It Is All About BTC, LTC, ETH, DOGE, KAS mining as well as other alternative crypto currencies
With the recent boom of crypto mining and more specifically Ethereum (ETH) mining there are a lot of new users joining the mining ranks and they start making newbie mistakes that we forgot about long ago. We are taking about the very easy direct mining to an exchange-generated Ethereum wallet address or with other words when the mining pool is directly paying the mined coins to a crypto exchange where you can sell or trade them. There is a big convenience in doing this, but there are also some pitfalls that may cause you to lose money and you may not even be fully aware of that fact.
Most crypto exchanges do not charge deposit fees to their users, but they do usually have a minimum number of coins to be deposited in order for the deposit to be credited to your account. They do however charge a small withdraw fee in order to pay the transaction fee, though some exchanges charge ridiculous withdraw fees that have nothing to do with the actual fees. The general rule is not to mine directly to an exchange and to transfer your crypto coins there only when you need to sell them or trade them, not to store them long term. Now we’ll get to a good example why currently it is not wise to mine Ethereum directly to the crypto exchange Kraken where there is a variable for ETH deposits and you will see in a moment why.
– To see the Kraken’s cryptocurrency deposit fees and minimums explained…
The Kraken crypto exchange has a minimum requirement of 0.05 ETH for a deposit to be credited to your account at all, so if the transaction is for a lower amount you will not see the coins in your account. There is also what they call a “Variable on-chain fee to move into Kraken’s wallet” that is only available for Ethereum deposits. This variable fee you pay apparently depends on the number of transactions on the Ethereum’s blockchain at the moment, when the number goes up, the fee also goes up. With the peaked interest in ETH at the moment as you can expect the fees are also very high, but this means that depositing Ethereum to Kraken at the moment can be pretty expensive to you, especially for smaller amounts or regular daily deposits from mining.
If you have scheduled a daily payout from a Ethereum mining pool with a low minimum of 0.05 ETH directly to your Kraken address, then at the moment you could easily get 0.01 or 0.005 ETH from that transfer deducted, because of the exchanges’ variable fee to move the coins you transfer from your exchange wallet to their consolidated wallet. That “small fee” currently means that you pay $8-$16 USD just to have your ~$80 USD deposited in the exchange, of course the fee will be very similar for both 0.5 ETH and 5 ETH, but for small amounts it is just way too much. So, be extra careful when mining directly to an exchange such as Kraken and make sure if you do you are aware of the specific requirements and fees that the exchange has!
We have recently started something new – a Crypto Blog publication on Medium as a kind of experiment. It is targeted at a wider audience that may be interested in crypto, but not so advanced or into it for as long as others following the Cryptomining Blog. It is covering pretty much the same topics, but often in more detailed and/or user friendly way suitable mostly for the audience of Medium which is not mostly advanced crypt users.
The Crypto Blog Medium publication is looking for authors that write on the topic of crypto currencies and crypto mining on Medium already (or are considering to do so) that are willing to reach wider audience. So, if you are one, then by all means please contact us with a link to your account and preferably something you have already written on Medium or other sources as a reference.
– To visit the Crypto Blog cryptocurrency publication on Mendium…
The latest TT-Miner 5.0.0 comes with no development fee, officially, meaning that the software will no longer mine 1% of the time for the developer like it was doing up until this version. While support and bugfixes should still continue further miner development could be stopped apparently. The latest major release TT-Miner 4.0.0 has added support for KAWPOW mining and now with version 5.0.0 this becomes the second KAWPOW miner with no dev fee, just like the official kawpowminer and this is a bit of an advantage that you might want to consider over other KAWPOW miners that do have 1% or even 2% dev fee!
If you like TT-Miner you are of course welcome to donate some coins to the developer should you wish to support further miner development, official developer donation addresses listed below:
BTC: bc1q0jvewuzg860dj7f9a6988l4ml5dc9ddzlq9e9m
XZC: aP7pMvUSgvSqswGcNxf4bBBMJbwpUEEto4
ETH: 0xb1C3d505DD3e6C737939AC686649fD79350D6D0d
RVN: RDXzfnKVBKF9uLWTCC5ao7CzWSYmh62NHN
Do note that if you get a missing DLL error when trying to run the miner on Windows you may need to download the latest Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2015, 2017 and 2019.
TT-Miner supports ProgPOW, KAWPOW, Ethash, UBQhash, MTP, Lyra2REv3, Epic, EagleSong and Kadena (Blake2S) algorithms on Nvidia GPUs and is available for Windows and Linux as pre-compiled binaries, a closed source miner with no developer fee for all of the supported algorithms since version 5.0.0.
– For more information and to download and try the latest TT-Miner 5.0.0 for Linux/Windows…