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One of the waste products from Bitcoin mining is the heat that is given off by the GPUs. On cold days could this excess heat be used to warm a home, essentially creating a data furnace? When it gets warmer then the rig can be optionally shut down.
As I understand it, the income generated from mining bitcoins at least pays for the electricity so long as you have a rig that is capable of meeting the difficulty. This would therefore imply that so long as you have already got a suitable rig lying around the house (e.g. for gaming) then running it up during the day would be useful. If the house also had solar panels then that would also benefit the earning potential.
Are there any calculations available to support/refute this?
So, a Bitcoin mining thermal power plant is quite possible.. :) – vi.su. – 2013-06-20T08:41:08.640
@vi.su. usually a power plant works the other way round ie generates power! – Highly Irregular – 2013-06-20T10:41:30.577
1@highly-irregular, may be a 'hash plant' that generates hash using heat energy, and produces electricity as byproduct. :) – vi.su. – 2013-06-21T10:16:05.803
2 – Stephen Gornick – 2011-12-20T02:13:09.570
Here's a graph that uses the price of $0.15 per kWh http://blockchain.info/charts/miners-operating-profit-margin
It shows a 25% profit margin at current difficulty levels. This is way down from the levels seen in the 1st half of 2011 but is up from the break-even levels (or small losses even) from Oct. and Nov.
Mining is just a slightly less risky gamble than buying bitcoins outright. Individual circumstances such as the marginal rate you pay for electricity and the benefit you receive from the heat generated will need to be considered to determine whether or not mining is worth it to you.