then the math is easy... 40 (output) is less than 50 (input), ergo bad investment.  60 (output) is greater than 50 (input), congrats, great investment.  It is irrelevant if the exchange rate with your fiat of choice went to .0001 or 1,000,000. 

If you are in BTC only for profit, then I recommend buying BTC outright at an exchange.  If you are the kind of technical person that finds networking and system administration fun, get some miners you can comfortably afford and enjoy it. 

Well said, sir! +1
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1022
Anarchy is not chaos.
August 31, 2013, 09:09:50 AM
Did you even listen to anything I said? Harder to double by Feb/march onwards. And did you even look at my mining cal link?

And you do realise a Jup will most likely run faster than 400 yeah?

http://mining.thegenesisblock.com/a/46d15997b5

Still ROI with hosting, with oct del instead of late sept, with lowest predicted hash rate of miner (400), with constant doubling.

You know what. F it. Another idiot added to ignore.

He can't do basic math, he thinks percentages rule the difficulty. He doesn't understand end game concepts.

It is such an easy concept, thousands of people understand it but he does not.

You need to stop trying to teach the retard, instead just point laugh and walk away.

^^ pointing and Laughing, "End Game Concepts" Did you learn that in Plox teach Engrishes fast?

actually Theory of Games is where the term comes from. That's the theoretical underpinnings of military intelligence, as well as most advanced games, Chaos (Complexity) Theory, and several other useful data models for modeling and loosely predicting wide scale events.

My knowledge of English is exhaustive, and yours is pathetic. You should not step into a battle of wits unarmed, as not all of us are gentlemen enough not to accept the easy victory.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1022
Anarchy is not chaos.
August 31, 2013, 09:03:41 AM



Wait your image shows that you will ROI by start of Jan? What the F are you on about then?

Yes you will get a return of a whole $400 for Saturn, and $1,500 for Jupiter!!! GREAT SUCCESS!!!!

That's not merely ROI, which is in fact ANY income generated, it's a profit ABOVE breakeven, even given the cost of electricity. That time frame of breakeven and positive ROI is an accountant's wet dream, not a pessimistic outlook. Three months to see a profit above breakeven on expensive equipment is stupendous. You aren't merely spreading FUD here, you are showing a complete lack of any sort of business sense.

That is in addition to the other less tangible profits, such as making bitcoin more secure, more available, and more tradeable. All of these are possible, even likely outcomes of the massive influx of ASIC based mining equipment. I personally would be happy to hit breakeven or a bit above in six months on ANY fuckin' investment, let alone something as speculative as this. And as has been pointed out repeatedly, those are rather pessimistic numbers.

On the subject of Return on Investment, I have to say that most of you are misusing the term rather badly. Even those who I agree with Smiley Return on investment is simply making an income from your investment, whether or not it reaches breakeven or profitability. Breakeven seems to be the term most of you are referring to as ROI, whereas anything above that is profit, or positive ROI. There are basically three scenarios in which these devices will make zero ROI.

1. You give up and never plug the bitch in.

2. It's a total scam. Just a box of fans, in which case it won't mine.

3. It's broken on delivery. In which case a reputable company will try to make you whole. Given the nature and declining profitability of such devices, I would hope they offer some additional boards for the loss of time in such a case. Not all companies are BFL, and unlike many here, I don't think even they started out with the intention of fraud.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1000
August 31, 2013, 09:02:11 AM
Why even try to reason with a troll?  They're like Democrats - they don't let inconveinient things like facts interfere with their vision of reality...

On the other hand, as we all know Republicans are widely known for their rationality.

I consider it a good day when I manage to piss off a Democrat and a Republican in the same sentence. It usually involves logic Smiley
Your foto reminds me of Al Jourgensen  Cheesy
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1022
Anarchy is not chaos.
August 31, 2013, 08:48:37 AM
Why even try to reason with a troll?  They're like Democrats - they don't let inconveinient things like facts interfere with their vision of reality...

On the other hand, as we all know Republicans are widely known for their rationality.

I consider it a good day when I manage to piss off a Democrat and a Republican in the same sentence. It usually involves logic Smiley
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
August 31, 2013, 08:25:16 AM
I wonder if there will be any problem combining several old power supplies to power knc miners, since I have few lying around.

Dude I would stick with the 80+ standard certification, downtime costs coin, killing your machine is also not profitable. Play it safe man. Love the username. Wink

--

Also with regards to all this ROI nonsense. Two things;

1. Did the OG CPU/GPU miners know Bitcoin would increase the way it has? No. They were hoping it would, it's only now just began to gain momentum, and that depends on innovating mainstream uptake, ease of transaction, and availability to exchange, which is pretty sad most people concentrate on mining over this, it's where the profit really is.

This is because it takes brainpower to innovate and turning a box on takes none, and as a lot of the comments here prove Bitcoin mining is now full of the latter. I can only assume most are n00bs that have become interested subsequent to the media interest from the Cypriot ECB theft fallout, or were just plain daft prior, but I find it hard to believe many of the recent posts are from individuals, capable of handling command line code and GPU rig assembly, handle heat, etc. Clearly plugging in, and flicking 'on' is testing the limits of their intelligence, if they cannot navigate the reasoning behind recent hashrate multiples being the result of thr transition of GPU rigs --> what few ASICs devices have actually surfaced after the fraud that's occurred with BFL, and Bitsyncom.

Therefore you are still purchasing with the intention Bitcoin will move north over time, that is your real ROI if you must fixate. You'd have to be stupid to believe whilst profit margins over electricity exist people won't keep piling in to profit over a box they just plug in. How can you not expect this to got the way GPU farms once were? Oh right you were never there in the first place.

2. Ever heard of FinCEN (the US Finacial Crimes Enforcement Network), or the FSA (UK'sFinacial Services Auhority)?

NO Bitcoin mining company can promise a 'return on investment', promise to 'protection for your investment', or even mention the word; 'INVESTMENT', unless they have met ALL the requirements of a heavily regulated finacial services product. None of them have. It is illegal. This is why under Bitsyncom's 'No Bullshit Terms', they should actively be packing their pants, as they are a US incorporated company that promised just that, and claimed to price accordingly. This is very, very serious and any company offering such terms is quite frankly, screwed, and lying to their customers.

Quote
If I purchase Avalon Unit right now when can I expect to receive my unit?

At the time of writing Batch #3 is expect to start shipping early May.

How is each batch’s unit price determined?

The price of each unit is the current mining difficulty which at the time of writing, just got readjusted to about 6,695,826. We take that number and multiply it by two ( predicting the network speed will double. ) and calculate the return in a thirty day window, which is about 75 bitcoins. See this site for more details.

Quote
Avalon ASIC Chip
The no bullshit, no fine print terms of sale
the only payment accepted is Bitcoin.
these chips will be available until at least end of the year, 2013.
spec and various information is available on the wiki
the chips being sold are packaged and tested.
the lead time on the chips is 9 to 10 weeks,
made to order from TSMC foundry, this also means no refunds.
the order quantity is 10,000 chips.
the chips are identical to those in the Avalon units.
communication protocol, reference board design can be found on github.
everything will be open source from FPGA to PCB design.
30 sample chips will be provided 4 weeks into ordering per 10,000 chips.
we do not offer technical support of any kind, this is final.
if you do not know what to do with the reference design / packaged chips, please do not purchase.
Please read the above carefully, as with all things Bitcoin one should treat this as an investment and make the decision best for you based on the liquid-able funds available at the moment when placing an order.

I accept the terms and the potential risks involved with placing an order.
legendary
Activity: 2940
Merit: 1090
August 31, 2013, 08:14:54 AM
This argument has been going on quite a while, which I perceive as a good thing. It means that new people are still entering the bitcoin community.

The whole ROI discussion depends on your initial frame of reference.  If you are fiat centered then it is easy to get distorted by exchange rates and what not.

I prefer a BTC centric view when dealing with mining.  
Lets say you "invest" 50BTC at time t0 (roughly current Gox pricing for Jupiter to be on topic), and at the end of its useful life, t1 it has returned only 40 BTC. The miner investment was not a good decision as at time t0, you would have been better off in the long run (by 10 BTC) to have not "invested" in the miner.  

Now... if the hardware at the end of its useful life returns 60 BTC, then your investment was a good one and you made a 20% return.

If you start with a BTC frame of reference, then the math is easy... 40 (output) is less than 50 (input), ergo bad investment.  60 (output) is greater than 50 (input), congrats, great investment.  It is irrelevant if the exchange rate with your fiat of choice went to .0001 or 1,000,000.  

If you are in BTC only for profit, then I recommend buying BTC outright at an exchange.  If you are the kind of technical person that finds networking and system administration fun, get some miners you can comfortably afford and enjoy it.  

Good luck buying at an exchange all the i0coins, coiledcoins, geistgeld or even groupcoins that a miner could have been mining for you using merged mining.

Heck you are even forgetting to mention buying some namecoins and devcoins and ixcoins along with bitcoins to make up for what you could have (merged) mined...

Its too late now to rake in lots of low difficulty i0coins and groupcoins with a miner, but coiledcoins and geistgeld a miner still gets them easier than buying them on an exchange as far as I know...

-MarkM-
sr. member
Activity: 490
Merit: 255
August 31, 2013, 07:59:02 AM
This argument has been going on quite a while, which I perceive as a good thing. It means that new people are still entering the bitcoin community.

The whole ROI discussion depends on your initial frame of reference.  If you are fiat centered then it is easy to get distorted by exchange rates and what not.

I prefer a BTC centric view when dealing with mining. 
Lets say you "invest" 50BTC at time t0 (roughly current Gox pricing for Jupiter to be on topic), and at the end of its useful life, t1 it has returned only 40 BTC. The miner investment was not a good decision as at time t0, you would have been better off in the long run (by 10 BTC) to have not "invested" in the miner. 

Now... if the hardware at the end of its useful life returns 60 BTC, then your investment was a good one and you made a 20% return.

If you start with a BTC frame of reference, then the math is easy... 40 (output) is less than 50 (input), ergo bad investment.  60 (output) is greater than 50 (input), congrats, great investment.  It is irrelevant if the exchange rate with your fiat of choice went to .0001 or 1,000,000. 

If you are in BTC only for profit, then I recommend buying BTC outright at an exchange.  If you are the kind of technical person that finds networking and system administration fun, get some miners you can comfortably afford and enjoy it. 
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
August 31, 2013, 07:36:02 AM
Ok. I asked this in another thread already, but HERE, I particularly do not understand where a lot of you are coming from.

First off, no matter what you WILL achieve ROI, so I have to assume you mean POSITIVE ROI. But even given that niggle, there is virtually no way these machines will not reach break even in a fairly short time, after which your only ongoing expense is electricity, which is not that great of an expense on these devices.

So, those of you crying "no ROI" over and over again, WHAT FREAKIN" TIME FRAME ARE YOU TRYING TO BEAT?Huh

Any frickin' timeframe.  Please see here.

Quote
I mean really. An ivestment that is likely to break even in less than a year??? That's insanely positive by most any business metric you care to apply! ...

If you don't break even in a year, you never will.  Never.  Unless conventional difficulty predictions are just a bunch of fud, spread by evol gobment infiltrators.

Total bollocks.
So..in 5 years from now BTC are $10k exchange...explain to me how what you said can be true? Also..how you know that or something similar can't happen? That was the point he was making and he's spot on. At the end of the day the exchange rate of BTC is everything when deciding if your investment in a miner profits or not.


Even if bitcoin is $10k if 5 years, that isn't relevant.  At any point in time if your rig cannot earn more bitcoins in a week than it costs in electricity (given that week's btc -> dollar exchange rate) you should turn it off.  Why?  Because you'd get more bitcoins buying them at an exchange than buying electricity to mine.

Also if bitcoin goes to $10k you can bet your sweet ass that difficulty will rise to match, and unless your miner is one of the most efficient (or you pay very little for power), you will not see profit.

So. If I buy a Jupiter now and mine just ONE BTC with it and BTC rises to 10k I won't be in profit?

Why bother, just buy 1btc and keep it!

Because the chances of a Jupiter actually mining just one coin are remote. OBVIOUSLY that was an example, a dead simple one.
I give up, heads are in sand here...not a gramme of logic.
Nothing prevent you to buy more btc either and not just one,lol

If the bigest question here is will I make an ROI whith good chance of not or barelly I am out. What about profit and why I am risking so much?
Instead of buying an miner I am better of purchase now btc at $138.
sr. member
Activity: 1176
Merit: 265
August 31, 2013, 07:31:35 AM
Ok. I asked this in another thread already, but HERE, I particularly do not understand where a lot of you are coming from.

First off, no matter what you WILL achieve ROI, so I have to assume you mean POSITIVE ROI. But even given that niggle, there is virtually no way these machines will not reach break even in a fairly short time, after which your only ongoing expense is electricity, which is not that great of an expense on these devices.

So, those of you crying "no ROI" over and over again, WHAT FREAKIN" TIME FRAME ARE YOU TRYING TO BEAT?Huh

Any frickin' timeframe.  Please see here.

Quote
I mean really. An ivestment that is likely to break even in less than a year??? That's insanely positive by most any business metric you care to apply! ...

If you don't break even in a year, you never will.  Never.  Unless conventional difficulty predictions are just a bunch of fud, spread by evol gobment infiltrators.

Total bollocks.
So..in 5 years from now BTC are $10k exchange...explain to me how what you said can be true? Also..how you know that or something similar can't happen? That was the point he was making and he's spot on. At the end of the day the exchange rate of BTC is everything when deciding if your investment in a miner profits or not.


Even if bitcoin is $10k if 5 years, that isn't relevant.  At any point in time if your rig cannot earn more bitcoins in a week than it costs in electricity (given that week's btc -> dollar exchange rate) you should turn it off.  Why?  Because you'd get more bitcoins buying them at an exchange than buying electricity to mine.

Also if bitcoin goes to $10k you can bet your sweet ass that difficulty will rise to match, and unless your miner is one of the most efficient (or you pay very little for power), you will not see profit.

So. If I buy a Jupiter now and mine just ONE BTC with it and BTC rises to 10k I won't be in profit?

Why bother, just buy 1btc and keep it!

Because the chances of a Jupiter actually mining just one coin are remote. OBVIOUSLY that was an example, a dead simple one.
I give up, heads are in sand here...not a gramme of logic.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
August 31, 2013, 07:26:23 AM
Ok. I asked this in another thread already, but HERE, I particularly do not understand where a lot of you are coming from.

First off, no matter what you WILL achieve ROI, so I have to assume you mean POSITIVE ROI. But even given that niggle, there is virtually no way these machines will not reach break even in a fairly short time, after which your only ongoing expense is electricity, which is not that great of an expense on these devices.

So, those of you crying "no ROI" over and over again, WHAT FREAKIN" TIME FRAME ARE YOU TRYING TO BEAT?Huh

Any frickin' timeframe.  Please see here.

Quote
I mean really. An ivestment that is likely to break even in less than a year??? That's insanely positive by most any business metric you care to apply! ...

If you don't break even in a year, you never will.  Never.  Unless conventional difficulty predictions are just a bunch of fud, spread by evol gobment infiltrators.

Total bollocks.
So..in 5 years from now BTC are $10k exchange...explain to me how what you said can be true? Also..how you know that or something similar can't happen? That was the point he was making and he's spot on. At the end of the day the exchange rate of BTC is everything when deciding if your investment in a miner profits or not.


Even if bitcoin is $10k if 5 years, that isn't relevant.  At any point in time if your rig cannot earn more bitcoins in a week than it costs in electricity (given that week's btc -> dollar exchange rate) you should turn it off.  Why?  Because you'd get more bitcoins buying them at an exchange than buying electricity to mine.

Also if bitcoin goes to $10k you can bet your sweet ass that difficulty will rise to match, and unless your miner is one of the most efficient (or you pay very little for power), you will not see profit.

So. If I buy a Jupiter now and mine just ONE BTC with it and BTC rises to 10k I won't be in profit?

Why bother, just buy 1btc and keep it!
sr. member
Activity: 1176
Merit: 265
August 31, 2013, 07:18:43 AM
Ok. I asked this in another thread already, but HERE, I particularly do not understand where a lot of you are coming from.

First off, no matter what you WILL achieve ROI, so I have to assume you mean POSITIVE ROI. But even given that niggle, there is virtually no way these machines will not reach break even in a fairly short time, after which your only ongoing expense is electricity, which is not that great of an expense on these devices.

So, those of you crying "no ROI" over and over again, WHAT FREAKIN" TIME FRAME ARE YOU TRYING TO BEAT?Huh

Any frickin' timeframe.  Please see here.

Quote
I mean really. An ivestment that is likely to break even in less than a year??? That's insanely positive by most any business metric you care to apply! ...

If you don't break even in a year, you never will.  Never.  Unless conventional difficulty predictions are just a bunch of fud, spread by evol gobment infiltrators.

Total bollocks.
So..in 5 years from now BTC are $10k exchange...explain to me how what you said can be true? Also..how you know that or something similar can't happen? That was the point he was making and he's spot on. At the end of the day the exchange rate of BTC is everything when deciding if your investment in a miner profits or not.


Even if bitcoin is $10k if 5 years, that isn't relevant.  At any point in time if your rig cannot earn more bitcoins in a week than it costs in electricity (given that week's btc -> dollar exchange rate) you should turn it off.  Why?  Because you'd get more bitcoins buying them at an exchange than buying electricity to mine.

Also if bitcoin goes to $10k you can bet your sweet ass that difficulty will rise to match, and unless your miner is one of the most efficient (or you pay very little for power), you will not see profit.

So. If I buy a Jupiter now and mine just ONE BTC with it and BTC rises to 10k I won't be in profit?
full member
Activity: 157
Merit: 100
August 31, 2013, 05:54:19 AM
I didn't see anyone writing this so i will.
If every 10 days difficulty increase by 30%:

30% more hashrate of the miner + delivery of miner on September 30 = original stated miner hashrate+ delivery of miner on September 20

So this "toward end of September" is not such a bad thing.
newbie
Activity: 46
Merit: 0
August 31, 2013, 05:37:06 AM
Some of you guys gotta stop looking at the short game and look at the long game. Knc wants to be a major player in this game and they know time is of the essence, especially with Hashfash Cointerra (with an impressive resume) and others coming to the market, they have to stay ahead of the game or they'll be tossed aside and lose a huge amount of face/future revenue to these other companies. In my opinion I'm glad they mentioned end Of September as I want them to continue to under-promise and over deliver. hint* hint*   Smiley

If they do they'll have a strong foot hold in the market and more trusting customers/investors willing to purchase/reinvest for gen 2 gen 3 based on there fast delivery.
sr. member
Activity: 446
Merit: 250
August 31, 2013, 04:06:18 AM
Yes you will get a return of a whole $400 for Saturn, and $1,500 for Jupiter!!! GREAT SUCCESS!!!!

So wait. You're saying there's ROI now? Before you said 0 ROI but now it's positive ROI? What are you? Some kind of idiot?

And like I said, After Feb onwards, you don't really know what will happen. Chances if it being double double double double are extremely unlikely.

$1500 for a Jupiter is not good? That's a 21% return!! That's bloody fantastic.


To give a moron like you some actual numbers.

$ 2,200.00 Hosting - $1,500 Profit = -$700

Moron, Troll, or KNC Shill?

Why do you care so much? Is it a special need to express intelligence over another person, perhaps it is the usual case of ego getting in the way. Either way why troll a sub forum dedicated to KNC customers
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