In a decentralized blockchain network, there is no central server responsible for recordkeeping. A consensus mechanism is therefore needed to ensure that transactions can be verified and written to the ledger. For Bitcoin Cash, the network needs a mechanism that can both protect security and maintain a stable transaction confirmation speed, supporting its normal operation as a payment network.
Mining is the core infrastructure of the BCH network. Miners participate in block production through proof of work, while the difficulty adjustment algorithm dynamically adjusts mining difficulty according to changes in network hash power. This mechanism allows BCH to maintain a relatively stable block production rhythm even when hash power fluctuates, helping preserve transaction processing efficiency and network security.
Bitcoin Cash mining is the process in which miners use computing equipment to perform hash calculations, compete to generate new blocks, and earn rewards. Miners collect unconfirmed transactions, package them into candidate blocks, and continuously test different parameters to calculate the block hash.
When a miner finds a hash value that meets the network’s difficulty requirement, the block can be broadcast to the network and added to the blockchain. The miner then receives the new block reward as well as the transaction fees included in that block.
This process allows the BCH network to confirm transactions and update its ledger without relying on any central institution.
Bitcoin Cash uses proof of work (PoW) as its consensus mechanism. At its core, PoW requires miners to invest computing power into hash calculations, proving that they have paid a computational cost to generate a new block.
In BCH, miners use the SHA 256 algorithm to calculate the hash of the block header and try to find a result lower than the target value. Because this process cannot be predicted and can only be attempted through repeated computation, it consumes hash power resources.
PoW uses “hash power competition” to determine who has the right to record the next block, making it difficult for any participant to tamper with the ledger and improving network security.
Miners are the block producers and security maintainers of the BCH network. Their main responsibilities include verifying transaction validity, packaging new blocks, and participating in PoW competition.
After a user initiates a transaction, miners check the transaction signature and balance status. Once they confirm that the transaction is valid, they include it in a candidate block. Miners then compete to generate the next block through computation and, after successfully producing a block, broadcast it to the network.
As a result, miners are responsible not only for processing transactions, but also for maintaining the trustworthiness of the network ledger through continuous hash power investment.
In a PoW network, total miner hash power changes constantly. If hash power increases while difficulty stays the same, blocks will be generated faster. If hash power decreases, block production will slow down.
For BCH, stable block production speed is crucial because it directly affects transaction confirmation time. To keep the average block generation time stable, the network needs to automatically adjust mining difficulty based on current hash power.
The role of the difficulty adjustment algorithm (DAA) is to dynamically raise or lower difficulty according to changes in network hash power, maintaining a steady block production rhythm.
Bitcoin Cash’s DAA dynamically adjusts mining difficulty for the next stage based on recent block generation times. If recent blocks have been produced faster than the target time, it means hash power is relatively high, so the system raises difficulty. If blocks have been produced more slowly, the system lowers difficulty.
This dynamic adjustment mechanism helps the network respond more quickly to changes in miner hash power and reduces abnormal block production speeds caused by hash power fluctuations. Because BCH and BTC use the same algorithm, miners may switch hash power between the two chains depending on profitability, so BCH needs a more flexible difficulty adjustment mechanism.
The presence of DAA allows BCH to maintain a relatively stable block generation speed even when hash power moves frequently.
PoW, miners, and DAA together form BCH’s consensus system. PoW provides the security mechanism, using hash power competition to determine who produces the next block. Miners carry out this mechanism and maintain ledger updates. DAA adjusts difficulty so that block production remains stable.
Without miners, the network could not process transactions. Without PoW, the network would lack security protection. Without DAA, hash power fluctuations would make transaction confirmations unstable. These three elements work together to keep the BCH network running continuously and reliably in a decentralized environment.
This coordination is also an important technical foundation that allows BCH to support on chain payments.
Bitcoin Cash is positioned around improving on chain payment efficiency, so stable block production is especially important for transaction confirmation. If new blocks are generated too slowly, confirmation times become longer. If blocks are generated too quickly, the chain may become less stable and face greater security risks.
Miners are responsible for packaging transactions and maintaining ledger security, while the difficulty adjustment algorithm keeps block times stable. Together, they determine the operating efficiency of the BCH network. This coordination ensures that transactions are processed in an orderly way and that the network continues to operate in a decentralized environment.
Bitcoin Cash uses the coordinated operation of miners, proof of work (PoW), and the difficulty adjustment algorithm (DAA) to verify transactions, generate blocks, and maintain network security. Miners compete for the right to record blocks through hash power, PoW makes the block generation process trustworthy, and DAA dynamically adjusts mining difficulty according to changes in hash power.
This mechanism allows BCH to maintain stable block production and efficient transaction confirmation in an open network environment, providing the underlying support for its on chain payment capability.
Bitcoin Cash uses a proof of work (PoW) mechanism, where miners compete for the right to generate new blocks by calculating hash values.
Miners are responsible for verifying transactions, packaging blocks, participating in hash power competition, and maintaining the security of the network ledger.
DAA dynamically adjusts mining difficulty according to changes in network hash power, helping keep block generation speed stable.
Yes. Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin both use the SHA 256 mining algorithm.
Because BCH and BTC share the SHA 256 algorithm, miners may switch hash power between the two chains. BCH therefore needs to adjust difficulty more quickly to stabilize block production time.





