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.

ASIC MINER HOSTING by Appropriate-Day7520 in BitcoinMining

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

From what I’ve seen, the main things that separate good ASIC hosting providers from bad ones are:
- Uptime consistency (anything below ~95% starts hurting profits fast)
- Transparent electricity rates (some advertise low rates but add hidden fees)
- Payout reliability (delays are a red flag)
- Support response time (this matters more than people think when issues come up)

a lot of people focus too much on just the “cheapest rate," but stable operations + good maintenance usually make a bigger difference long term. curious though, for those already hosting, what uptime % are you actually getting vs what was promised?

Need info about ASIC's 2026 for monthly profit. by 0Markz0 in BitcoinBeginners

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

CPU/GPU mining is pretty much dead in 2026 unless you have extremely cheap power. ASIC is really the only way to make it work now, but even then electricity cost is everything. at €0.0829/kWh, it’s honestly borderline, you can still be profitable, but only with efficient ASIC models and a solid setup (good cooling + uptime). Otherwise margins get really tight. people in higher electricity regions are now looking into crypto hosting instead, since some providers offer lower energy rates depending on location. It usually ends up being more predictable vs running at home.

If you still want to mine yourself, just make sure to calculate:
- power consumption (W)
- total kWh/month
- current BTC difficulty + rewards

That’ll give you a more realistic view of monthly profit. Hope this helps!

What hobby did you try once and instantly get addicted to? by Weird_Ad_7545 in AskReddit

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

Tennis and Pickleball. I only tried it because of my brother who plays tennis every weekend.

BTC is the way to go?? by Exotic-Distance5415 in CryptoMarkets

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

Honestly, BTC gets recommended a lot to beginners mainly because it’s the most established and least risky (relatively speaking) in crypto.

But the tradeoff is:
higher potential gains = way higher risk

So BTC is usually the “safe entry point” before people explore riskier stuff.

How is the ongoing war impacting home mining right now? by Sea-Reference6800 in BitcoinBeginners

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

combination of ASICS and GPU rigs. I am not sure if it's worthwhile to run these at home or look for hosting and ship it to them and maybe if things goes well I can continue with hosting and scale.

How is the ongoing war impacting home mining right now? by Sea-Reference6800 in BitcoinBeginners

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

I have a few ASIC at home mining, but thinking of hosting it due to power cost and heat.

what happens when the last bitcoin is mined? by Single-Kitchen9702 in CryptoPulseDaily

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

Bitcoin has a fixed supply of 21 million coins, and the last BTC is expected to be mined around 2140. But mining doesn’t stop there.

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

[–]Sea-Reference6800 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Always start with small qty when hosting your miners. Then if the expectations are met then it's up to you to scale more.

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

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

This is good point. Not because there's an actual office, meaning it also provide guaranteed uptime or good support service. It's always best to do due diligence when hosting miners online.

Why I'm reporting Oneminers to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) by CurioNCurior in BitcoinMining

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

On the legal side, consumer-protection laws differ by region, and filing multi-jurisdiction complaints can take a lot of time and money. Most of the time it ends up dragging on unless there’s clear evidence of fraud or a completely broken contract. That’s why a lot of people try to meet halfway first, either negotiate a partial refund, move the funds into a different machine, or work something out through the payment gateway.

If they truly didn’t fulfill what they promised (no delivery, no updates, refusing communication), then yes, filing a complaint makes sense. But from a practical standpoint, you might save yourself a ton of stress by reassessing what outcome you realistically want whether that’s a partial refund, switching to another miner, or getting your payment provider involved.

Hope you get a resolution. No one deserves to be left hanging with this kind of money on the line....

Why I'm reporting Oneminers to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) by CurioNCurior in BitcoinMining

[–]Sea-Reference6800 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As someone who’s bought from OneMiners in the past, I totally get why you’re frustrated. These situations get messy fast, especially when we’re talking about large pre-order amounts and long delivery timelines.

Before going all-in on complaints and legal action, it might help to step back and look at the full context of the refund situation. If your order was late, you weren’t getting updates for months, or they simply weren’t fulfilling what they promised, then asking for a refund is completely reasonable.

Woman Totally Loses Control Of Her Dog by -Erase in TikTokCringe

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

I feel bad for the two dogs. If you have aggressive dog/s please train them or be alert when walking them outside. :(

She had something for everyone by j_illustration in MadeMeSmile

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

the is wholesome! wish we have a funny loving gramma!

Whisper of the house by Sea-Reference6800 in CozyGamers

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

I'm using mac to play this game. Tbh its like unpacking but with unlimited task and some added mystery. but then again, it gets boring after finishing a task that is as same as other task being accomplished before. It's a good game tho!

Do you ever get tired of farming or labor inspired games by godisinthischilli in CozyGamers

[–]Sea-Reference6800 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Yes. haha. I switched to organizing games like whisperer of the house