Hosting & Services

How a Wholesale mining hardware fits into a modern mining setup

Photo: Sebastian Hillig / Flickr · CC BY-NC 2.0

Every operation eventually argues about its wholesale mining hardware, and for good reason — it sits on the critical path between the watts coming in and the useful work going out.

What a wholesale mining hardware actually does

Strip away the branding and a wholesale mining hardware is really a tool for managed uptime. Judge it on how well it does that before anything else.

When someone else runs the hardware, a wholesale mining hardware is only as good as its worst week — the SLA, the response time and what happens when an unit dies.

What to look for

When you put a wholesale mining hardware through its paces, weigh it against the things that bite in production rather than the ones that demo well:

  • What the SLA actually guarantees on uptime, and the penalties if it slips
  • Transparency on fees, power rates and the cut taken off the top
  • Response time on dead units, repairs and RMA in practice
  • Real monitoring and remote access, not an once-a-day status email
  • Contract terms, lock-in and how cleanly you can walk away

Common mistakes

The usual trap is optimising for the happy path. A wholesale mining hardware that looks great on the bench can fall apart the moment heat, dust and 24/7 load build up — which is exactly when it matters most. Test it under sustained load, in real ambient conditions, and on the messiest power you actually have.

The bottom line

Run any wholesale mining hardware at small scale first. The spec sheet never mentions the failure modes — your own logs and your power meter will.