It Is All About BTC, LTC, ETH, DOGE, KAS mining as well as other alternative crypto currencies
The f2pool has just launched its Kaspa mining pool today with a 1% PPLNS payout scheme for KAS mining and the pool is running a contest to attract miners who will be competing for 500,000 KAS in total prizes. The Kaspa (KAS) mining contest will run starting on 2022-03-02 10:00 UTC until 2022-03-12 10:00 UTC, with the Top 20 miners by daily average KAS hashrate at f2pool going to receive rewards in proportion to their hashrate contribution from a total prize pool of 500,000 KAS coins. Apparently, the contest is favouring the bigger miners and not the small home miner, so a fairer distribution of the reward among miners could be used in order to attract all kinds of KAS miners… still it is nice to see that more of the crypto ecosystem is now slowly starting to adopt KAS support.
With the recent price increase for Kaspa (KAS) going past 1 US cent and keeping it there for a while there is increased interest in the project that is still generally kind of on the sidelines for many people into crypto. It is good now that GPU miners are making profit mining KAS and it is not only Kaspa, but some other new POW project are on the positive side regarding actually making profit after you pay for the electricity used. And Kaspa, although really good already in terms of speed has even more to offer with the upcoming upgrades, so if you still haven’t checked it out you might want to dig a bit deeper on blockDAG and the GHOSTDAG protocol and what KAS has in store for the near future as well.
– To read more about the addition of Kaspa on f2pool and their 500K KAS competition…
The Goldshell Mini-DOGE ASIC miners for mining Scrypt-based crypto coins such as Litecoin (LTC) and DogeCoin (DOGE) are quite popular topic among the home miners with the recent spike in the price of both mentioned coins. The miner has the DOGE in its name, but you can mine any Scrypt-based crypto coin and there is actually no point in mining only DogeCoin with it as DOGE is merge-mined with Litecoin, so you are essentially mining Litecoin and DogeCoin together and not only one or the other. Of course, there are quite a few other crypto coins out there that use the Scrypt algorithm, it has been one of the earliest alternatives to Bitcoin’s SHA-256 algorithm, though probably mining for LTC and DOGE is the most popular way these are being used.
It is interesting to note that the Goldshell Mini-DOGE Miner is no longer available for sale by Goldshell as it has been replaced by a slightly faster in terms of hashrate and better in terms of power usage Pro version (205 MH/s at 220 Watts or about 1.1 Watt per Megahash), however you can easily find the non-pro version on the second-hand miner market. And you will be surprised to see that these small home miners do not come very cheap, even though they are not that profitable at the moment. And if you are buying one, just make sure you get the WiFi version as it makes it much easier for home use as there is also a non-WiFi equipped earlier model apparently. If you manage to get a good deal on a Mini-DOGE Pro miner (they come with black cases, so they are easy to differentiate) you better go for that one, though it is not that much of a difference to justify a big price difference.
The official specifications of these small miners are 185 MH/s Scrypt mining hashrate and 233 Watts of power usage, or with other words about 1.26 Watts per Megahash as power efficiency. Just as a reference the quite old already and still quite popular Bitmain L3 Scrypt ASIC miner offers around 1.6W per Megahash and can be optimized to work with around 1.3 Watts per Megahash which is very similar to the Mini-DOGE. So, if you are looking at buying a Goldshell Mini-DOGE you might also check out the options for a Bitmain AntMiner L3 with a custom firmware, it might come cheaper with higher hashrate, but also a bit bulkier and noisier and no WiFi option on that one.
But let us get back to the main question and it is how much do these Goldshell Mini-DOGE Scrypt ASIC miners able to currently mine in terms of LTC and DOGE coins doing merged mining. We did a quick test using the F2Pool as one of the large Litecoin mining pools that does support merged mining with DogeCoin and you can see the actual results for the last 7 full days. Do note that there is a slight increase and then a slight drop in the number of mined coins as there has been a difficulty adjustment on two occasions during the test period. The first one on 21st of November with 1.4% drop and the second one on 24th of November with 5.3% increase.
So, the amount mined Litecoin coins is around 0.0023-0.0024 LTC per day with is roughly around $0.17 USD at the current exchange rate. This is not much really considering that the miner uses around 5.6 kW of power per day and depending on your electricity cost this may be enough to just cover roughly maybe 1/5 of the electricity bill. But wait, there is also the DogeCoin that you mine with it at the same time and you get around 3-4 DOGE per day with it. That is another 30-40 US cents per day with the current exchange rate of the coin. Essentially at the moment you will be kind of covering the electricity used by the miner, depending on where you live, with what you are able to mine with the Mini-DOGE miner.
While the Goldshell Mini-DOGE Scrypt ASIC miners may not be very profitable at the moment, don’t forget that we are in a bear market at the moment and pretty much everything is down in terms of price in the crypto world and there is not much profitability regardless of what you mine. So, mining and keeping the mined coins is the wiser idea the moment, waiting for the bull run cycle to start and the prices to go up and, in the meantime, you can just pick a couple of Mini-DOGE miners if you manage to score a good deal on the price and use them as space heaters during the cold winter days. They are quite compact and operate pretty silent and thanks to the WiFi module you can place them easily in different places around your home. A single device with its 233 Watts of power usage won’t be able to heat up much space that well, but a few of these devices might do the job better. We are soon going to be sharing a more detailed review of the Mini-DOGE ASIC miner here on the blog, so stay tuned if you are interested in learning more about the device.
Now, regardless if you support the Ravencoin Classic (RVC) or not, as with other forks if you had Ravencoin (RVN) in a local wallet, then you will be able to claim your RVC coins at 1:1 ratio to do whatever you want with them. You just need to copy the wallet data file to a new installation of the RVC wallet, make sure you use the datadir command line parameter to use a custom folder for the Ravencoin Classic blockchain data as otherwise it will try to overwrite the RVN data you have available. The RVC wallet should have replay protection already, though it is always wise to first move your RVN coins to a new address before doing anything with RVC, just to be on the safe side! Ravencoin Classic (RVC) is currently being traded only on the Longbit crypt exchange which is an Asian one (switch to English language in the upper right corer of the screen), though it accepts international registrations. It however requires you to go through an identity verification process before you can deposit and trade coins, so have in mind that you need to pass that as well.
– To visit the official Ravencoin Classic (RVC) fork website for more details…