It Is All About BTC, LTC, ETH, DOGE, KAS mining as well as other alternative crypto currencies
Keeping an eye on the recent fork of Vertcoin (VTC) form Lyra2REv3 to the new Verthash algorithm the profitability has been nice, although not as good as mining Ethereum. The VertHash algo is a memory-intensive algorithm, so GPU performance is not as important as having fast video memory with wide memory bus. It is similar to Ethash in that matter, however the interesting advantage of VertHash is that it uses much less video memory and thus can be mined on older GPUs. This makes it quite interesting for owners of AMD Radeon RX 470, RX 480, RX 570 and RX 580 GPUs with just 4GB of video memory that are at the end of their life for mining ETH, though other older video cards with just 2GB or 3GB might also benefit.
While you can still mine Ethereum (ETH) with these 4GB Radeon GPUs in “Zombie Mode” with lower performance and diminishing profits. So, mining Vertcoin (VTC) with 4GB Radeon’s might be a viable alternative as things are at the moment, so definitely worth checking thing out. Event at the moment the profitability could be better than Ethereum mining at the moment with the current lower hashrate that the 4GB GPUs deliver, and that hashrate is going to continue to get lower in the following days.
We tested what a Gigabyte Radeon RX 570 4GB GPU can offer in terms of performance mining Vertcoin (VTC) using the Verthash algorithm. With stock settings we have managed to get just about 350 KHS in term of hashrate, though after a quick and easy mod of the video BIOS with faster video memory timings we jumped up to about 455 KH/s. Compare this to a single optimized Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 Ti video card (TDP at 65%) doing 760 KHS with settings doing 58 MH/s for Ethereum and a single optimized GeForce GTX 1080 Ti doing 560 KH/s with the default memory timings and around 700 KH/s with the OhGodAnETHlargementPill with the same settings doing 44 MH/s for Ethereum (TDP tat 69%).
The same performance optimizations for Ethash should also work well with the VertHash algorithm as both are memory-intensive ones, but mining VertCoin is possible on GPUs with at least 2GB of video memory… remember those old Radeon 280 and 290, as well as 380 and 390 GPUs with 4GB or less video memory. The key is to look for faster memory and wider memory bus as this works best for memory-intensive crypto algorithms, though if it is profitable everything goes, right. The VerthashMiner could of course be improved for less stale shares and more importantly to generate the 1.2 GB verthash.dat file on the fly, just like other miners do with Ethereum’s DAG file on start, hoping to also see other miners also adopting support for the VertHash algorithm.
The latest Nvidia GeForce RTX 3000 series of video cards with GDDR6 (RTX 3060, 3060 Ti, 3070) and GDDR6X (RTX 3080 and RTX 3090) video memory is even better for VTC mining, just like they are for Ethereum as well. A power optimized RTX 3090 that delivers 120 MH/s for Ethereum mining (300W power usage) can give you a hashrate of about 1900 KH/s for VertCoin (VTC). The thing is that these video cards are still better off mining Ethereum at the current profitability, so no point in directing them at VTC, but GPUs such as the 4GB VRAM Radeons could benefit from their good mining performance for VertHash instead of having to retire them from mining.
You can check your mining profitability with a mining calculator, though 8x Radeon’s with 4GB able to deliver something like 3.5-4 MHS hashrate for VertHash at the moment they could be more profitable mining VTC than ETH at the moment and even more as the DAG size increases and the performance of these GPUs gets even lower. The catch here is that currently Bittrex – the largest crypto exchange in term of trading volume for VTC is in maintenance mode, so you are not able to deposit or withdraw VertCoin there. There are other smaller crypto exchanges that trade VTC and could have upgraded their wallets after the fork, so you might want to look for alternatives.
– To Check Your VTC Mining Profitability at the Minerstat Mining Calculator…
If you been intr crypto for longer time probably have heard about VertCoin (VTC), after all it has been available for more than 7 years already and during that time forked multiple times changing Proof of Work (PoW) mining algorithms. Well, VTC did it once more this time switching from using Lyra2REv3 to Verthash in order to bring back mining VertCoin back in the hands of GPU miners. As is it normal with forks, requiring wallet updates and new mining software things may get a bit messy initially until everyone updates to the required software and the fork just happened. This means that not all mining pools and exchanges supporting VTC have already upgraded and are ready for the fork, so make sure if you mine VTC using Verthash to do it on a compatible mining pool and keep the mined coins locally and not sending them directly to an exchange for a while more at least!
In order to be able to mine VTC with the new Verthash algorithm you need to start by downloading the latest VTC wallet (currently version 0.17.1) and running it as it will generate a Verthash Datafile on its first run. This verthash.dat file is over 1GB in size so it can take a while, but it is a requirement for the miner to start working, so you will need to wait (the dat file is required on every mining rig!).
– To Download the latest Vertcoin Wallet v0.17.1 (Verthash)…
The next thing you need is to download and configure the latest VerthashMiner, there is a Windows and Linux version available and the miner works on both Nvidia CUDA and AMD OpenCL GPUs. Have in mind that the VerthashMiner miner requires a GPU with a minimum of 2GB VRAM! In order to start mining you will need two things, a mining pool where you will point your mining hashratre (you can go for the – Suprnova Vertcoin Pool like we do in this example) and the second thing the miner needs is the verthash.dat file that the wallet will generate on its first run.
– To Download the latest VerthashMiner v0.6.1 Miner…
Suprnova VTC VertHash Stratum server:
– Standart Difficulty: stratum+tcp://vtc.suprnova.cc:1777
– High Difficulty: stratum+tcp://vtc.suprnova.cc:1778
– High Difficulty: stratum+tcp://vtc.suprnova.cc:1779
Example VerthashMiner command line:
VerthashMiner -o stratum+tcp://vtc.suprnova.cc:1777 -u USERNAME.WORKER-ID -p x --verthash-data verthash.dat --all-cu-devices --all-cl-devices
Make sure to replace USERNAME with the username and WORKER-ID with a worker id you have created on the pool. Then either copy the verthash.dat file from the VertCoin wallet folder to the miner folder or set the full path to the file in the miner command line.
How much VTC can you mine using the new Verthash algorithm, well that depends on what kind of video cards you have available and how many. For instance, a single power-optimized Nvidia GeForce RTX 1080 Ti video card does about 700 KH/s in terms of hashrate and that can probably get you about 1 VTC per two hours maybe (1 VTC is about $0.22 USD at the moment), though with difficulty increasing that will surely change and go down.
If you are looking for an easier alternative to get started mining Vertcoin (VTC) with the new Verthash crypto algorithm, then you might want to also check out the official Vertcoin One Click Miner that simplifies the process described above for people that are new to crypto and mining in general.
After the recent addition of BEAM (Equihash 150,5) support on the service for selling and buying mining hashrate – NiceHash has become more active and has just added two (three) more new algorithms – CuckARoo29 and CuckAToo31 used by GRIN and Lyra2REv3 used by VTC. NiceHash support for GRIN on the software side is still somewhat lacking, with the latest GMiner 1.28 pretty much currently the only available miner for Grin (CuckARoo29) available for Nvidia GPUs under Windows, no AMD Grin miners with proper NiceHash support for now it seems. Lyra2REv3 on the other hand is more widely supported and available already on multiple software miners for both AMD and Nvidia as it was an anticipated fork for VTC, so developers had the time to get ready. An example for a compatible AMD miner is the latest WildRig Multi and for Nvidia you can try the latest official ccminer by tpruvot or the latest CryptoDredge which is faster in terms of performance compared to ccminer. Due to the interest and demand for Grin mining hashrate currently profitability wise it might be interesting for Nvidia miners to try selling their hashrate on NiceHash and get paid in BTC for it while waiting for the Grin ecosystem to get more developed and functional that it is at the moment.