Entry-to-mid tier miners priced at $5,000 or below, ranked by daily profit at a $0.045/kWh electricity rate. A strong starting shortlist for home deployments and first-time buyers who want live payback numbers, not marketing fluff.
View collection → High-hashrate and hydro-cooled miners built to run in a data center, not a living room. Deploy into LeedMiner's partner hosting facilities at $0.06–$0.08/kWh all-in — no noise, cooling, or electrical-upgrade overhead.
View collection → Miners ranked by joules per TH/s — the single number that most dominates long-run ROI. Efficient miners stay profitable longer as network difficulty climbs and electricity prices fluctuate, which is why the best buy isn't always the highest hashrate.
View collection → Recent-generation ASIC miners released in the last 15 months, ranked by daily profit. The current generation typically offers the best J/TH and the longest useful life before difficulty catches up — a natural starting point for fresh deployments.
View collection → Pre-owned and refurbished ASIC miners at significantly lower price per TH/s than new-generation units. Stronger ROI per dollar but no manufacturer warranty — best paired with managed hosting to manage failure risk.
View collection → Miners rated at 55 dB or below — approximately the noise level of a dishwasher. Practical for home offices, garages, and residential deployments where a 75 dB data-center miner is simply unviable.
View collection → Miners designed for two-phase or single-phase immersion cooling — submerged in a dielectric coolant rather than cooled by air fans. Quieter, denser, and typically 10–20% more efficient than their air-cooled equivalents, but require an immersion tank and managed facility.
View collection → Entry-level ASIC miners priced below $1,000 — typically older-generation SHA-256 units or current-generation Scrypt / KHeavyHash hardware. Reasonable starter fleet for buyers testing hosting, electricity arbitrage, or a specific coin thesis before scaling up.
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