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Introducing Noble Pool 1% Fees Payment Cycle Every 20 Seconds Node.JS Backend Simple Anonymous Mining Support for ZCash, ZenCash, Hush, Komodo and ZClassic Try it out for yourself at noblepool.orgNoble Pool has been setup for one purpose, to be transparent and take no bull sh!t fees and value the miner over everything else. We currently support 5 equihash coins, those which suffer from mining pool centralization. If you want your favorite equihash coin added simply send me an email at thelowkeypanda@gmail.com. If you have any questions just ask them by either sending an email or posting it in this thread. Visit http://noblepool.org/getting_started to get started.
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I have started my Z-Nomp pool with Zcash and Z-Nomp doesn't listen to the zcash port no matter what. Here is my zcash.json. I know it isn't a problem to do with Z-Nomp since when I start my Zen pool it works fine and listens on the right stratum port but it doesn't work with Zcash. { "enabled": true, "coin": "zcash.json",
"address": "t1Z8pt1DC78hrq1yGFiYKXb3iU1AVi6cBKJ", "_comment_address": "a transparent address to send coinbase rewards to and to transfer to zAddress.",
"zAddress": "zcMKWPgF2ZqYQFVUobZZCL6PuvswznMMPnLt81TPFhsBVV9k4UiBRGUQ6oc7mhULaoZBbW1yuUj7zRKvwwEXZhRejNvbAvh", "_comment_zAddress": "a private address used to send coins to tAddress.",
"tAddress": "t1RfmKkA2LFwHFcF5v1W2qHS8h7Tnkq9BTt", "_comment_tAddress": "transparent address used to send payments, make this a different address, otherwise payments will not send",
"walletInterval": 10,
"rewardRecipients": { "t1SAKfo3yk689JLwZQuKbw8Z1TAyLKGTjAY": 1.0 },
"paymentProcessing": { "minConf": 10, "enabled": true, "paymentMode": "prop", "_comment_paymentMode":"prop, pplnt", "paymentInterval": 20, "minimumPayment": 0.1, "maxBlocksPerPayment": 3, "daemon": { "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 8232, "user": "pool", "password": "CrwsLD5e2UZDjITWqcEJyebhsDyQcNodroLegRj+aNQ=" } },
"tlsOptions": { "enabled": false, "serverKey":"", "serverCert":"", "ca":"" },
"ports": { "3032": { "diff": 0.05, "tls": false, "varDiff": { "minDiff": 0.04, "maxDiff": 16, "targetTime": 3, "retargetTime": 60, "variancePercent": 30 } } },
"daemons": [ { "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 8232, "user": "pool", "password": "mysecretpassword" } ],
"p2p": { "enabled": false, "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 19333, "disableTransactions": true },
"mposMode": { "enabled": false, "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 3306, "user": "me", "password": "mypass", "database": "zec", "checkPassword": true, "autoCreateWorker": false }
}
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I would go 1080Ti. They will be the most future proof to new algorithms and coins and if all fails they will have the most resale ability in a year. They also give you more MH/s per square foot which is also good if space is a concern.
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and it will be nice to get more than tiny fractions every month. You will only get tiny fractions a month. It might not be worth your time. I think you could make more money mining BURST with the hdd then u could mining Monero or another altcoin.
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I would recommend you return the board if possible and get the Z270-AR. Works with 7 GPUs without the use of a M.2 slot. BitsBeTrippin has a video on how to setup the BIOS for it.
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BTC for sure. BTC is the titan of cryptocurrency and I don't see how it could be replaced. I am 99% sure that BTC will be worth more in 1 year then it is now. I am not sure if ETH will be worth more in 1 year from now.
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By the time you get the asics odds are the difficulty will be a lot higher and you may never get ROI. What ASICS are they? I need to see the power draw of them to check your math.
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This is an ok card for mining. I would recommend VTC for mining as that has been a top earner for me for a few weeks now. The cooling on those is ok and you can expect 75-80c temps while mining with a mild overclock and 100% power limit.
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Why are you mining on your smart phone? Surely the profits can't make up for the amount of damage you are causing to your phone due to heat. Or is that phone disposable?
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Are there any other programs running?
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Any bright future for HUSH you think? I have been interested in the project for a while and I think that it is a solid privacy based coin. The biggest problem with privacy based coins is to get recognized outside of all the other privacy coins such as Monero, ZCASH and Verge.
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Then you need to mention you budget or plan how much you want to put in. This is the most important thing. Also ETH isn't that profitable anymore. I would recommend buying an NVIDIA mining rig. 2000-2500$ GTX 1060 6GB x6 3000-3500$ GTX 1070 x6 4000-4500$ GTX 1080 x6 5000-5500$ GTX 1080Ti x6 All of these card configurations cost varying amount of money and are all good for mining VTC. VTC consistently has been one of the top earners for a while.
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Use MSI Afterburner for fan control. Also you can setup some box fans or tower fans to get more ventilation into your mining rigs. Also placing them somewhere cool like your basement if you have one will help.
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Every pump group always has this statement. NO PRE PUMP YOU GET A CRAP TON OF MONEEYYYYYY!!!!!  Never join these. There is a high chance you will lose all your money.
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To buy put your USD in Coinbase and buy BTC. Then send the BTC to Bittrex and buy the altcoin of your choice from there.
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Cloud mining is in general all a scam. Like other people said hashnet.com is one of the only legit ones out there. Instead of buying mining power from a cloud mining company build your own GPU rig or buy your own ASICs.
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Why did you not just go with a 1600w power supply? I own 2 6 1080Ti mining rigs and you need a 1200w and an 850w to make it work. What PSU connect do you have? I use the Add2PSU.
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x1 to x16 risers can help you be more universal, since you can use any physical PCIe slot for mining, however, they are not "better" for mining performance. Additionally, using risers can give you more flexibility with card placement (and thus cooling) outside of your case. This is 100% correct. They are not more efficient but it takes less PCIE lanes on your CPU. Most cheap cpus are limited to 16 PCIE lanes so just having 1 16x GPU would max out the CPU. By using a 1x you can put up to 16 GPUs before you max out the PCIE lanes on your CPU.
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If you buy low quality cables, risers or psu's there is a high chance you could ruin all of your hardware which will probably set you back 1500$ or more depending on what GPUs you have. Corsair is a great brand and I recommend you stick to it.
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Increase virtual memory and/or turn down the intensity
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