According to Kolivas, the miner had chances of 1 in 130,000 to find the block.
The 49 TH/S used by the individual miner equals half of an ASIC S19 Pro.
A solitary miner with a computing power of just 49 Terahas per second (TH/S) managed to process Bitcoin’s 907283 block on July 26 a total reward of approximate 376,000 dollars.
According to Mempool.Space, those profits obtained through the server Solo CKPOOL are broken down into a total rates of 0.029 BTC (equivalent to almost 3,500 dollars) and a subsidy more expenses of 3,154 BTC (more than 372,000 dollars).


With Kolivas, leader of Solo Ckpool, explained The magnitude of the feat in which this lonely miner beat all mining pools and industrial miners:
“A miner of this size has only a probability of 1 between 130,000 to solve a block per day, or once every 370 years on average.”
With Kolivas, software engineer and administrator of Solo CKPOOL.
To dimension this feat in an approximate way, the hashrate 49 TH/S of the miner equivalent to half of the power of an ASIC S19 PRO DE BITMAIN, a device that offers around 110 TH/s.
In contrast, for example, Foundry Us Approximately 2 million of those ASIC S19 PRO to achieve that processing power.
This means that, at the height of block 907,283, a miner with “medium” ASIC S19 beat the hypothetics 2 million Foundry, plus the additional thousands of thousands of other ASICs used in other pools.
Thus, Bitcoin mining, although increasingly centralized and difficult due to the growth of industrial miners, still gives flashes of the random and decentralized capacity of the Bitcoin Network. As cryptootics reported in the past, that practice still allows individual miners Participate in the network with scarce resources And, in some cases, take the complete reward.