The Definitive Bitaxe Overclocking Manual: Every Model, Every Setting, Maximum Hashrate
Solo mining is a numbers game. Your Bitaxe is hashing against the entire Bitcoin network — roughly 800+ EH/s of combined computational power.
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Solo mining is a numbers game. Your Bitaxe is hashing against the entire Bitcoin network — roughly 800+ EH/s of combined computational power.
The entire history of Bitcoin mining hardware has been a story of centralization. A handful of manufacturers, behind closed doors, designing chips and machines that only they control.
Every Bitcoin miner faces a fundamental decision before their first hash is computed: pool mining or solo mining? This choice shapes your economics, your privacy, your relationship with the…
Yes. Both devices convert 100% of consumed electricity into heat — this is dictated by the first law of thermodynamics.
Industrial Antminers are extraordinary machines. They are also, in the most literal sense, factory equipment — designed for a warehouse, not a spare bedroom. The…
If you run an AI coding agent on the same machine that holds your wallet keys, you have a new attack surface — and it…
There is a difference between running a miner and owning one. You can plug in an Antminer, point it at a pool, and watch the…
The Antminer S9 launched in 2016. Nine years later, it is still the single most-flashed, most-documented, most-hacked Bitcoin miner ever built — and that is…
If you run a Bitcoin miner, you already operate (or can trivially stand up) a piece of infrastructure most people pay a startup to rent:…
Imagine telling an AI agent on your laptop, in plain English, “set my Bitaxe to best-efficiency mode and drop the fan a little,” and watching…
“0% dev fee” is the most quoted line in mining firmware marketing — and one of the least examined. Almost every aftermarket firmware claims a…
Industrial Antminers were built for warehouses, and their firmware stayed closed. As Hashcenters dump cheap ASICs, open-source firmware is how plebs reclaim that hardware for the home. The thesis behind DCENT_OS, told honestly.
It is the question every miner asks the moment the AI gold rush hits the headlines: GPUs that used to mine Ethereum now print money…
Large Bitcoin Hashcenters are converting to AI compute — but the conversion reuses power, cooling and real estate, not the mining ASICs. Here is what actually transfers, why a used-ASIC price crash follows, and why that pushes hardware into homes where open firmware keeps it yours.
A plain-English guide to custom Bitmain firmware: what third-party Antminer firmware actually is, why miners flash it, the honest risks, and the open-source frontier including DCENT_OS.
Power and compute are useless if you cannot reach your node, miner, or AI agent when the ISP drops. Here is how a low-bandwidth LoRa mesh plus Nostr keeps the critical signals flowing — honestly, without over-promising broadband.
Bitcoiners have monetized stranded, flared, and curtailed energy for years. That same off-grid playbook now powers local AI compute too — with Bitcoin as the interruptible base load that absorbs intermittency. Honest about storage, economics, and why your ASIC can’t run AI.
Gate an MCP tool behind an L402 paywall so any AI agent that calls it pays sats per invocation — no accounts, no API keys, no middleman. The reference shape, what you can sell, and the honest limits.
The honest answer is yes — flashing third-party firmware generally voids your Bitmain warranty. Here is what that coverage is actually worth, the ownership trade you are really making, and how a real repair lab de-risks it.
“Sovereign AI” is being sold as a national GPU buildout. The Bitcoiner reframe: real sovereignty is individual — your hardware, your open-weight model, your basement — the same logic as running your own node.
Every Ollama guide stops at “ollama run.” The real sovereignty question is the power, cooling, and heat under a box that runs 24/7 — the exact thing Bitcoin miners already understand.
Run a local LLM on your own host box to read your miner logs, explain cryptic errors in plain language, and babysit your rigs overnight. It runs on your hardware next to the ASIC, never on the miner, grounded in D-Central error-code data, and it never phones home.
AI agents are starting to spend sats over Lightning. The number-one self-custody mistake is handing an autonomous agent your real keys. Here are the rules that keep an agent useful but contained: hot/cold separation, tiny floats, per-agent budgets, watch-only monitoring, and clean revocation.
Coding agents like Claude Code call hosted models by default — they do not run Claude offline. The honest air-gapped path: point an open agent harness (Codex) at a local open-weight model via Ollama. Here is what really runs offline, the hardware you need, and the honest capability gap.
On Antminers shipped after March 2024, Bitmain locked the Amlogic control board so it resists non-stock firmware. Here is what the lock affects, why it is a sovereignty problem, and how open firmware restores real ownership of hardware you already paid for.
You already run a node on hardware you own. That same sovereign box can host an open agent (Hermes, by Nous Research) instead of renting a VPS. Own your compute the way you own your keys – honestly, with the trade-offs spelled out.
You already own your money and run your node. Local AI is the next layer — own your compute the way you own your keys. A Bitcoiner’s honest guide to the self-sovereign local-AI stack: Ollama, open-weight models, MCP, and a GPU you own. A backup to rented intelligence, not a replacement for Bitcoin.
Honest take on VNish alternatives for operators who value auditability over maturity. We credit VNish first, then map the open-source spectrum from BraiinsOS+ to the S9-only DCENT_OS beta.
Both an AI GPU and a Bitcoin ASIC turn nearly 100% of their watts into heat (1W = 3.412 BTU/hr). The honest difference: the ASIC runs constant and hot 24/7 and earns sats, the GPU runs bursty and idle-cold and earns tokens, and a rented heat box earns you nothing. No free heat, just thermodynamics with a payout.
Sovereign compute means running AI inference on hardware you own and paying for it in Bitcoin over Lightning with no account. Here is the canonical definition of the sovereign compute loop — your hardware, your model, your money — and how L402 pay-per-inference closes it.
Should you buy a used ASIC in 2026? The corporate mining-to-AI pivot is flooding the secondary market with cheap S19-class hardware. An honest take on what to buy, what is e-waste, and where open firmware fits.
Antminers ship for 240V data centers, not your basement. The complete guide to running a miner on a standard 110V/120V household circuit – voltage conversion, the Slim Edition and Loki Edition builds, choosing an APW3-class PSU, mounting it safely, and the electrical fire-safety practices that keep home mining from burning the house down.
The complete reference for mining Bitcoin from home – equipment selection, noise and heat management, electrical sizing, profitability math, network security, and why distributed home hashrate keeps Bitcoin decentralized. Built on D-Central’s experience since 2016.
Last reviewed May 16, 2026.
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