Products: From Beams to Supercomputers

Products: From Beams to Supercomputers

Series: Mining & Materials • Part 11 of 14

Products: From Beams to Supercomputers

Here’s the payoff. We turn sorted earth (Part 2), clean energy (Part 3), and smokeless smelters (Parts 4–6) into objects people touch — rails, bridges, trackers, trucks — and into objects that think — racks and supercomputers. One recipe book, many chapters.

Today’s mission
Map raw → refined → product across four families: Build • Move • Gather • Compute.
Publish pre‑calculated BOMs, footprints, and power.
Show how a supercomputer sits calmly on the same microgrid as beams and glass.

Steel • Al • Cu Glass • Silicon Battery metals Build: Beams • Rails • Panels Move: Mega Vans • Rail • Ropeways Gather: PV • BESS • Transformers Compute: Racks • Cooling • DC Bus

Four product families (one recipe book)

Build — beams, rails, frames, panels

  • H‑beams, plate, hollow sections, rails (Part 5)
  • Solar glass & façade panels (Part 9)
  • Precast blocks & LC³ binders (Part 9)
Ships as standard lengths

Move — trucks, rail, ropeways

  • 200‑t mega vans with 3–5 MWh packs (Part 7)
  • Electric rail spurs, covered conveyors (Part 8)
  • Ropeways for mountains (Part 8)
Motion as microgrid buffer

Gather — PV, storage, power electronics

  • PV modules (Part 3), trackers & mounts
  • BESS pods, transformers, switchgear
  • District heat from process recovery
Energy → everything

Compute — racks, fabrics, cooling

  • Liquid‑cooled racks (80–120 kW each typical planning)
  • Rear‑door HEX / cold plates / immersion options
  • 380–800 V DC bus, or AC ring with rectifiers
Waste heat warms neighbors

Quick BOMs (indicative, pre‑calculated)

1 km of double‑track rail (build)

Item Qty Notes
Rails (60 kg/m) ~120 t Two rails × 1,000 m
Sleepers + fasteners ~160–220 t Concrete/steel mix
Copper signaling cable ~0.6–1.2 t Shielded pairs
Power (electrified) as designed MV overhead or third rail

Mass varies with grade/ballast. We standardize lengths for shipping (Part 8).

1 MWp ground PV with trackers (gather)

Item Qty Notes
Modules ~1,800–2,200 panels 450–550 W class
Module mass ~45–60 t Glass+frame (Part 9)
Steel/alum. mounts ~60–100 t Galv. steel + Al rails
Copper ~1.2–2.0 t Strings + combiner to inverter
Inverters/transformer ~1 set 1–1.5 MVA

Area: ~1.6–2.2 ha (ground mount). Numbers keep with earlier posts.

200‑t Mega Van (move)

Subsystem Spec Notes
Main battery ~3–5 MWh Pack mass ~21–36 t
Flywheel pod 30–50 kWh • 2–5 MW Peak buffering
Motors 4 in‑wheel Vector control
Regen ~70% downhill Protects brakes

Charging: 1.5–2.5 MW pads; optional 2–3 MW uphill trolley (Part 7).

Compute rack (80 kW, liquid‑cooled)

Item Qty / Mass Notes
Frame (Al + steel) ~300–500 kg Extrusions + sheet
Copper (bus + cables) ~40–80 kg Depends on topology
Cold plates/HEX ~60–120 kg Al/Cu mix
IT electronics ~400–800 kg Boards, drives, optics
Max heat to loop ~80 kW 45–60 °C outlet typical

Racks can run higher than 80 kW; we pick plan values for calm microgrids.

Product kits (ready‑to‑ship compositions)

Bridge‑in‑a‑Box (200 m span)

Component Spec Pods needed
Girders & H‑beams ~1,800–2,400 t steel LP(section mill), PP‑20
Deck panels precast LC³ LP(precast), HP‑20
Railings & bolts aluminum + steel LP(fab)
Lighting & sensors low‑voltage CP (controls)

Ships in standard lengths; site cranes + torque checklist; zero smoke.

Solar Farm 100 MWp (single‑axis)

Component Qty Notes
PV modules ~180–220k 500–550 W class
Mount steel/Al ~6–10 kt Galv. sections + Al rails
Inverters/transformers ~70–100 MVA Central/string mix
Site BESS ~100–200 MWh Grid smoothing
Area ~1.8–2.4 km² Layout dependent

Built by pods from Parts 3, 5, 9, and 10.

Rail Spur 50 km (bulk corridor)

Item Qty Notes
Rail steel ~6,000 t 60 kg/m class
Sleepers/ballast ~8–11 kt Civil by terrain
Electrification as designed MV line + substations

Pairs with ropeways/conveyors for mountains (Part 8).

Edge Supercomputer 20 MW (compute)

Component Spec Notes
Racks ~250 @ 80 kW Liquid‑cooled
Power path 380–800 V DC or AC→DC Ring topology
Cooling ~0.4–0.8 MW pumps ~2–4% of IT load
Daily energy ~480 MWh 20 MW × 24 h
PV min ~103 MWp 20×5.14 rule
Storage (12 h) ~240 MWh Site battery

Waste heat goes to district loop (Part 9), keeping neighbors toasty.

Supercomputer campus (calm, hot, helpful)

Architecture

  • Power: PV + BESS + MV ring; optional DC bus to PDUs.
  • Cooling: cold plates + rear‑door HEX; 45–60 °C water to heat network.
  • PUE target: ~1.05–1.12 (liquid done right).
  • Fabric: optical spine; copper only where short.
Predictable 24/7 load

Materials snapshot (20 MW build)

Material Approx. Mass Where it lives
Aluminum ~30–60 t Racks, cold plates, frames
Steel ~50–100 t Frames, cable trays, shells
Copper ~15–35 t Busbars, cables, motors
Glass & panels ~10–20 t Doors, displays, optics

The atoms are familiar — we already made them clean in Parts 5–9.

Why DC distribution?
Fewer conversions, easier storage coupling, and friendly to PV/BESS. AC works too — we pick what keeps losses down and maintenance boring.

Shipping & staging (how the products travel)

TEU counts (typical)

Product kit TEU Heaviest piece
Bridge‑in‑a‑Box ~120–180 ~40 t girder
Solar Farm 100 MWp ~1,000–1,600 Transformer 40–80 t (OD)
Rail Spur 50 km ~600–900 Rail bundles ~25–30 t
Supercomputer 20 MW ~120–220 Chiller/HEX skid 15–25 t

OD = over‑dimensional; those go on modular trailers, not boxes.

Staging choreography

  • Products arrive as pods & pallets with barcoded kitting.
  • On‑site, the same MEC ports (Part 10) feed fabrication tents and finishing lines.
  • Commission with a ballet, not a scramble: scan → set → plug → test.
Standards make it easy

Tap‑to‑open Q&A

“Isn’t a supercomputer too ‘delicate’ for an industrial campus?”
It loves it here. The compute hall wants constant clean power and quiet water loops — exactly what our PV/BESS pods and heat pods provide. Waste heat is a feature, not a bug.
“What changes when products evolve?”
The line pod. Beams stay beams; racks stay racks. We swap casters/laminators/ER stacks or compute sleds without rewriting the campus.
“Where do the chips come from?”
From whichever foundry respects the planet and our standards. Our job here is the power, cooling, metals, glass, and assembly — we make a beautiful, efficient home for silicon.

Up next — Circular Industry: Waste = Input (Part 12 of 14). We’ll close every loop: scrap to melt, heat to neighbors, water to water — nothing wasted, everything working.

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