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How to Set Up an ASIC Miner for the First Time? (Step-by-Step)

Unbox carefully, place on a stable surface with 30 cm clearance, connect the correct PSU and Ethernet, find its IP via scanner, log in with default credentials, configure your pool, and verify thermal stability before mining.

Feb 02, 2026 at 05:00 pm

Unboxing and Physical Setup

1. Carefully remove the ASIC miner from its packaging, ensuring all protective foam and plastic covers are fully detached.

2. Place the unit on a stable, non-conductive surface with at least 30 cm of clearance on all sides for airflow.

3. Connect the included power supply unit (PSU) using the manufacturer-specified cable—never substitute with generic ATX PSUs unless explicitly rated for continuous 24/7 operation.

4. Attach the Ethernet cable directly to a wired network port with DHCP enabled; avoid Wi-Fi bridges or repeaters during initial configuration.

5. Power on the device using the rear toggle switch and observe LED indicators—solid green typically signals boot readiness within 90 seconds.

Network Identification and Access

1. Launch a network scanning tool such as Advanced IP Scanner or Angry IP Scanner on a connected PC or laptop.

2. Filter results for devices running HTTP services on port 80 or 443, looking for vendor strings like “Bitmain”, “MicroBT”, or “Canaan”.

3. Note the assigned IPv4 address—most units default to 192.168.1.10 or similar if no DHCP lease is granted.

4. Open a Chromium-based browser and enter the IP address into the address bar—do not use Safari or Internet Explorer due to TLS handshake incompatibilities.

5. Log in using factory credentials: root/root or admin/admin, depending on firmware version.

Firmware and Pool Configuration

1. Navigate to the “Miner Configuration” or “Pools” tab and disable any preloaded mining pools shown in grayed-out fields.

2. Enter your chosen mining pool URL in the primary field—examples include stratum+tcp://btc.hk.f2pool.com:3333 or stratum+tcp://us-east.stratum.slushpool.com:3333.

3. Input your wallet address as the worker name; some pools require appending a dot and identifier like yourwalletaddress.worker1.

4. Set password to x unless the pool mandates a specific string—many reject empty or complex passwords.

5. Save and reboot—do not skip the reboot step, as configuration changes only persist after full firmware reload.

Thermal Monitoring and Stability Checks

1. Wait five minutes post-reboot before checking hash rate in the “Status” or “Dashboard” view.

2. Verify chip temperatures remain below 85°C under load—sustained readings above 90°C indicate inadequate airflow or dust-clogged heatsinks.

3. Cross-check reported hashrate against the unit’s official spec sheet—deviations over ±5% warrant reseating hashboard cables.

4. Monitor rejected shares percentage: values exceeding 2.5% suggest network latency, pool instability, or incorrect worker naming.

5. Confirm fan speeds auto-adjust between 30–100% RPM based on thermal load—fixed-speed fans signal faulty sensor input or firmware corruption.

Troubleshooting Common Failures

1. If the web interface fails to load, confirm the miner and PC share the same subnet—manually assign 192.168.1.20 to your PC if the miner uses 192.168.1.10.

2. No hash rate display after 10 minutes indicates either pool authentication failure or incompatible stratum protocol—switch from stratum+ssl to stratum+tcp.

3. Repeated “Bootloader Error” messages point to corrupted firmware; flash latest .bin file via UART cable using Flash Tool v2.4.

4. Intermittent disconnects correlate with PoE injector usage—ASICs draw peak current surges that destabilize unregulated PoE sources.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I run an ASIC miner on a home Wi-Fi network?A: No. Wi-Fi introduces packet loss and latency spikes that cause rejected shares and unstable connections. A direct Ethernet link to a router or switch is mandatory.

Q: Why does my miner show “No Pool Connection” even with correct settings?A: This commonly stems from firewall rules blocking outbound TCP on port 3333 or 443, or ISP-level port filtering—test with a mobile hotspot to isolate the issue.

Q: Is it safe to overclock the ASIC immediately after setup?A: Unsafe. Factory clocks are thermally validated. Overclocking without calibrated voltage adjustments risks permanent chip degradation within 72 hours of operation.

Q: Do I need a separate wallet to receive mining rewards?A: Yes. Pools pay out to Bitcoin addresses you control. Never use exchange deposit addresses as worker names—they lack private key access required for valid payouts.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

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