Mine Solo

Mine Solo




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Mine Solo
What is actually happening behind the scenes?
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Try ‘Catch the Block’ and validate a block of cryptocurrency rewards worth over $119,153!*
Simply purchase a package on our mining marketplace, sit back, and wait for the mining round to finish. If you’re lucky, you will mine a reward of up to 6.25 Bitcoins or Bitcoin Cash, or 10,000 Dogecoins!
*Bitcoin price valued at $19,064, October 2022
Solo mining is the ‘original’ concept of mining. You validate blocks of cryptocurrency transactions with your own computing power and get a reward for your ‘work’. But mining has evolved so much that now very large ‘pools’ (groups of computing power) make it much harder for a solo miner to find a block on their own, since you are competing against much larger operations, and they split the rewards among all their miners.
This is exactly what NiceHash does. We provide the hashpower of other miners so that you can use it to try and mine a block yourself, meaning you potentially get the whole block reward, and do not have to share it with anyone!
With pool mining, many miners group (‘pool’) together their hashpower in order to increase the overall hashrate and have a higher chance of finding a block. When a reward is confirmed, the amount is split between all the miners, meaning lower rewards.
With Solo mining, you have a lower chance to validate a block, but when you do, you get a BLOCK REWARD, eg. 6.25 Bitcoins (about $119,153). The chances of finding a block are still much higher than winning a Lottery. Why share if you don’t have to?
Here you can see blocks that were recently validated by other solo mining packages. Yours could be next! Buy a package and try to catch a reward.
How to give it a try? Simply purchase a package from your solo-mining dashboard (once signed up to our platform), sit back, and wait for the mining round to finish. If you’re lucky, you will catch a reward!


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Home / Crypto Mining / How to solo mine any Altcoin – Solo mining new and low difficulty coins
That feeling when you get in early before a large group of miners join the party and raise the difficulty is something special. Isn’t it? You’ll find such opportunity once in a while and it always leads to profit in a short period of time.
In Crypto getting in early is the key so keep looking at Altcoin announcement thread of Bitcoin Talk to find out newly launched coins. Once you found the gem, setup the miner, and start mining solo to hit a block on your own. Believe it or not, solo mining is very much possible and even with a single GPU you can hit a block. What!? Let’s get into the details.
Here this is a beginners guide and a quick tutorial on how to solo mine cryptocurrencies. Before we get in to solo mining guide we’ll see if solo mine really works out and if so what type of coins comes under this solo mining category.
They always say that solo mining only works out for a lucky few. Yes, it is. But theoretically there is math involved and the answer to this question completely depends on the network hashrate and your hardware power.
Solo mining is just like winning a lottery and there is no magic number that’ll guarantee results. You could either mine a block or you could never solve a block even after mining for a long time. However technically there is a chance of mining a block if you maintain proper communication with the network and keep submitting shares constantly. We can’t tell how long as It all depends on several factors. A suitable comparison would be lottery.
Totally forget about Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ethereum, Monero, Zcash and all other popular Cryptocurrencies. Apply this solo mining guide only on coins in which you could expect results. The most suitable ones are the newly launched altcoins where the network difficulty will be too low.
There are tons of new coins that you can choose from if you head over to Bitcoin Talk announcement thread . Not all of them have attained its popularity and not all of them have mining pools setup initially. Once you found one, do your research before you get in to the mining scene. If you feel the coin is worth your time then quickly setup the mining environment and start solo mining.
This guide assumes that you have your hardware ready (CPU, GPU or ASIC). The process to solo mine is very simple:
For this tutorial we’ve chosen Ravencoin. Solo mining Ravencoin is not possible due to high network difficulty but anyways we are just showing the method and this applies to every proof of work cryptocurrencies. So to solo mine other altcoins all you have to do is apply the same procedure. We’ll show you how to GPU solo mine but the same also applies to CPU as well as ASICs.
Also in this guide there are two methods involved 1. Solo mining using same computer where the wallet runs 2. Solo mining using mining rig where you don’t have your wallet setup.
For pool mining no client is needed. Just the pool address, username and password is enough. However to solo mine you need to setup local environment and enable RPC port. Follow the steps below to setup a solo mining environment.
1. First Download and install the QT wallet of the coin that you’d like to solo mine.
2. Once done let the wallet to synchronize completely. Wait until you see the check mark at the bottom right corner of your wallet and says “synchronization finished” or “up to date”.
3. Once the blockchain has been downloaded completely, close your wallet and open the wallet configuration file . Please go through that guide if you don’t know where the config file is located.
4. Now within the configuration file input the following commands.
You can change the username, password and port to anything you wish.
rpcallowip is the local IP of your system. For security reasons never ever allow any external IPs. Only allow IPs that are connected to your private network. Example of private IP: 127.0.0.1 , 192.168.1.1 , 192.168.1.*
rpcport is basically a way of identifying a machine. This is the address where your wallet will be listening for network connection and requests.
These 4 details such as username, password, IP and port that you’ve entered in your wallet config file should be the same in your miner configuration file as well.
5. Here we’ve used ccminer as an example. Download the mining software that supports solo mining and configure it appropriately.
If you take a look at the above config then you’ll notice that the IP, Port, Username and the Password will be same as the wallet config file.
6. Save the batch file and run the miner. That’s it! You are now solo mining!
For safety purpose most don’t install wallets on their mining rig. In this case how do you solo mine? Actually you don’t need a wallet installed on your mining rig. To solo mine using your mining rig all we need to do is connect the miner to your PC where the wallet is running. For this we’ll need two information.
Your WiFi router will automatically assign a local IP address for your computer and each of your mining rigs. This local IP address can only be accessed within your private network and is normally hidden from the outside world. So it is completely safe.
To know the internal IP; open command prompt. Now in the command window input ipconfig and hit enter. You’ll find something called Ipv4 address which is the internal address of that particular machine.
Fetch this IPv4 address of both your mining rig and your PC. If you have more than one rig then fetch all of its IP address. Next follow the steps below.
Step 1: First close your wallet, then open your wallet config file and allow all those IP. Once done, save the file and keep the wallet open and running.
Step 2. Now in your mining rig enter the IP address of your wallet machine in the URL field of your batch file. Save it and then run it.
If it works then use the same batch file setup for all your mining rigs that you’d like to solo mine.
First to ensure if you are on the right track check the block height that you are mining currently. Open your wallet, go to Debug console window and enter getmininginfo which will return the block height. In addition to this you can also use the block explorer .
Next unlike pool mining you won’t see accepted shares or rejected shares when solo mining. All you see is your hardware hashing continuously and when you hit a block you’ll see a message saying yes! The reward for the block which you solved will reflect immediately in your wallet address that you entered in your miner batch file.
Empty data received in JSON-RPC call
get_work failed, retry after 30 seconds
These are the two common errors that you’d come across when you solo mine. It means either the coin that you are mining or the mining software that you are using don’t support solo mining. Research on this as most of the new forked coins have removed getwork command, they only support getblocktemplate .
Currently getblocktemplate is only supported by sgminer, cgminer and some forked ccminer . If you can’t find a miner that supports solo mining then for such coins either setup a node stratum pool locally or join a mining pool which is the only solution.
Other than that to make your work simpler there are certain mining pools that provide a means to solo mine. Search for such pools and start mining solo.
Each and every client is a little bit different so you may encounter some errors at the start. However if you understand this setup then with few tweaks you can get them working. Hope this guide helps and we hope you’ve started to solo mine!
Solo mining still exists and, in fact, became easier for the less tech savvy people. I mine 10-15 verge a day, for instance, on a 3 year old computer running GTX 1060 3Gb using Begrip Miner from buzzilio.com. Many Alt coins in general are easy to mine, so try these: Verge, FeatherCoin, ZenCash, Komodo, Electroneum, PhoenixCoin etc.
Hello I want to share my “.bat” file for solo mining and pool mining. 22 hours per day I mine in pool and 2 hours per day I mine solo, because I want to try my “luck”.
Here is the .bat file.
Note: don’t forget to remove the following lines in above config file.
// this is the number of cycle’s …or days like in my case
// this is the time for first bat.file 79200secounds=22hours
// this is the time for second bat.file 7200secounds = 2 hours
Also add your’s bat files. For example in my case my bat file’s are “start1” and “ETC_solo”.
Hey man great article. But is there a website where it lists all the newest alt coins that are out? I can’t seem to find it and would be real nice to jump on the solo mine first!
I tried to set it up with antminer l3+ and no luck.
Any advice?
Hi
did you come rite with your l3+ ? I’m also interested. please help
Hello somebody can help me to install a minerpool or solomining?
We mined schillingcoin but now the developer closed the pool!!
Good guide except you need to remind people to re-open the wallet before the final step when running the configured miner.
This is a very intereting post but it lacks support for an asic miner. I tried following the guide up to the point of setting up my asic miner. now i’m stuck. any help?
I need help. I am copying bitcoin solo via USB. I have Bitcoin wallet and the whole synchronization is OK. When I start the cgminer with the machine idize diff very high. USB does not copy. How do I change diff in bitcoin.conf file? please help.
Hello dears,
I tried a lot of my time to setting my antminer s9j up but unfortunately i did not success.can anyone help me?i edit my .conf file with 127.0.0.1 or 192.168.1.1 / 20 and ports like 9050 or 9999 but everytime I type my miner’s URL fields with those urls and ports, my miner status says:dead!!!
What should I do!?
I used this guide for Vertcoin’s Verthash and it all works great, except other household pc’s won’t connect. Which I’m working on. Thanks!
Hi, I’m trying to solo mine on testnet with sgminer (AMD GPU) without succeed, can someone help?
I able to mine with CPU miner on testnet.
Its virtually impossible. No just kidding. but don’t tell everybody, testnet is just that, remember. This is ONLY a test 😉 You should try CPU miner! I know you have already used that before, and as well they have a version of cpuminer which handles bot, CPU and GPU mining! YVW! Good Luck!
Thanks for a straight forward guide. First and only that I have been able to find.
Hi a small group of miners looking for someone to help them set up solo mining siacoin with Goldshell HS5’s. Monetary reward for a solution.
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BTC Address:
3MzDvaybWDVCzVZ7taJrRnw5f6FhGu6FB5
ETH Address:
0xEf9AAb0e49FCE5cFfA858c1935558cec6601357E
LTC Address:
Lhu6NK2VKuc8JdrXZUPBzfJYBEWKk9okkm

Mining pools for professionals by professionals
Mining nature is probabilistic. Is it possible to be luckier than others? Why mining is sometimes perceived as a game?
It just happens to be that mining is also a sort of a game or a competition, in its own way. And we will tell you why. The GPU miner rigs or ASIC devices of one miner are going through billions of combinations searching for the desired block solution. The moment fortune smiles at him and one of his devices find the right solution of the block; the miner gets the reward.
The difficulty of mining the most popular cryptocurrencies is so high that the miner can’t deal with it on his own. But if he calls his friends to help, and they will, there’s a chance they will find the right solution pretty fast.

They will split the reward in this case. That’s how the mining pools are born.
In cases with different cryptocurrencies for each block found you get different amounts of coins. For instance, for a block of Zcash (ZEC) miner gets 10 coins (currently $2400), for a block in Ethereum network – 3 ETH coins or $900.
There are also lower rates, for example, a block of Pirl will give you 10 coins ($4), Ethereum Classic – 5 coins ($84). Ah, don’t forget about His Majesty Bitcoin…12.5 coins or $82530!
Let’s imagine you are rolling the dice and you need to get 6. In the perfect world, if you roll it many times, number 6 should appear in 16,67% of cases, i.e., every sixth time (since the dice has six faces), right?
In real life, you can get lucky, and the number 6 will appear a few times in a row if you experiment.
The process of solution searching in mining is equivalent to rolling the dice, even though it sounds strange. You are competing with the whole world, but the point doesn’t change.
Let’s say you have one video card, and your friend has 6-GPU Mining Rig , this is equivalent to you having one dice, and him having six dices. You roll each dice once and try to get six.
Apparently, your friend has much more (nine times more) chances of getting six, but it doesn’t mean you can’t win. Let’s suppose that the reward for one block is $70. You can unite with your friend and find the block together, and divide the gainings in a fair way – you get $10, and his part is $60.
Or you can search for the block on your own, and then you get the whole $70 for yourself for the found block. In the perfect world, it would take ten times more time, than if you cooperate with your friend, but our world isn’t ideal.
The more mining devices you have, the higher chance you have to find the cherished block. The possibility of finding this particular block is only higher when the network difficulty of the cryptocurrency that you are mining is lower.
We rent capacities on Nicehash or MiningRigRentals and direct them at the solo pool. The tactics can be different: you can send 100GH/S for an hour, or you could go for 10GH/S for 10 hours. One decides which one based on his own experience. By the way, the real players take one TH/S or more.
Renting of capacities on Nicehash is also an art, at different times of the day the prices vary, it’s due to Nicehash being a market with sellers on the one side and buyers on another.
Some people put a knowingly low price thinking “it may work” and based on our experience such orders work very often.
Here, while the market price is 0.0085, there are two orders twice cheaper, and please, pay particular attention to the order with INFINITE speed, i.e., someone is ready to rent ANY number of farms for this money.
At Nicehash you can rent capacities for different algorithms: Dagger Hashimoto for cryptocurrencies like ETH and similar, Equihash for ZEC and similar, Scrypt for LTC, SHA 256 for Bitcoin or Bitcoin Cash.
Here, for example, cool guys took 750 GH/S, playing the big game.
Let’s take Ethereum as an example. We go to Whattomine, choose Ethash algorithm, check out the reward for one block – it’s 3 ETH coins. Then we start to increase the hashrate until we find the value at which the calculator shows 3 coins per day.
Currently, this value is ± 17 450MH/S (17.45GH/S).
One more time – what does that mean? It means that in a perfect world with such hashing power you would find one block daily (3 ETH coins = $900) Look at the table below, at 17.45 GH/S it shows 3 ETH per day.
As we already mentioned our world is not perfect, here the luck factor starts to play. You can look for 1 block the whole day, and you won’t find it, but it can also happen, that you will find it within the first hour of mining. The luck is usually measured in percent.
Perfect world – 100% luck, less than 100% – you are lucky, more than 100% – you are not.
You can use this Solo Mining Calculator , for a quick estimate of your Solo chances.
It’s like when you win the lottery. In the pool, it’s the number in %, which shows the luck of the pool in its search for the blocks. In a perfect world, the pool would find a new block every time the Luck value hits 100%. If the pool is lucky, blocks are found before 100%, if not – the process can drag on till 900%.
Look at the last blocks on our Ethereum Solo Pool:

For the time the pool was supposed to find one block, it found all 4! And each block is $900, so $2700 are over the estimated value, here you have the pool that is lucky.
You should understand, that if we buy the hashrate for one block at a luck rate of 100% and then we don’t find it, we lose our money. Let’s take a look at Ethereum as an example, if we buy 17.45GH/S for one day, there’s a possibility we don’t find a block, but if we take 174.5 GH/S, then we have a chance to find ten blocks.
And we don’t l
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