Mining hardware specs jump between megahashes, terahashes, and exahashes without warning, making it hard to compare a single rig against a global network. This converter normalises any hashrate across the entire SI scale and tells you what slice of the network you control, all computed instantly in your browser.
How it works
Hashrate is simply the number of hash attempts a device performs each second. The units differ only by SI prefixes that each scale by a factor of one thousand. To convert, the tool multiplies your input by its unit factor to reach a base figure in H/s, then divides by every other unit factor to fill out the table. Because the relationship is linear, the conversions are exact apart from display rounding.
The share-of-network calculation divides your base H/s by the total network hashrate, which you enter in EH/s. Multiplying that fraction by 100 gives the percentage of the network you represent. Over enough time this fraction approximates the share of blocks and rewards you would win, since proof-of-work is a memoryless race weighted by hashpower.
Example and notes
A 100 TH/s ASIC entered against a 700 EH/s network yields a share of roughly 0.0000143 percent — a vivid reminder of how concentrated modern mining is. The conversion table is handy on its own: 1 PH/s equals 1,000 TH/s or 1,000,000 GH/s. Remember that share is the revenue side only; electricity, efficiency, and coin price decide whether mining is actually profitable.