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Topic: Trying to open wallet from 2013 (Read 385 times)

copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 17, 2020, 11:23:45 AM
#22
here is some of the words. ignoramus candlelight cashiered corporately. There's actually 17 total words now that I look at it.

Maybe you had a 17 character password somewhere and you wrote it down as words? Either wallet password, either password for the mining pool?

Ya maybe for the mining pool. I know I generated some bitcoin mining back in 2013. Like less than 90 cents at the time, but I have no idea what site that was lol
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 6452
Self-proclaimed Genius
March 14, 2020, 10:00:41 PM
#21
I guess i missunderstand the #4 post cause you said anything like restore the old wallet but i would like to know if the same process can be use for other BTC wallet (electrum).
That's off-topic but yes, you can.

But Electrum's wallet file doesn't have to be renamed to be loaded by default, you just have to paste it to the data directory:
%appdata%/electrum/wallets then open it using 'file->open' menu even if Electrum is running.
member
Activity: 1191
Merit: 78
March 14, 2020, 07:45:18 AM
#20
Have a question about restoring old wallet. After gettng old wallet DAT file what is the next procedure cause I'm lost there and none of you guys said something about it.
Read post#4, you need to copy it to the data directory and rename the wallet file into "wallet.dat" (Bitcoin Core have to be shutdown before proceeding).
And Core should rescan when you launch it.

The default directories written there are simplified,
for Windows, %appdata% is in your hidden C:\Users\Username\AppData\Roaming folder;
or just type %appdata% in the run menu (Win+R), the open "bitcoin".
I guess i missunderstand the #4 post cause you said anything like restore the old wallet but i would like to know if the same process can be use for other BTC wallet (electrum).
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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March 14, 2020, 12:54:26 AM
#19
here is some of the words. ignoramus candlelight cashiered corporately. There's actually 17 total words now that I look at it.

Maybe you had a 17 character password somewhere and you wrote it down as words? Either wallet password, either password for the mining pool?
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 6452
Self-proclaimed Genius
March 13, 2020, 09:42:20 PM
#18
I got it open with bitcoin core. Not sure what that 17 word thing is for. Wallet was empty as excepted lol
You might want to check if it's a brainwallet.

Just download brainwallet's source (site, the Github link is in the footer) and run it offline.
Paste your brainwallet and copy the results, check the address in a blockexplorer if it has any balance.

If there is, you can now import the private key to any Bitcoin wallet that you want.

But wait, is core not fully synced yet?
copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 13, 2020, 09:36:09 PM
#17
I got it open with bitcoin core. Not sure what that 17 word thing is for. Wallet was empty as excepted lol
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 6452
Self-proclaimed Genius
March 13, 2020, 09:20:49 PM
#16
Have a question about restoring old wallet. After gettng old wallet DAT file what is the next procedure cause I'm lost there and none of you guys said something about it.
Read post#4, you need to copy it to the data directory and rename the wallet file into "wallet.dat" (Bitcoin Core have to be shutdown before proceeding).
And Core should rescan when you launch it.

The default directories written there are simplified,
for Windows, %appdata% is in your hidden C:\Users\Username\AppData\Roaming folder;
or just type %appdata% in the run menu (Win+R), the open "bitcoin".
member
Activity: 1191
Merit: 78
March 13, 2020, 12:08:06 PM
#15
Have a question about restoring old wallet. After gettng old wallet DAT file what is the next procedure cause I'm lost there and none of you guys said something about it.
copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 13, 2020, 10:09:09 AM
#14
Nope - here is some of the words. ignoramus candlelight cashiered corporately. There's actually 17 total words now that I look at it.

mnemonic generators have always tried avoiding complicated words, past tense and adverbs (corporately) and generally words that could have more than one form and could be confusing. your words don't exist in any of the word lists which means there is a good chance it is a brain wallet.

ps. i couldn't find these set of words on GitHub or Google except in dictionary lists containing thousands of words (if it were mnemonic it should have been in a shorter 2048 word list in a project)

Hmm. Resynced and now it's stuck at "rescanning" (well sat like this for about 45 minutes so far) when I try to open Bitcoin Core... don't have remote access to my home PC at work so I'll have to look into it further later tonight. Maybe it's not even a Bitcoin wallet? No idea at this point lol
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
March 12, 2020, 11:48:52 PM
#13
Nope - here is some of the words. ignoramus candlelight cashiered corporately. There's actually 17 total words now that I look at it.

mnemonic generators have always tried avoiding complicated words, past tense and adverbs (corporately) and generally words that could have more than one form and could be confusing. your words don't exist in any of the word lists which means there is a good chance it is a brain wallet.

ps. i couldn't find these set of words on GitHub or Google except in dictionary lists containing thousands of words (if it were mnemonic it should have been in a shorter 2048 word list in a project)
copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 12, 2020, 09:08:54 PM
#12
Maybe that's a "Brainwallet", did it ring a bell?

It couldn't be a BIP39 seed if you're sure that it's from 2013 because it was just published on that year's last quarter (but there's a chance).
Did the words from that 12-word backup matched any of the words in this list: BIP39 Word-list?

Nope - here is some of the words. ignoramus candlelight cashiered corporately. There's actually 17 total words now that I look at it.

Hmm...
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 6452
Self-proclaimed Genius
March 12, 2020, 08:53:49 PM
#11
Maybe that's a "Brainwallet", did it ring a bell?

It couldn't be a BIP39 seed if you're sure that it's from 2013 because it was just published on that year's last quarter (but there's a chance).
Did the words from that 12-word backup matched any of the words in this list: BIP39 Word-list?
copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 12, 2020, 08:30:32 PM
#10
I have both wallet.dat file (random gibberish when it's opened in notepad) and then a notepad file called Bitcoin that looks like a 12 word seed. Both dated 12/24/2013  I'm currently resyncing Bitcoin Core and should know when I wake up what the deal is. I don't remember where these files came from. I briefly CPU/GPU mined in 2013 and didn't get back into crypto until 2016. I doubt there's anything on it. If I remember correctly I ended up mining like .0003 but I feel like I was part of a pool that had a web wallet but I honestly don't remember lol. I used to use my work PCs to CPU mine

The wallet file is encrypted that is why it shows random character when opening it to notepad.

Have you heard about the Multibit wallet it might be generated from a multibit wallet so try to check that wallet to recover your old wallet?

- https://multibit.org/help/hd0.1/restore-wallet.html

Tried that. I don't think it's a seed phrase. I think it was a password I was required to use to encrypt a wallet. I feel like it was from a website generated wallet not Bitcoin core, but I don't know. Any chance there's a list of Bitcoin mining sites/wallet sites from 2013 anywhere? lol
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 3217
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March 12, 2020, 05:24:39 PM
#9
I have both wallet.dat file (random gibberish when it's opened in notepad) and then a notepad file called Bitcoin that looks like a 12 word seed. Both dated 12/24/2013  I'm currently resyncing Bitcoin Core and should know when I wake up what the deal is. I don't remember where these files came from. I briefly CPU/GPU mined in 2013 and didn't get back into crypto until 2016. I doubt there's anything on it. If I remember correctly I ended up mining like .0003 but I feel like I was part of a pool that had a web wallet but I honestly don't remember lol. I used to use my work PCs to CPU mine

The wallet file is encrypted that is why it shows random character when opening it to notepad.

Have you heard about the Multibit wallet it might be generated from a multibit wallet so try to check that wallet to recover your old wallet?

- https://multibit.org/help/hd0.1/restore-wallet.html
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 6452
Self-proclaimed Genius
March 11, 2020, 11:33:16 PM
#8
are you sure those wallet files are readable because usually .dat files are used for when you store data as binary not plain text which means opening it with a text editor should technically show you random looking weird characters instead of a readable text.
Try to download v1.8.1 and open the "electrum.dat" or "any_name.dat" file that it created.
Even provided with a password, it will just encrypt the seed but will leave everything "readable".

I have both wallet.dat file (random gibberish when it's opened in notepad) and then a notepad file called Bitcoin that looks like a 12 word seed. Both dated 12/24/2013
Then it isn't Electrum's wallet file.
Also, there's a chance that the 12-word seed isn't connected to that wallet file since Bitcoin Core didn't used seed phrase ever.
copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 11, 2020, 11:24:03 PM
#7
Very old versions of Electrum have a '.dat' extension to its wallet files, and ofc a seed phrase.
Specifically v1.8.1 from 2013.
Have you tried to open a copy of the wallet file using a text editor?

are you sure those wallet files are readable because usually .dat files are used for when you store data as binary not plain text which means opening it with a text editor should technically show you random looking weird characters instead of a readable text.

I have both wallet.dat file (random gibberish when it's opened in notepad) and then a notepad file called Bitcoin that looks like a 12 word seed. Both dated 12/24/2013  I'm currently resyncing Bitcoin Core and should know when I wake up what the deal is. I don't remember where these files came from. I briefly CPU/GPU mined in 2013 and didn't get back into crypto until 2016. I doubt there's anything on it. If I remember correctly I ended up mining like .0003 but I feel like I was part of a pool that had a web wallet but I honestly don't remember lol. I used to use my work PCs to CPU mine
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
March 11, 2020, 11:18:20 PM
#6
Very old versions of Electrum have a '.dat' extension to its wallet files, and ofc a seed phrase.
Specifically v1.8.1 from 2013.
Have you tried to open a copy of the wallet file using a text editor?

are you sure those wallet files are readable because usually .dat files are used for when you store data as binary not plain text which means opening it with a text editor should technically show you random looking weird characters instead of a readable text.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 6452
Self-proclaimed Genius
March 11, 2020, 11:09:34 PM
#5
I don't know where it came from, but I do have a 12 word seed phrase with it.
Very old versions of Electrum have a '.dat' extension to its wallet files, and ofc a seed phrase.
Specifically v1.8.1 from 2013.

Have you tried to open a copy of the wallet file using a text editor?
If it's Electrum, there should be readable data because the whole wallet file wasn't encrypted back then.

If you can read "addr_history" and bunch of addresses, then it must be Electrum.
Just restore your seed to the latest version from the official site: https://electrum.org/#download
copper member
Activity: 2856
Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
March 11, 2020, 07:47:34 PM
#4
Copy it to the datadir bitcoin core creates.

For Linux that'll be: ~/. Bitcoin
for Windows it'll be: %appdata%/roaming/bitcoin or %appdata%/local/bitcoin

If you haven't configured your own.
copper member
Activity: 336
Merit: 35
March 11, 2020, 07:43:34 PM
#3
Yeah it's in prune mode, you'll have to redo the syncing process once more with the wallet imported...

This is a standard error imo.

The 12 words is probably a password, bitcoin core didn't come with mnemonics in 2013 or any year....

How do I import the wallet? Is there an import option or do I just drop it in the Bitcoin Core folder?
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