Friday, January 21st 2022

Bitcoin Drops Below the $40,000-mark, Raises Hopes of Graphics Card Availability

The most popular cryptocurrency by market-cap, Bitcoin, has dropped in value to below the USD $40,000-mark, to $38,429 as of this writing. This amounts to a whopping 43% drop in value from its November 2021 peak of roughly $67,600. Ethereum has also seen an 8% fall over the past 24 hours, as has the value of several other cryptocurrencies. While we won't get into the nuts and bolts of Bitcoin volatility or hand out any financial advice, this could have an impact on graphics card availability owing to a multitude of reasons.

As of this writing, we see the GeForce RTX 3080 commanding a scalper price of roughly $1,500 (brand new), for the LHR variant (lower crypto-mining performance), while non-LHR cards that are used, start around $1,900. If the fall in cryptocurrencies continues, we could see increased availability of used graphics cards from crypto miners, as gamers would be willing to buy a used RTX 30-series or RX 6000 series graphics card that's still within its warranty period (of 2 years).
Sales of used cards by miners will apply pressure on scalpers hording new cards to cut prices, more so as they'd be trying to sell newer batches of RTX 30-series cards that are LHR. Add to all this, the next-generation crypto-mining ASICs are on the anvil, including Bitmain's Antminer S19 XP, and Intel's "Bonanza Mine" ASIC that the company plans to unveil next month. The arrival of ASIC miners usually triggers an increase in the mining difficulty algorithm, which should worsen the performance/Dollar of GPUs in mining applications. The compound effect of all these, we predict, could briefly improve graphics card availability in 1H-2022. A continued fall in the value of cryptocurrencies will only accelerate this.
Sources: Google Finance, CNBC
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110 Comments on Bitcoin Drops Below the $40,000-mark, Raises Hopes of Graphics Card Availability

#101
owen10578
Uh Intel's Bitcoin mining chips does nothing to the difficulty of Ethereum Mining which is what GPUs mine.
Posted on Reply
#103
nguyen
Incoming mass sell off of mining GPUs :roll: , please don't buy used mining GPU people, let them miners rot so we can buy new GPUs at MSRP later.

Posted on Reply
#104
lexluthermiester
nguyenplease don't buy used mining GPU people
Um, no. That's very narrow minded and foolish advice. Inexpensive cards are going to be a boon to the market.
nguyenlet them miners rot so we can buy new GPUs at MSRP later.
This will happen on it's own..
Posted on Reply
#105
R-T-B
I mean, you're all welcome to let my 2080 Super rot when I retire it. I'll probably let it go for a proper fair price (like a true used card back in the day), but if you want me to keep it, so be it.
Posted on Reply
#106
xtreemchaos
bitcoin is like catching a wave then riding it to just before it crashes on the beach and jumping off with your pockets full, thats where the moneys at. one would think thats by design but whata i know eh.
Posted on Reply
#107
defaultluser
R0H1TThat's just an assumption at this point in time, who knows when another sh!tcoin launches & (GPU) miners won't flock to it? It's essentially free money, for some, so don't bet against this ever lasting tulip crypto mania!
Simple man - because there are hundreds of other shit coins already out there looking to be the next Big Star

Welcome to Libertarian, Inc, May I take your order? The whole reason everyone gets in on the ground floor is to become rich, and "Future Rich People" are the last people to expect to coordinate on a dingle standard.

Etherium only won so quickly because it was the first solid competitor to Bitcoin (and it still took two years to become unstoppable) - it's going to take several years for the next big thing to replace it!

And, because you have proof-of-stake, Etheriukm is treading a new path never-before seen (will you keep your GPUs, or will you buy more Ether after selling?)
Posted on Reply
#108
user112
DeeJay1001Mining GPUs are run at a constant temperature, rarely power or temperature cycled, and run far below maximum power. Not to mention the person running the mining card has alot more reason to keep that card in good condition than the average gamer. I would choose an ex-minig card, over a general use card every time without question.
the sheds and warehouses miners use are not great places to have any running electronics in much less GPUs. durring the wrong time of year forget GPUs you could legit die in those conditions. also electron migration is more of a problem than thermal cycling.
Posted on Reply
#109
R-T-B
user112the sheds and warehouses miners use are not great places to have any running electronics in much less GPUs. durring the wrong time of year forget GPUs you could legit die in those conditions. also electron migration is more of a problem than thermal cycling.
Any miner who cares about profitability is keeping those sheds and warehouses cool.
Posted on Reply
#110
lexluthermiester
user112also electron migration is more of a problem than thermal cycling.
That would be incorrect. What you describe was a problem of the past and directly related to voltage not being applied in a way the pathways were designed for. Those problems have been solved with chemistry changes in the lithography process and voltage regulation techniques that fine tune how operating voltage is apllied to the circuitry. The problem of Electron Migration was solved more than a decade ago. It only exists now as a result of extreme overclocking employing high levels of voltage, far above the rated levels.

Modern stock voltages and clock speeds will never result in electron migration or pathway degradation. Heat however, can.
Posted on Reply
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