Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Mining Speed | Converted Speed | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5 TH/s | 500,000 MH/s | Small test device |
| 1 TH/s | 1,000,000 MH/s | Base conversion example |
| 10 TH/s | 10,000,000 MH/s | Compact mining setup |
| 100 TH/s | 100,000,000 MH/s | High-performance miner |
| 250 TH/s | 250,000,000 MH/s | Large mining hardware |
Formula Used
The calculator uses decimal hashrate prefixes. One terahash equals one million megahashes.
MH/s = TH/s × 1,000,000Effective TH/s = TH/s × Miner Count × Uptime%Effective MH/s = Effective TH/s × 1,000,000GH/s = TH/s × 1,000H/s = TH/s × 1,000,000,000,000
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the hashrate value in TH/s.
- Add miner count if you want a combined fleet result.
- Enter uptime percentage to estimate effective speed.
- Add a target MH/s value if comparison is needed.
- Choose decimal places for cleaner output.
- Add batch TH/s values for a table and graph.
- Click the calculate button.
- Download the CSV or PDF report when needed.
Understanding TH/s to MH/s Conversion
Hashrate measures how many hashing attempts a machine can complete each second. It is used often in cryptocurrency mining, hardware comparisons, and network analysis. TH/s means terahashes per second. MH/s means megahashes per second. Both units describe speed, but they use different scale levels.
Why the Conversion Matters
Mining devices are usually marketed with large units. A modern miner may show performance in TH/s. Older hardware, software dashboards, and mining pools may show MH/s. This difference can confuse reports. A simple conversion removes that confusion. Since one TH/s equals one million MH/s, the conversion is direct. No complex mining formula is needed.
Fleet and Uptime Planning
This calculator also supports miner count and uptime. These options are useful for planning a full setup. A miner may be rated at 120 TH/s. Ten miners may have a rated total of 1,200 TH/s. Yet real output can be lower. Heat, maintenance, rejected shares, and downtime can reduce performance. The uptime field gives a practical estimate.
Using the Result
The result helps compare devices, estimate pool dashboard values, and prepare reports. It can also help check whether a target hashrate is being reached. The batch table is useful for comparing many values. The graph makes scale changes easier to understand. CSV export helps spreadsheet work. PDF export helps documentation.
Important Notes
This tool uses decimal mining units. It does not estimate coins, rewards, fees, electricity cost, or profit. Those values need network difficulty, block reward, pool rules, price, and energy data. Use this calculator when your main need is clean unit conversion. Always compare final mining results with real pool statistics.
FAQs
1. What does TH/s mean?
TH/s means terahashes per second. It measures one trillion hashing attempts per second. It is common in modern mining hardware specifications.
2. What does MH/s mean?
MH/s means megahashes per second. It measures one million hashing attempts per second. Some older dashboards and calculators still use this unit.
3. How many MH/s are in 1 TH/s?
There are 1,000,000 MH/s in 1 TH/s. The calculator multiplies every TH/s value by one million.
4. Is this conversion useful for mining?
Yes. It helps compare mining hardware, pool readings, and performance reports when different hashrate units are used.
5. Does uptime affect the base conversion?
No. The base conversion is fixed. Uptime only estimates practical effective output across time, especially for real mining operations.
6. Can I convert multiple TH/s values?
Yes. Enter several values in the batch field. Separate them with commas, spaces, semicolons, or line breaks.
7. Does this calculator estimate mining profit?
No. It only converts hashrate units. Profit needs coin price, mining difficulty, block reward, pool fees, and energy cost.
8. Why is the output so large?
MH/s is a much smaller unit than TH/s. Since one TH/s equals one million MH/s, converted values become very large.