Early CPU Miner Loses 27,000 BTC to Unrecoverable Drive Failure
BlockedHardware device was lost or destroyed, and no independent seed phrase backup existed.
Dalkore mined 27,000 BTC during Bitcoin's earliest period using CPU mining, when the network was still in its first year and coins carried no meaningful market value. At the time of accumulation, Bitcoin traded at approximately $0.002 per coin, making the total holding worth less than $50. Because the asset had no perceived worth, Dalkore stored the wallet file on a standard desktop storage device without redundancy, backup, or any formal preservation protocol.
No seed phrase was recorded, no paper wallet was created, and no secondary copy of the wallet file existed. When the storage device failed, the wallet became inaccessible. Dalkore conducted a forensic disk scan in an attempt to recover the lost data, but fragmentation and overwrite patterns made full recovery impossible. The forensic effort recovered only 5 BTC from scattered fragments, leaving 26,995 BTC permanently lost.
On August 19, 2012, Dalkore publicly disclosed the loss on BitcoinTalk's 'known lost bitcoins' thread, describing the incident as a formative lesson in custody discipline. This case exemplifies a widespread pattern among early Bitcoin miners: coins were accumulated with minimal operational effort when perceived as worthless, stored with no redundancy or documentation, and lost to hardware failure before their eventual market value became apparent. Dalkore's loss ranks among the largest individual early-miner custody failures ever publicly documented on community forums.
| Stress condition | Device loss |
| Custody system | Software wallet |
| Outcome | Blocked |
| Documentation | Present and interpretable |
| Year observed | 2012 |
What determines whether device loss is permanent
When a device fails, burns, floods, or disappears, the Bitcoin remains on the blockchain, unchanged. What changes is whether any path to authorized access still exists. A seed phrase stored separately from the device preserves that path. A seed phrase stored with the device — or never recorded at all — eliminates it permanently.
The pattern observed across cases in this archive is consistent: recovery is possible when the seed phrase survived the event that took the device. It is not possible when it did not. The type of device, its cost, its brand, its security features — none of these factors determine the outcome. The seed phrase backup does.
Most device loss cases that result in permanent loss involve one of three failure modes: the seed phrase was never recorded at setup, the seed phrase was stored physically alongside the device and lost with it, or the seed phrase was stored in a location that became inaccessible during the same event (flood, fire, relocation). All three are detectable in advance. A backup test — confirming that the seed phrase can restore the wallet on a separate device — would have revealed the gap before the loss event.
A device loss case becomes unrecoverable the moment the backup path is also broken. The preventive action is simple in concept: record the seed phrase at setup, store it independently from the device, and test that it works. Most cases in this archive involved none of these three steps.
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