Replying to Avatar rev.hodl

I will explain mining yields in detail with a much longer note. It's a good opportunity to showcase my permaculture approach to Bitcoin mining and the progression of home mining here at the homestead.

The most surface level yields from Bitcoin mining are the sats and the heat.

I mine with a FPPS pool which pays out sats proportional to the hash I contribute to the pool regardless if the pool finds a block or not. The FPPS pool structure is good for my situation because my hash is intermittent. My miners are only running when I need them to do work for me or when I have extra solar power.

The mining I do is transaction fee insurance because as the fees to transact on the network increase the amount of Bitcoin I mine increases proportionally. If I can't delay transactions until fees are more favorable the extra sats I'm earning from mining will subsidize the transactions I make during periods of high fees.

https://v.nostr.build/Zn4k.mp4

I don't think of the sats I earn from mining as free but more of a rebate on the cost of power usage from the work performed by my miners. Because I use an FPPS pool I don't need to expend extra energy in order to guarantee a payout. I get paid out proportionally to the hash I contribute at the time that I'm hashing. If I'm hashing I'm getting paid.

https://v.nostr.build/zeGd.mp4

I hope this clears up some of your questions when comes to yield, transaction insurance, and payouts when it comes to mining at home. Once again I am working on a longer for note that will breakdown home mining yields through the lense of permaculture.

#homesteading #permaculture #permies #meshtadel #selfsovereignty #bitcoin #bitcoinmining #homemining #homeminer #plebminer

nostr:nevent1qqspysh2hpcm2n5qq9jnxj7vnwzgt634mwnemwmpvr4nauvuhzzp79spr4mhxue69uhkummnw3ezucnfw33k76twv4ezuum0vd5kzmp0qgs9qn4yv2cxx7gysxnwugfennvu20jyvfr4azd9um9ydq4z879qn3srqsqqqqqp6nlgw7

Thanks I look forward to future posts! I also like the use of the permaculture lens on your activities.

I'm also glad you talk about intermittent mining. We have an old octapus furnace in our basement, which operates via thermosiphon rather than forced air.

It originally burned coal, now fuel oil. I've tested it with wood as well.

The plan would be to hook a miner up during winter to supplement our masonry heater.

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Sounds like an awesome project!