Open-source home miners from Power Mining — the same category of hardware responsible for multiple confirmed solo block wins in 2025–2026.
How Solo Bitcoin Mining Actually Works
Every ten minutes, the Bitcoin network produces a new block. Miners worldwide race to find the valid cryptographic hash that closes it. The first miner to find a valid hash earns the block subsidy — currently 3.125 BTC after the 2024 halving — plus all transaction fees in that block.
Large commercial farms pool their hashrate and split rewards proportionally. The income is steady but fractional — a small miner in a large pool earns a few cents per day. Solo mining operates on a completely different principle. You point your machine at a solo pool — no partners, no fee splitting — and compete for the entire block reward independently. Either your machine finds the winning hash and you collect everything, or it doesn't and you collect nothing that round.
It is often called "lottery mining." The label is not wrong. But it undersells a key reality: every hash your machine generates is a mathematically valid attempt with a calculable probability. And as 2025 and 2026 have now proven repeatedly, home miners are winning.
This Is Not a Fluke — A Pattern Is Emerging
Block #937,218 did not happen in isolation. It is the latest in a confirmed series of solo block finds by home miners using open-source ASIC hardware — the same devices Power Mining manufactures and ships to customers in 50+ countries.
#853,742
Bitaxe Supra (~650 GH/s) — first ever Bitaxe block win · July 2024
3.192 BTC
~$200,000
#887,212
Bitaxe Ultra — solo home miner, self-hosted Public Pool
3.150 BTC
confirmed win
#888,989
Bitaxe Supra — solo home miner
3.152 BTC
confirmed win
#920,440
NerdQaxe++ — solo home miner
3.141 BTC
confirmed win
#924,569
Bitaxe Gamma — solo home miner
3.146 BTC
confirmed win
#937,218
Public Pool — solo home miner
⚡ Latest · Feb 18 2026
3.143 BTC
$212,982
Every single winner ran consumer-grade, open-source ASIC hardware. No privileged access. No industrial power contracts. A home internet connection and a compact machine drawing less electricity than a gaming PC — and in multiple confirmed cases, that was enough to find a block before every industrial farm on the planet.
The Power Mining Solo Pool
Power Mining operates a dedicated zero-fee solo pool at pool.powermining.io, built directly on the Public Pool open-source project — the same infrastructure behind block #937,218. No registration required. No fees. Every satoshi of a block reward goes directly to the winning miner.
Connection details for any compatible miner:
Stratum TCP: stratum+tcp://pool.powermining.io:3333
Stratum TLS: stratum+tls://pool.powermining.io:4333
Username: <your BTC address>.<worker name> · Password: x
The pool currently has over 400 active devices — Bitaxe, NerdQaxe++, NerdOctaxe, and more — contributing hashrate around the clock. The community high scores board shows difficulty peaks above 10 TH/s, with NerdQaxe++ devices holding multiple top-ten records.
pool.powermining.io — the Power Mining community solo pool. Zero fees, open source, live device stats.
Why Home Miners Keep Running
The honest case for solo mining is not a financial guarantee. Electricity costs are real. The odds per machine per block are long. Anyone framing this purely as an investment opportunity is being misleading, and we won't do that.
The actual case is something different — and for a growing number of people, far more compelling. When you run a Power Mining device connected to pool.powermining.io, you are running a fully validating node that participates directly in Bitcoin's consensus. You own the hardware outright. You validate your own blocks. You contribute hashrate to decentralizing a network that would otherwise trend toward industrial concentration.
The open-source hardware that Power Mining builds and ships is part of a broader movement: ensuring that Bitcoin mining remains accessible to individuals, not just corporations with megawatt power contracts. Every Bitaxe and NerdQaxe++ running at a home or office is a direct counter to that centralization.
And occasionally — as blocks #853,742, #920,440, #924,569, and now #937,218 confirm — that participation pays $213,000 to a home miner who kept their machine running.