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1. 10 weeks ago, I joined the @lightning network barely knowing how to open a channel. Last week I became a profitable lightning network routing node.

Here's a thread on the ultimate strategy game for LN node operators from one #Bitcoin pleb to another.
👇👇👇
2. Running a node is more of an art because each individual channel needs its own unique care and attention. It’s kind of like having a tamagochi that needs to constantly be taken care of.
3. Between analyzing traffic flow, fees, what channels to open and close, and rebalancing, you really have to take the time to see how traffic moves and what it costs to move.
4. You have to dig in at the individual route then look at a more macro view overtime to set your fees and know where to put your sats. This is where the human touch comes in.
5. Sure you can program a script to automate fees and rebalancing for you and there are some great ones out there, but I don’t think we’re at the point where it can analyze traffic patterns, overall flow, and best channels to open to to minimize costs and maximize profits.
6. The peer is more important than the channel size.
Most people say channel size (girth) is everything. The bigger, the better. This is true to an extent. Really channels under 2M sats don’t see any flow, but I have 2M channels that route more traffic than my 20M channels.
7. It just depends on who they’re connected to, where that traffic is going, and what their fee structure is. A good way to analyze routes is during rebalancing.
8. You can see who is connected to who, where things can cheaply move, or where there is room to open a channel to one of the connecting nodes to minimize fees and maximize routing potential.
9. @alexbosworth ’s Balance of Satoshis (BOS) has been super helpful in seeing rebalancing routes.
So really I guess it’s not about the size but what you do with it?
10. Rebalancing
I’ve heard a lot of people say rebalancing doesn’t help. I’ve heard people say you should have all balanced channels. I haven’t found either to be true.
11. I rebalance constantly. But I rebalance to “feed the traffic.” I don’t keep a channel perfectly balanced unless traffic flows both ways. If traffic flows one way, which a lot of channels do, then I constantly push or pull sats back to feed the traffic.
12. More feeding, more sats. If it’s not profitable to rebalance certain channels, then up your fees.
13. How did I calculate my break even?
I took all routing fees and subtracted: rebalancing fees, on-chain transactions (opening/closing channels fees, moving sats to my node, and any loop outs).
14. If you don’t run a node yet, now is the time to experiment. The mempool is empty so you can open channels at 1 sat/vb, and Bitcoin is only at $30k.
15. When lighting adoption really takes off and bitcoin 10 or 20xs, you’re going to thank yourself that you got in early and your relatively “small” channel sizes will be massive in the future.
16. And join Plebnet (@kycjelly) on telegram and we’ll help you get started. I’ve learned more in the last 2 months than I have in years. The learning is addicting.
17. It’s more of an art than a science.
I’m sure having a technical coding or software background has it’s advantages, but as someone that never used a command line prior to running a node, I don’t think it’s really needed at this stage in the game.
18. Between @getumbrel, MyNode, @RaspiBlitz, and communities like Plebent, it’s never been easier to build a node, find information, or ask questions. ⚡️
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