Our factory builds modular data centers. It also builds power distribution for nuclear plants. That sounds like an odd combination. It isn't. The engineering overlap is almost total. Busbar design. Thermal management. Protection coordination. Redundancy architecture. The same principles that keep a nuclear power station's electrical systems safe at 6300 amps apply directly to a data center's power distribution at 2000 amps. Our parent company, Extreme LTD, has been building low-voltage switchboards, diesel gensets, and relay protection panels since 2000. Schneider Electric, ABB, and Cubic certified. Nuclear, oil and gas, thermal power stations. When we started building modular data centers, we didn't need to learn power engineering. We needed to learn IT infrastructure and cooling. The power side was already at a level most DC companies never reach. This is why our modules ship with custom-designed power distribution instead of off-the-shelf PDUs. The team that builds a 6300A main distribution board for a steel mill designs the power path inside your 2 MW data center container. Over-engineering? Maybe. But when your module is deployed at a remote mining site or a military forward operating base, "over-engineered power" is exactly what you want. The depth of engineering in a company matters more than the breadth of its marketing. #Manufacturing #PowerDistribution #ModularDataCenter #Engineering #ExtremeEnvironments