I wanted to create a useful warning thread for Scam Accusations. What scams, fake services, fake giveaways, social engineering tricks, and misleading offers should miners learn to spot immediately?
For anyone still troubleshooting this, the most useful sequence I found was: confirm the wallet and worker format first, then verify the stratum target, then check miner logs, then look at temperature and uptime, and only after that start changing firmware or network settings. Doing it in a clean order saved me a lot of time because I stopped guessing and started isolating the real problem.
Same issue here. The miner looked connected, but it turned out the worker format was wrong.
What helped me most was writing down the exact symptoms before changing anything. Once I compared the dashboard, local logs, and power behavior together, the real cause became much easier to spot.
I like this topic because it gets closer to how mining actually works in the real world. A lot of people read generic advice and assume the answer is always hardware or always pool-side, but in practice it can be wallet format, DNS, latency, stale behavior, unstable power, or simple operator error. The more details people share, the more useful this thread becomes for future readers.
This kind of thread is useful because the same symptom can come from different causes. The best replies are the ones that show the exact setup, the tests performed, and what finally changed the result.
Threads like this can become excellent references when members explain the mistake, the symptoms, and the fix in a structured way.
I appreciate topics like this because they help newer miners avoid expensive errors and give experienced users a place to compare methods.
This is a useful topic because it gives miners the kind of practical detail that is often missing from generic advice.
I think discussions like this are strongest when people share exact setup details, what they tested, and what changed the result.
It also helps to separate theory from real-world miner experience, because many problems only show up under actual load and uptime conditions.
