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Author Topic: Was mining with the Raspberry Pi ever profitable?  (Read 4948 times)
InMyselfITrust (OP)
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November 03, 2014, 07:51:03 PM
 #1

Obviously now it would not be but I wonder a few years ago was it ever feasible?
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seriouscoin
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November 03, 2014, 09:06:17 PM
 #2

Obviously now it would not be but I wonder a few years ago was it ever feasible?

No Never Ever.

Time to move long, nothing to see here

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November 04, 2014, 08:23:56 AM
 #3

Obviously now it would not be but I wonder a few years ago was it ever feasible?
If you're saying hooking it up with a high end ASIC miner, it would be most probably profitable. Raspberry Pi is a machine which uses only 3-5watts. The core is a 700 MHz Low Power ARM1176JZ-F Applications Processor. If you try to mine it, the temperature would definitely go above 100 degrees Celsius with no fan and cooling. You would most probably just damage the CPU.

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notlist3d
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November 04, 2014, 01:14:09 PM
 #4

It was a while ago but they did have a few block erupters on a raspberry pi.   I'm not sure if they ROI'ed on them or not.   Personlly i ran all of them on windows as I was using a lot more then the 5 or so they had with it.
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November 04, 2014, 03:33:04 PM
 #5

No, mining was never profitable with a RaspPi.  Only used as a host PC to control ASICs, but never as a CPU/GPU miner.

The heat alone trying to mine with that puny CPU would fry the little guy.

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November 08, 2014, 01:07:13 PM
 #6

Obviously now it would not be but I wonder a few years ago was it ever feasible?

Can you even mine with raspberry PI?
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November 18, 2014, 08:04:13 AM
 #7

I mined my first block on an Intel Celeron. the rpi could have easily mined a block back in the day Smiley
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November 18, 2014, 10:52:10 AM
 #8

I mined my first block on an Intel Celeron. the rpi could have easily mined a block back in the day Smiley
The Celeron or any other desktop PC would have a heatsink and a fan to keep the cores cool and prevent it from overheating. Raspberry Pi is mostly designed for non CPU extensive work and low power consumption therefore it doesn't need a fan or a heatsink. In 2012, Celeron would definitely generate a block if you run it long enough, most raspberry pi would just die after generating one block. Back in the days you would have suffered a huge huge loss.

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November 18, 2014, 01:35:13 PM
 #9

I'm sure the Pi would have been a profitable miner on it's own with the correct cooling, but of course those days would have been before the Pi was released.  Wink
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November 19, 2014, 09:11:21 PM
 #10

I mined my first block on an Intel Celeron. the rpi could have easily mined a block back in the day Smiley
The Celeron or any other desktop PC would have a heatsink and a fan to keep the cores cool and prevent it from overheating. Raspberry Pi is mostly designed for non CPU extensive work and low power consumption therefore it doesn't need a fan or a heatsink. In 2012, Celeron would definitely generate a block if you run it long enough, most raspberry pi would just die after generating one block. Back in the days you would have suffered a huge huge loss.

Not sure when the pi was introduced, but I'm speaking of 2010 Smiley
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