It Is All About BTC, LTC, ETH, DOGE, KAS mining as well as other alternative crypto currencies
Recently the NiceHash platform has made available a new feature that they call Solo Mining with “Catch the Block” and we have decided to try our luck and see if we can manage to hit a block and get the full block reward. NiceHash have made this new feature very easy to be used, almost like buying lottery tickets and testing your luck hitting a big reward. What you do here is buy a package of hashing power from their platform that will be used for mining a certain crypto coin for some time, and if you validate a block with it then you get the full block reward. All you need to do is choose a mining package (pay for it with Bitcoin) and wait for it to finish mining and see if you were lucky enough or not to hit a block and get a nice reward. Currently mining Bitcoin (BTC), Bitcoin Cash (BCH), ZCash (ZEC) and Dogecoin (DOGE) are supported by thins new mining feature and you have a couple of different mining packages that you can choose from…
In order to be able to use the Solo Mining mode you must first have an account at NiceHash and then also have some Bitcoin (BTC) transferred to your platform wallet that you would be using to pay for the mining packages you want to purchase. That may require a certain level of verification if you are registering a new account. Also have in mind that in order to receive your reward you would need to be Tier 2 verified (not required to try your luck) and that requires identity and address verification! There are 3 different mining packages available – Bronze, Silver and Gold with 3 levels of each (S, M and L) available so 9 different packages in total. Bronze is for Zcoin (ZEC), Silver is for DOGE although the L level is for Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Gold is for Bitcoin mining.
Each of the mining packages available is priced differently with the lowest one starting at sub $2 USD at the moment and the highest priced one is a little shy of $200 USD. The higher the price goes, the more hashing power and time you get to try and validate a block, thus your chances are getting higher. The more you pay however the less you will get if you manage to validate a block, but the chance of doing so is higher (the probability is listed for each package and it varies). With 1:3 or 1:4 probability the chances are high, but you can still buy a mining package and get nothing in return, so maybe not as much like a lottery, but more like gambling.
When you buy a mining packages shortly it starts mining and showing you how much time is left and how are you doing trying to validate a block for the specified crypto coin the mining package you bought for. There is no need to have the page open or anything, it will run for the specified time and you can find the results and your luck afterwards. Of course, there are some pretty graphics that are showing should you decide to spend time watching how things are progressing.
We’ve decided to start with the S or Small mining package for the three options available and then get three of each, so 9 in total for a total of 0.0009 BTC or about $17.37 USD with the current price of Bitcoin. Each of the packages ran for about 1 hour and although we got high percentages of being close to hit the reward, we did not have enough luck and did not manage to pull off validating any blocks with our 9 “lottery tickets”.
If you click on the smaller icon in the ACTIVE order section of any of the purchased mining packages you will get a more detailed graph and stats with information about it, so if you are curious and want to spend more time watching as things progress you can do so. Or you can just leave it to finish and then return to see the results of your luck or chance and if you managed to score any rewards or not and decide to maybe try again or not. Here is also another useful option you can take advantage of – the ability to stop an active mining package from the three small dots on the upper right corner.
The mining duration you get for the S-sized package is about 1 hour, for the M-sized one it is about 2 hours and for the L-sized one it is about 4 hours. There is no exact mention of the amount of hashpower you get with each of the packages, but on the detailed page you see how the spending of the amount paid in BTC is progressing. However when you purchase a mining package you are not charged the full amount, instead it gets depleted over the duration of the mining time you get. So, say you hit a block very early on and you can stop the mining package and not use up the remaining amount. You’ve already beaten the high odds, or would you continue and try hitting another block maybe.
There is a dedicated page showing all of your completed orders as an easy to view list including how close were you to hitting a reward and if any of the mining packages you bought actually managed to hit a block and score you are reward. If you click on any of the packages listed on the COMPLETED orders page you will also get a more detailed full stats for the whole mining time of the package, similar to the detailed data you can watch during the actual mining.
The closest we got a reward with our 9 S-sized mining packages was 89% on a Bronze S package for mining ZCash (ZEC) and that one had 1:118 chance according to the data when purchasing the package, so pretty good, although a little disappointed that we were not lucky enough to hit a block and get a reward. Maybe will give it a couple more tries and you are welcome to try your own luck with a few mining packages and see if you can manage to score a block reward or not.
Update: Meanwhile we have also given it another try with one package of the second M-sized levels for each and unfortunately our luck has not improved much and again we did not get to validate a block on either of the three crypto currencies with the higher mining packages. We are not ready to give up yet, so next come the L-sized ones, hopefully with better results or we are getting completely disappointed from our luck today, but maybe you would have better luck than us.
– Visit NiceHash for more details on their new Solo Mining feature…
If you were early on the whole Bitcoin mining thing and were one of the first adopters of the Bitcoin ASIC miners when they started appearing you may still have some devices lying around that are generally not worth using anymore for mining. Well, maybe you just thought that they are not good for anything anymore, but there could still be some use for them, or at least if you want to test your luck “playing the lottery” for Bitcoin. The concept of Bitcoin lottery device was used along the announcement of the TechnoBit DICE Bitcoin ASIC miner, probably something that the marketing at Spondoolies Tech came up with as they are the actual manufacturer of the ASIC chips used inside the device. But aside from the DICE the concept to solo mine testing your luck to hit a BTC block yourself with a Bitcoin ASIC miner that is unprofitable if you mine at a pool sharing the profit with other miners might actually not be a bad one. It is risky and the chances are not that high thus the lottery reference – you may need a few months or an year and still get no block solved, but if you are lucky and manage to hit one, then you will get 25 BTC as a reward. Depending on the ASIC miner you are going to be using your chances might be better than actually playing the lottery, so you might want to give this idea a go.
The drawback that the use of an older and low hashrate Bitcoin ASIC miner as a “lottery device” is that you need to have a system that is always on and running a Bitcoin node, so that you can point your miner at it. Also setting up solo mining operation at home might not be the easiest thing for everyone, though if you already have and used Bitcoin ASIC miners you most likely should be able to do it. There is an alternative however, you can use a solo mining pool such as TBDice that was apparently prepared for DICE miners, but you can join in with any their miner as well. The idea of this pool is that you get to mine with the added convenience of a mining pool, but if you solve a Bitcoin block you will still get the full reward minus a small fee. Then again you may also decide to run the mining pool software yourself on your own website or a PC, you can get the CKPOOL source and use it – it is freely available. Do note that CKPOOL is designed to be used as a Bitcoin mining pool, but the concept of using your mining hardware as a lottery device applies to pretty much all other crypto coins as well, so you can test it with Litecoin for example or any other altcoin.
– To check out the CKPOOL code if you are interested in running your own Bitcoin mining pool…