Blog
What Does a Solo Miner Need? Hardware,Pools & Tech Prep
Hardware Selection: Small Hashrate, Big Dreams
Solo mining doesn’t require a warehouse full of roaring machines. A device the size of your palm, consuming only tens of watts, is sufficient. It fits on a desk, a bookshelf, or in a corner—quiet as a router.
Comparison of Mainstream Low-Power Miners:
| Device | Hashrate | Power | Features |
| Bitaxe Gamma | 1.2 TH/s | 18-20W | Open-source design, active community |
| Bitaxe Turbo Touch | 2.15 TH/s | 43W | Touchscreen, dual-chip |
| Avalon Nano | 6 TH/s | 140W | Higher hashrate, low noise |
Pool Configuration: Connecting to Your “Battlefield”
Solo miners need to connect to Solo Mining Pools. These pools do not combine hash power; they only distribute work and broadcast blocks. Common Solo pools include:
- Public Pool:
stratum+tcp://public-pool.io:21496 - Solo CK Pool:
stratum+tcp://solo.ckpool.org:3333 - Ocean: Non-custodial pool with Solo mode support
When configuring, your Worker Name is usually your Bitcoin wallet address. This is where the reward goes if you hit the jackpot.
Network & Environment
Special considerations for Solo mining:
- Direct connections to pools might be blocked depending on your region; a relay or proxy may be needed.
- Use an independent network (like a 4G hotspot) to avoid triggering corporate network security audits.
- Be cautious of third-party proxy pools that may skim hashrate (an inherent risk with the plaintext Stratum protocol).