What 61 ASIC miners actually look like on our shelves
Every product page on this site says the same thing: in stock, ships from our Hong Kong warehouse in 24 to 72 hours. That claim is easy to type and hard to prove, and the ASIC market is full of vendors who type it without meaning it.
So this post is the proof. Here is what 61 models of physical inventory actually looks like, and how you can verify any single unit before you send a payment.
What "61 models in stock" means
It does not mean 61 units. It means 61 distinct models, across every major algorithm we sell: SHA-256 Bitcoin hardware from Bitmain and MicroBT, kHeavyHash Kaspa units from IceRiver and Bitmain, Scrypt machines for Litecoin and Dogecoin, Equihash for Zcash, and RandomX for Monero. Behind each listed model sits real quantity on a real rack.
The fast-moving SHA-256 stock (the S21 and S23 families, the Whatsminer M60 and M63 series) turns over quickly, so those shelves get restocked weekly from manufacturer pallets. Lower-volume units like the Antminer X9 for Monero or the refurbished Z15 Pro sit in smaller, stable quantities.
How we photograph inventory
Two kinds of photo exist in our system for every order:
- Shelf photos. Wide shots of the racks, taken weekly, showing the models on hand. These are the images that feed posts like this one and the warehouse galleries.
- Pre-shipment photos. A close shot of your specific unit, serial number visible, taken after the bench test and logged against your order number before the box is sealed. That photo is yours on request.
The difference matters. A shelf photo proves we run a warehouse. A pre-shipment photo proves we are sending you a specific, tested unit. We keep both.
How you verify a unit before paying
This is the part most buyers do not realise they can ask for. Before you pay, you can message us on WhatsApp with the model you want and we will send you a current photo of that model on the shelf, with the serial number readable. For larger orders we send timestamped video: the camera pans across the units, the serials are legible, the model and quantity are confirmed on camera.
We do this for a 1-unit retail buyer the same way we do it for a 100-unit fleet buyer. The standard does not change with order size. The only difference is that bulk buyers get the video by default, and retail buyers get it on request.
Why a scammer cannot fake this easily
Stock photos pulled from a manufacturer website look clean and identical. Real warehouse photos do not. They have your warehouse lighting, your rack labels, your dust, the specific mix of models you actually hold, and, when you ask for it, a serial number you can cross-check against the unit you receive. A vendor who can produce a current, serial-visible photo of the exact model on demand is operating differently from one who sends you a glossy render and goes quiet.
This ties directly into our Staff Verification page: confirm the person you are talking to is real, then confirm the hardware they are describing is real. Two checks, both fast, both yours to run before any money moves.
See it for yourself
Pick any model from the catalog and ask us for a current shelf photo of it. We will send it the same day during Hong Kong business hours.
Browse the catalog β Β Β·Β Ask for a stock photo on WhatsApp
Talk to us about hardware selection, ROI projections at your power rate, or a written quote for bulk pricing.