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Author Topic: Worth it to purchase a mining rig with 5970 at $399?  (Read 809 times)
jjshabadoo (OP)
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September 16, 2011, 05:42:06 AM
 #1

I'm looking at a mining rig with 2 5970 and a decent power supply, mobo, etc. for about $1300. I'd be happy to just make my money back and have some good hardware to play with for gaming and benchmarking down the road. I also have power at .09 per kwh here in the states and possibly a free source.

Thanks in advance.

I also firmly believe in any alternative to fiat currency.

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johnj
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September 16, 2011, 05:47:49 AM
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http://bitcoinx.com/profit/index.php


1AeW7QK59HvEJwiyMztFH1ubWPSLLKx5ym
TradeHill Referral TH-R120549
Fjordbit
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September 16, 2011, 06:06:39 AM
 #3

I'm looking at a mining rig with 2 5970 and a decent power supply, mobo, etc. for about $1300. I'd be happy to just make my money back and have some good hardware to play with for gaming and benchmarking down the road. I also have power at .09 per kwh here in the states and possibly a free source.

If you want the hardware for other uses, then it could be a good way to subsidize it, but alone it won't earn its keep.
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September 17, 2011, 10:54:00 PM
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do you play for electricity?

if yes then no, if no then yes

You gotta pay
Alex Fenner
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September 18, 2011, 03:11:54 AM
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You should get that rig.

I bought a similar one yesterday  Cheesy
worldinacoin
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September 18, 2011, 01:33:07 PM
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I calculated my hardware breakeven, not too encouraging at more than 10 000 days Smiley
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September 18, 2011, 03:21:49 PM
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I calculated my hardware breakeven, not too encouraging at more than 10 000 days Smiley

That's about 28 years, which is overly pessimistic IMO. While these profit calculators are helpful, they have artificial assumptions built into them about price and difficulty, both of which change in an unpredictable way. The prospects for making profit through mining certainly look dim right now, and I don't recommend starting now, but it is possible that price and/or difficulty could change in a way that makes mining more profitable. There was a brief period of time when you could pay off your rig in a month or two of mining, but those days are probably gone for good. But if you have access to cheap/free electricity, I don't think it's totally insane to hope you can pay off your rig in a year or two. Even with the precipitous drop in bitcoin price, I'm on track to pay off my rig in about 8 months (I started around the end of June).  But I did a pretty good job of keeping costs down, and I don't pay for electric. For reference, I'm mining at 1200 Mh/s with four 5850s (bought for $150 each). I have them undervolted to 0.95 VDC, so I'm only pulling 450 watts from the wall, and running the whole rig with a 775 watt Thermaltake toughpower PSU that I got for $70. Homemade open air case. The whole rig cost me about $850. Of course price or difficulty could change in a way to shorten or lengthen that 8 month time frame.
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