I had two related questions, but first let me set the stage:
Got 4 new 841s, and at the same time sold my old 741 to a friend. Everything been great for both of us for a few weeks, but for a reason(s) neither of us understand, the settings in the controller I sold to him reverted late last week to my old settings. So you guessed it - I got credited with his machine's work since the old settings obviously had my worker info until he fixed it this morning:
Question #1: Any easy way to split out the work? This is more theoretical than practical - I'm just going to buy him lunch to pay him back but I was curious if there was an easy way to do this if the parties have a agreement on hash rate share (ie I am 4.5 machines he is .5).
Question #2: While computing on my worker, his machine caused my average "Shares" count to double; yet the "Average Share" value fell by half. Clearly I don't understand these values like I thought. I would expect all values to change by a percentage value commensurate with the the incremental hash rate. Could someone explain how those are calculated?
https://imgur.com/gallery/Pfl2gThanks!
I've been managing a "co-op" operation (very small...total of ~45TH) for three years. Each partner gets a share of the block reward based on their relative spec'd hash, cf. there are 7 machines total with 46.5TH, six of them are mine with a total of 35.5TH, and one for a partner (an 821) at 11TH. Divide the block reward by the total shares, then multiply by one's own number of shares. Transmit the rewards to the partner when they get to a threshold of .01BTC (simply for efficiently). Send the partner a spreadsheet weekly with all the tx details from my Core. Not complicated at all, transparent (the partner has access to the board, and the pool stats), and inexpensive to manage. My first mining partner passed away last year; he helped me get started in pool mining.
There's a distinct advantage for both of us; the 5Nd makes it easier for the co-op to "absorb" minor machine burps and bumps without significant overall hash loss. The transparency here is a distinct advantage.
Best of luck.