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Bitcoin accepted at checkout  |  Ships from Laval, QC, Canada  |  Expert support since 2016

D-Central has been building, tuning, repairing, and shipping Bitcoin mining hardware out of Laval, Quebec since 2016. Over that time we have published one of the deepest open libraries on the internet — guides, three live databases, hundreds of miner profiles, a fault finder, a glossary, and calculators. The Mining Academy is not new reading. It is a map. It takes everything we have already written and arranges it into five ordered tracks so you always know what to read next, from your very first question to component-level board repair.

Work through the tracks in order, or jump straight to the one that matches where you are today. Each track opens with a short orientation and then a sequenced reading list — follow it top to bottom. We stand on the shoulders of the open-source builders, repair techs, and home miners who came before us; this curriculum simply organizes their hard-won knowledge into a path you can actually walk.

Track 1 — Beginner: Understand the Machine

Start here if Bitcoin mining is still abstract. The goal of this track is comprehension, not purchase. By the end you will understand what an ASIC actually does, speak the vocabulary, and be able to run the numbers on whether mining makes sense for your power rate.

  1. What Is an ASIC Miner — The Ultimate Guide — the foundational explainer; what the chips do and why they exist.
  2. ASIC Miner Technology Explained — a deeper look at how the hardware is built and how it hashes.
  3. The Bitcoin Mining Glossary — 100+ essential terms; keep this open in a tab as you read everything else.
  4. Home Bitcoin Mining: The Complete Guide — the big-picture overview of mining from your home.
  5. Run the numbers with our Mining Calculators hub — including the Profitability Calculator, the Power Cost Calculator, and the Solo Mining Probability Calculator.
  6. Bitcoin Mining ROI: How to Evaluate Any Miner — turn those numbers into an honest expectation.

Track 2 — Setup & Run: Pick a Miner and Point It at a Pool

Now you choose hardware and get hashing. This track moves from selection to a live, connected miner. If you want the lowest-risk way to learn by doing, our recommended starting hardware is the Bitaxe — a single-chip, open-source solo miner that runs near silent off a standard barrel jack.

  1. Start Here: Find the Right Miner — answer four questions and get matched to hardware for your budget, goal, and power setup.
  2. The Universal ASIC Miner Spec Database — compare hashrate, efficiency, and power across every major model.
  3. ASIC Miner Efficiency: Choosing the Right One — how to read J/TH and pick for your electricity cost.
  4. What Is a Bitaxe? The Complete Guide — why the open-source solo miner is the ideal learning machine.
  5. How to Start Bitcoin Mining at Home — the practical first-setup walkthrough.
  6. Bitaxe Setup Guide — step-by-step configuration for every model.
  7. Pool Mining vs Solo Mining — decide how you want to earn before you connect.
  8. How to Choose a Mining Pool and the Pool Comparison — pick a pool, then point your miner at it.

Track 3 — Advanced / Tuning: Squeeze Every Watt

Your miner runs. Now make it run better. This track is about efficiency — pulling more hashrate per watt, lowering heat, and understanding the firmware that makes tuning possible. Take your time and change one variable at a time.

  1. The ASIC Power Profiles Database — real tuning targets across hundreds of model configurations.
  2. The Complete Antminer Undervolting Guide — the safest first efficiency win.
  3. Antminer Overclocking, Done Safely — push hashrate without cooking your boards.
  4. Per-Chip Frequency Tuning Explained — how modern firmware calculates settings per domain at runtime.
  5. ASIC Mining Firmware Types: Stock vs Third-Party vs Open-Source — understand your options before you flash.
  6. The Mining Firmware Comparison — feature-by-feature matrix of the major firmwares.

Track 4 — Repair & Diagnostics: Fix What Breaks

Mining hardware fails — fans seize, chips drop, hashboards go quiet. Learning to diagnose and repair is what separates an operator from an owner, and it keeps machines out of landfills. This track moves from reading error signals to component-level board work.

  1. The ASIC Fault Finder & Error Code Database — look up your exact error or status code first.
  2. ASIC Status LEDs & Blink Codes Explained — read what the lights are telling you.
  3. ASIC Hashboard Repair: How Boards Fail and Get Fixed — the master guide to board-level failure and rework.
  4. Antminer S21 Family Hashboard Repair — a worked example down to the architecture level.
  5. Bitaxe Repair & Diagnostics — the complete repair vertical for the learning hardware you started on.

Track 5 — Sovereignty & Open-Source: Own Your Stack

The final track is the reason any of this matters. Every miner you run at home, on firmware you control, decentralizes Bitcoin one more layer. This track covers the open-source ethos and the tools — including our own, built openly and humbly on the work of the projects that came first.

  1. Open-Source Bitcoin Mining Firmware Options — the honest landscape of what is actually open.
  2. Made for the Plebs, by Plebs — the case for open firmware on industrial miners.
  3. DCENT_OS — Open-Source Mining Firmware — our GPL-3.0 firmware, currently in closed beta.
  4. The Bitaxe Hub — everything for the open-source solo miner in one place.
  5. The Open-Source Hardware Tools Directory — the wider toolkit for sovereign Bitcoiners.
  6. Self-Hosting for Sovereign Bitcoiners — extend the same independence to the rest of your stack.

The Best Way to Learn Is to Build

Reading takes you far, but hashing teaches faster. If you want one device to carry you through every track on this page, start with the Bitaxe. It is the world’s first fully open-source Bitcoin ASIC miner: quiet, low-power, and simple enough to set up in an afternoon, yet open enough to tune, repair, and reflash as you grow. Learn on it, break it, fix it, and flash DCENT_OS when the beta opens. That is the whole curriculum in one small machine — and every hash it makes pushes Bitcoin one more layer toward the people.