Versapool

Zano guide

How to mine Zano on Versapool

Use this page to connect a miner correctly, format workers cleanly, and verify that your setup is sending work.

Step 01

Prepare your wallet and worker name

Use your Zano wallet address as the login value. If you want separate rig visibility in the pool view, append a worker name after a dot. A common format is YOUR_ZANO_WALLET.rig01.

This format makes it easier to identify individual machines, compare hashrate between rigs, and check whether a specific miner is unstable or offline.

Step 02

Use the correct endpoint

The current public Zano endpoint is:

eu.zano.versapool.cc:8866

Always use the endpoint shown on the live pool page if anything changes later. Public connection information on the site is the authoritative source.

Step 03

Example miner command

For TT-Miner, a typical command looks like this:

./TT-Miner -luck -coin ZANO -P [email protected]:8866

The -luck flag only affects miner-side display output. It does not switch your payout model or turn pool mining into solo mining.

Step 04

Confirm that the miner is working

After startup, watch for a successful stratum connection, accepted shares, and a non-zero hashrate after the initial kernel build. If the miner shows repeated timeouts or stays at zero hashrate, check the endpoint, local firewall rules, and your network path before changing pool-side assumptions.

Once connected, use the public Zano pool page to confirm that your worker appears as expected and that your reported activity matches the miner-side console.