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Author Topic: When last was mining at $0.11/kwh not profitable ?  (Read 360 times)
thebigjdoe (OP)
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November 15, 2017, 04:01:05 PM
 #1

Everyone here seems adamant on a MAX of $0.10/kwh or you cannot mine.  Every calculator is showing profits through the roof even at $0.12/kwh.  When was the last time that you would be operating in the red if you had electricity at the cost of $0.1/kwh or higher?  Was it back in Jan/Feb before the price started booming?
wavelengthsf
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November 15, 2017, 04:15:02 PM
 #2

Power cost is only part of the equation. You need a hash rate plus power draw to be accurate.

For example, 1 TH at 6000w would likely not be profitable even at .05c/KWh.
thebigjdoe (OP)
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November 15, 2017, 04:48:28 PM
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Power cost is only part of the equation. You need a hash rate plus power draw to be accurate.

For example, 1 TH at 6000w would likely not be profitable even at .05c/KWh.

I am talking strictly S9s in this case.  So 1TH per 100W.  When was the last time that an S9 was not profitable even at $0.11/kwh
wavelengthsf
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November 15, 2017, 05:21:33 PM
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There has never been a time when the S9 wasn't profitable at that rate
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