How an Industrial scale deployment fits into a modern mining setup

Photo: im4t00l / Flickr · CC BY-SA 2.0
The industrial scale deployment has quietly become table stakes, but most setups still get judged on the wrong criteria.
What an industrial scale deployment actually does
Strip away the branding and an industrial scale deployment is really a tool for space, density and deployment. Judge it on how well it does that before anything else.
Floor space, weight and airflow add up fast; the wrong industrial scale deployment caps how many units you can run long before your power does.
What to look for
When you put an industrial scale deployment through its paces, weigh it against the things that bite in production rather than the ones that demo well:
- Rack density versus the airflow and service access you actually need
- Structural, fire and electrical code for the space you are converting
- How cleanly it scales from a handful of units to a full room
- Portability and lead time if the site or the power deal changes
- Total cost per slot once cooling, wiring and mounting are counted
Common mistakes
The usual trap is optimising for the happy path. An industrial scale deployment that looks great on the bench can fall apart the moment heat, dust and 24/7 load build up — which is exactly when it matters most. Test it under sustained load, in real ambient conditions, and on the messiest power you actually have.
The bottom line
Run any industrial scale deployment at small scale first. The spec sheet never mentions the failure modes — your own logs and your power meter will.



