Ever since the interview with Lukas Seyfrid (CZ), the chief of the hardware team, it was clear that Braiins is pivoting from the development of mining software, to building their own hardware.

This, I believe, is the first iteration of their effort in form of a consumer product, and while it is unlikely to make you a financial return on the investment, it’s small form factor and nice anodized aluminum case can allow pretty much anyone to become familiar with the process of bitcoin mining. Or terrorize the testnet. The choice is yours.

I think I might buy one, just to try the viability of a pure solar setup.

HW specifications:

Price (pre-order) $199.00
Hashrate ~1Th/s
Power Consumption 40W - 55W
Number of hashboards 1
Number of ASIC chips 4
Cooling Type Active
Noise 40 dB
Air outlet temperature 40-50 °C

But really, how much would it make in a year?

If we assume the current price and difficulty stays the same, the block subsidy is 3.125 BTC, median fees around 0.2212 BTC, free electricity, you’d get 0.001 BTC per 12 months, which is roughly 65 USD. A little more than 3 years to break even.

It’s not going to break any records, but I’m still excited for what’s to come next.

  • shortwavesurfer
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    12 days ago

    Well, see, my thought is these miners would join into a pool that’s decentralized. Kind of like how P2 pool is on Monero. I think you guys have F2 pool, which is the same thing i think. The goal with a consumer space heater product wouldn’t necessarily be to make money with it but more just to subsidize your electricity bill during the winter. I mean if you’ve got to generate the heat anyway it might as well be doing something productive and giving you at least some bitcoin.