Power Supply
A power supply provides the stable electrical power a cryptocurrency miner needs to run its chips, fans, and control electronics.
Definition
A power supply is the hardware that converts electricity from a wall outlet, power distribution unit, or facility circuit into the voltage and current a mining machine can use. In cryptocurrency mining, it is especially important because ASIC miners draw large amounts of power continuously.
A good power supply keeps that power stable under heavy load. An undersized or failing unit can cause restarts, low hash rate, component damage, or unsafe conditions.
How It Works
Most mining power supplies take AC power from the grid and convert it into DC power for the miner. The output depends on the miner model, but the power supply usually feeds the hash boards, control board, and cooling fans. In modern ASIC miners, the power supply is often built into the machine.
The power supply must be rated for the miner’s expected wattage plus operating headroom. A miner that consumes 3,200 watts should not use a supply that can barely deliver 3,200 watts in real conditions. Heat, voltage quality, and long operating hours can reduce reliability.
Efficiency is also important. A more efficient power supply wastes less electricity as heat while delivering power to the miner. This is why miners check efficiency ratings, input voltage, cable quality, and whether the supply is designed for continuous high-load use.
Why It Matters
Electricity is usually the largest ongoing cost in proof-of-work mining. The power supply affects how much purchased electricity becomes useful mining work and how much is lost as heat. Better efficiency can improve profit margins, especially at scale.
Reliability matters too. A weak power supply can make a miner look defective even when the hash boards are healthy. Symptoms may include random shutdowns, fan errors, unstable hash rate, rejected shares, or failure to start after an outage.
Power supplies also affect safety. Mining equipment runs at high wattage for long periods, so overloaded circuits, loose connectors, and poor ventilation can create fire or equipment damage risks. Mining farms size circuits carefully, monitor power draw, and replace damaged connectors before they fail.