Saw this on Cointelegraph and wow, a solo miner just mined Bitcoin block 912632, raking in about $340K. Pretty wild if you ask me. The fact that a solo miner pulled this off and got the full reward is something else. I’m not sure if this guy had a ton of hash power or just hit the jackpot in luck. It’s a rare event in Bitcoin mining history, even if it can technically happen. Can't say I've heard of this happening before.
Most Bitcoin blocks get mined by pools, where miners combine their hash power, or by big mining operations. So it's pretty crazy that a solo miner managed to crack a whole block, especially with how tough the competition is in mining right now.
What do you guys think? Was it just luck or did this miner have some secret sauce to boost his hash rate?
Do not mind this what Cointelegraph is publishing, solo miners are always mining blocks.
These are some of the recent blocks mined by solo miners:
912975
912935
912850
912841
All these blocks were mined after the one that you are talking about. It has always been like this if you go through the previous blocks.
Old news... It was a very large rental on solo.ckpool a 2 days ago. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5237323.msg65756404#msg65756404 As said before, it is NOT exactly a rare event.
There is a post in the Russian local board:
"The solo miner mined bitcoins on equipment with a capacity of 61 Ph/s - this is about 300 modern mining devices"
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5501142.msg65758736#msg65758736
This miner played a very expensive lottery.
The electricity costs for such equipment are very expensive.
Yeah it rarely happens but that doesn't mean it can't happen. There have been many occasions where solo miners were able to get a block reward and it was even more reoccurring back when the general difficulty was way lower and block reward was bigger compared to now.
What bigger hash rates do is give you a larger computational power to solve the block header and get the rewards faster compared to other miners so technically speaking bigger hashrates increase your chances but don't really guarantee you'll get it solved first since it's based on randomization. So those solo miners we basically lucky guys.
I'm very curious about this miner's motives.
With that hashrate, his revenue is $3,500 a day. I don't know his expenses, but I wouldn't mine solo if I were him. Maybe he tried for a couple of days and got lucky
This is similar to hitting a lottery and is a wet dream of many miners out there. I would never recommend anyone to do this because the cost of setting up equipment and the cost of electricity, maintenance for being able to the run the rigs for a time by which a block gets mined solo under their wing will be end up being much higher than the return.
Much like gambling away more than you what you get back on hitting a jackpot.
But they do make the news, hence reality check should also be done.
On Solo Sk pools you can mine with any hashrate.
The minimum hashrate is set by the pool owner. Read the instructions on the pool, there is no point in mining solo with very weak devices now.
The motive was to get rich or die trying, just like those guys who participate in lotteries otherwise I don't he would have done that if it was him trying to play safe and lucky for him, he has pocketed that ~$340K
I don't know how long he had to wait the day but it definitely must have felt good.
I saw the news about how a miner from Bitaxe caught a block at a speed of 500 giga hash in total, and that's when I became interested.
It turns out that it's just luck and you don't need to buy a hangar with ASICs))
This is a stroke of luck, or like winning a two-round lottery. Tens of thousands of lottery miners are sold each year, yet there's very little news about profits. Recent information suggests that miners are using industrial-grade equipment for solo mining.