To calculate the five trillionth digit (and the following seventy-six digits) took 13,500 CPU hours, using 25 computers from 6 countries.4 The forty trillionth digit required 84,500 CPU hours and 126 computers from 18 countries. The highest calculation, the one quadrillionth digit, took 1.2 million CPU hours and 1,734 computers from 56 countries. Total resources: 1,885 computers donated 1.3 million CPU hours. The average computer that was used to calculate would have taken 148 years to complete the calculations alone.
After setting three records, calculating the five trillionth bit,5 the forty trillionth bit,6 and the quadrillionth bit,7 the project ended on September 11, 2000.8
While the PiHex project calculated the least significant digits of π ever attempted at the time in any base, the second place is held by Peter Trueb who computed some 22+ trillion digits in 2016 and third place by houkouonchi who derived the 13.3 trillionth digit in base 10.9
Unlike most computations of π, which compute results in base 10, PiHex computed in base 2 (bits), because Bellard's formula and the BBP formula could only be used to compute π in base 2 at the time.10
The final bit strings for each of the three calculations resulted as such:
Percival, Colin. "PiHex- A distributed effort to calculate Pi". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/index.html ↩
Percival, Colin. "PiHex's Top Producers". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/topall.html ↩
Percival, Colin. "About PiHex". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/about.html ↩
The project, named PiHex, took 5 months of real time and a year and a half of computer time to complete Quora Mathology, Feb. 26, 2024 https://mathology.quora.com/The-project-named-PiHex-took-5-months-of-real-time-and-a-year-and-a-half-of-computer-time-to-complete ↩
Percival, Colin. "The five trillionth bit of Pi is '0'". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/announce5t.html ↩
Percival, Colin. "The forty trillionth bit of Pi is '0'". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/announce40t.html ↩
Percival, Colin. "The quadrillionth bit of Pi is '0'". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/announce1q.html ↩
Percival, Colin. "What's New". wayback.cecm.sfu.ca. Retrieved 2017-07-09. http://wayback.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/pihex/news.html ↩
"Pi". http://www.numberworld.org/digits/Pi/ ↩
Weisstein, Eric W. "Digit-Extraction Algorithm". MathWorld. /wiki/Eric_W._Weisstein ↩