In the original Bitcoin Core client, all your private keys, public addresses, and transaction metadata are stored in a single file called wallet.dat .

This file was (and is) the master key to your fortune. It contains:

Instead of a master seed, early wallets generated a random pool of loose, independent key pairs (typically 100 at a time). Every time you generated a new receiving address or sent a transaction that required a "change address," the wallet pulled a pre-generated key out of this pool. Key Components Stored Inside:

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Old Walletdat Exclusive |top| < VERIFIED — Honest Review >

In the original Bitcoin Core client, all your private keys, public addresses, and transaction metadata are stored in a single file called wallet.dat .

This file was (and is) the master key to your fortune. It contains: old walletdat exclusive

Instead of a master seed, early wallets generated a random pool of loose, independent key pairs (typically 100 at a time). Every time you generated a new receiving address or sent a transaction that required a "change address," the wallet pulled a pre-generated key out of this pool. Key Components Stored Inside: In the original Bitcoin Core client, all your

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