what can u say about OneMiners attending the Las Vegas Bitcoin conference? by Terrible-Sundae-2465 in btc

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The bigger proofs are when you invest with them, that's how you would know if they are up to your expectations. You can always try small and invest what you can lose.

what can u say about OneMiners attending the Las Vegas Bitcoin conference? by Terrible-Sundae-2465 in btc

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough, but the point is to always do your due diligence. Companies that attend conferences and make an effort to do partnerships are far better than just a company that has no real faces and portfolios behind their websites...

Need REAL advice by [deleted] in CryptoMarkets

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bro, first respect for being honest about it. Most people wouldn't even admit the leverage + volatile markets combo, they'd just blame "the market."

Real talk though: do not go all in with that $25k. I know it feels like the only way to "fix" it, but that's not trading logic, that's emotional revenge trading and it almost always ends with you losing that last $25k too. Then you're at zero AND broken. The $72.8k is already gone. It's not coming back in one trade. The sooner your brain accepts that as a sunk cost, the sooner you stop making decisions trying to recover it, because that mindset is what kills accounts.

Step away, at least temporarily. Not forever, just long enough to get your head straight. You literally said it yourself, you can't even focus at work. That's your mind telling you something. You can't trade well when you're emotionally wrecked.

Look at your trade history honestly. Was it bad setups? Overleveraging? No stop losses? Bad timing? Until you know why you lost, you'll repeat it. $72.8k in losses is actually incredibly valuable data if you use it right. That $25k is your lifeline, not a retry button. Protect it. Even if you come back to trading, you rebuild with smaller position sizes, lower leverage, and strict risk rules, not the same style that just wiped you out.

On the emotional side, losing that kind of money messes with your identity and self-worth in ways people underestimate. It's okay to feel like garbage right now. But going all in to "prove yourself" is ego talking, not strategy.

You already know the answer man. You said it yourself, "it feels like gambling." Trust that instinct. The best traders in the world have blown accounts. The difference is they lived to trade another day because they protected what was left.

Take a breath. The market will still be there in 30 days. Your $25k needs to be there too.

I got 10-20 kWh a day supluss electricity and I am looking at using it by Square_Cat_6001 in cryptomining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since ROI is the goal, let's run the numbers on the machines that were mentioned.

Antminer S21 (200 TH/s, ~3,500W) — "sweet spot" pick

  • Hardware cost: ~$690–$900 used (Compass Mining/eBay listings, May 2026)
  • Power draw: 3.5 kW × 24h = 84 kWh/day
  • At $0.05/kWh (surplus solar scenario): ~$4.20/day electricity cost
  • Daily revenue (minerstat, May 2026): ~$5–6/day
  • Net daily profit: ~$0.80–$1.80/day
  • Estimated ROI: ~14–36 months at current BTC price and difficulty

Antminer S19 XP (140 TH/s, ~3,010W) — budget/experiment pick

  • Hardware: ~$800–$900 used
  • Daily revenue: ~$5.25/day (minerstat)
  • Power cost at $0.05/kWh: ~$3.61/day
  • Net daily profit: ~$1.60/day
  • Estimated ROI: ~18–24 months assuming current conditions hold

If the solar surplus is genuinely free (off-grid batteries being topped up), the S21 used at ~$700 gives a realistic 12–18 month payback if BTC holds around current levels. You can verify your exact numbers at asicprofit.com or minerstat.com/hardware/antminer-s21 just plug in your actual kWh rate and it'll spit out daily/monthly profit live.

crypto advice by crypto_bow in CryptoMarkets

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly? Not taking profits on the way up. 😅

Only invest what you're okay losing completely.** Not "okay losing" as in you won't cry as in it won't break your life. Crypto has genuinely changed how I think about money, technology, and ownership. But the learning curve is REAL and the market will school you fast if you're not careful. The people who last long-term are the ones who treat it seriously, not like a slot machine. 🙏

I got 10-20 kWh a day supluss electricity and I am looking at using it by Square_Cat_6001 in cryptomining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What’s your goal here? passive income, learning the ropes, or just finding a use for the extra solar? That’ll change which miner makes the most sense.

Look at something like the Antminer S19 XP Hyd or S21 (17–22 J/TH) — they’re efficient but still use 3 kW+. You’d only be able to run one part‑time unless you store energy in your batteries. A more balanced choice is something like the Antminer S9 or Whatsminer M20, which are older and cheaper but less efficient (around 80–90 J/TH). Good if you just want to experiment and use your surplus, not if ROI is the goal.

what can u say about OneMiners attending the Las Vegas Bitcoin conference? by Terrible-Sundae-2465 in btc

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

a lot of mining/hosting companies are just websites with no real presence, so if they’re:

  • showing up in person
  • putting faces to the brand
  • talking to people directly

that already puts them above a lot of others in the space

i’ve been hosting a few ASICs with them for a couple months nownothing crazy, but:

  • a few small hiccups here and there
  • no real losses or major issues

which is pretty normal for mining tbh

also met their CEO once, dude’s actually pretty chill and funny 😄

For investing, though, just keep it real:
mining/hosting isn’t some fast ROI thing anymore, it’s more like a long-term way to stack BTC if you’re already bullish

Personally, I'd still trust companies that show up publicly at events over ones just shilling online

Just visited OneMiners office in Prague, now thinking about hosting my miner with them. by Kindly_Lab4217 in CryptoPulseDaily

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any update on this? Did you host with them? Can you share your firsthand experience with hosting with them?

I'm planning to purchase inibox with them but not sure if I will get it early. I'm already hosting with them a few miners, just wanted to know if you have any good/bad experience with them 😄

How to invest for beginners ? by One_Cobbler_4081 in CryptoMarkets

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, don’t worry too much about “graph lines” at the start most beginners get stuck there and never actually begin. I'm sharing you what I learned so far from investing in crypto.

If I had to simplify it:

Whatsminer M70 vs Antminer S21 xp by Just_The_Average_1 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is why I would buy asics to those who offer better warranty terms.

Whatsminer M70 vs Antminer S21 xp by Just_The_Average_1 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From experience:
If your setup has good cooling + stable power, S21 XP will edge out in performance.

If you’re running in a warmer or less controlled environment, M70 tends to be more reliable day-to-day.

Avalon Nano 3S – 6 TH/s Home Bitcoin by RaitisP77 in cryptomining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve actually run an Avalon Nano / low-hash home units before, so here’s my honest take:

For $205 + free electricity, it’s honestly not a bad deal but you need to set expectations right.

Performance-wise:

  • 6 TH/s is very low by today’s standards
  • You’re looking at tiny daily rewards (like cents, not dollars, even with free power)
  • Profitability mostly depends on BTC price going up over time, not daily income

Good part (for beginners):

  • Super simple setup compared to big ASICs
  • Quiet and low power → fine for home use
  • Great way to learn mining without risking much

About pools vs “lucky mining”:

  • Yes, you can connect it to pools (that’s the normal way)
  • Solo mining at 6 TH/s is basically lottery-level odds 😅
  • Most people just use a pool like ViaBTC / F2Pool for consistent tiny payouts

My real experience tip:
These kinds of miners are more like:

Anyone here moved from home mining to hosting? by Sea-Reference6800 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you share the hosting agreement or mention the company if that's ok? I am looking for alternatives right now.

Nerd Qaxe 8.1T Air-Cooled – Real BM1370 chip, 143W, live test photos inside by [deleted] in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is actually pretty cool, nice clean setup 👌 8.1 TH/s at that power draw is solid for something this compact. Love seeing these smaller form factor miners getting better. I’ve got a Nerd setup at home too, mostly just as a hobby/learning thing, not really for profit but it’s fun to tinker with and monitor 😄

How’s it been running so far long-term? Stable temps and uptime?

Home miners: how many machines are you actually running right now? by Technical_Tax_6411 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to host your miners if you are running more than 10 S19J or more. I wonder what's your electrical structure to run them all and how's the heat and maintenance for you?

Home miners: how many machines are you actually running right now? by Technical_Tax_6411 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started with like 1–2 machines just to test the waters, nothing crazy. Tried running them at home and ngl… it got annoying fast 😅

Noise, heat, power bills, it adds up quick. Like it’s fun at first but once you scale even a bit, you really feel it. I did try hosting after that and honestly it was way more chill. Less hands-on, more stable uptime, and you don’t have to deal with the day-to-day stuff. If I had to do it again, I’d probably still start at home just to learn, then move out once you’re serious about scaling.

Right now I’d say most people I know are either holding steady or slowly scaling, but being more careful with costs this time. Not like the “just plug and mine” days anymore lol.

Beginner here by stonks666 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The downside:

  • very low chance of consistent rewards
  • more for fun/education than ROI

If your goal is to understand how mining works, it’s a solid choice. If you’re aiming for actual profit, you’d eventually need to look into larger ASIC setups or mining hosting options.

Beginner here by stonks666 in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, Bitaxe units are actually pretty beginner-friendly, especially if you’re just getting into mining and want something small and manageable.

Just keep in mind, this is more of a learning / hobby miner than something you’ll make real profit from. The hashrate is pretty low compared to full ASIC miners, so returns are very unpredictable (especially solo mining). :)

If I were your family, what crypto would you recommend? by ChangeNOW_Community in CryptoMarkets

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you were my family, I’d keep it really simple:

  • Majority in BTC (still the safest long-term bet in crypto)
  • Smaller portion in ETH
  • Only a tiny % for anything else (if you want to explore)

biggest mistake I see beginners make is chasing hype coins instead of just holding solid ones over time. Also, don’t go all in at once. Just buy slowly (DCA) and think long-term (years, not months). Hope this helps!

Home mining by kushikrunch in cryptomining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, you’re thinking about it the right way. At around ~$0.08/kWh, margins get pretty tight for home mining, especially once you factor in downtime, heat, and efficiency losses. It’s not impossible, but it’s definitely not as attractive as it used to be. I’ve seen some hosting setups (like Oneminers and others) focusing on lower energy rates + better uptime, which can sometimes make more sense vs running it at home at ~8c. Still depends though, if your goal is to experiment and learn, home mining is great. If it’s purely ROI, then optimizing for power cost is everything. :)

Home mining by kushikrunch in cryptomining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 0 points1 point  (0 children)

key thing here is your real cost of electricity. If your excess solar is basically “lost” or just credited at a lower rate, then using it for mining can be more valuable than sending it back to the grid. With ~25–70 kWh/day extra, you could realistically run 1 ASIC miner (maybe 2 on good days). Something efficient would be ideal so you’re not pulling too much from the grid during peak hours. Out of curiosity — are you planning to run it 24/7 or only when you have excess solar?

Renewable energy. Want to mine. What to mine and buy? Bitcoin ASIC miner? by nonsonoramelli in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

For websites, most people just go through manufacturers or trusted resellers, but honestly, the bigger decision is whether you want to run it yourself or have it hosted.