Power & Cooling

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Advanced power and cooling needs are on the rise. We can help design your environment to reliably run and remain cool while carrying growing workloads.

Power & Cooling Solutions

Everything your power and cooling environment needs, from initial design through deployment, monitoring, and every expansion in between.

Client OutcomeHow Paragon Micro Delivers

A long term commercial customer turned a 6 plus year VMware environment into a faster, stronger, more resilient infrastructure platform.

The Situation

A long term customer was ready to retire server and storage infrastructure that had carried the business for more than 6 years.
They needed more speed, higher storage performance, stronger network throughput, and better disaster recovery without disrupting critical applications.

The Outcome

Paragon Micro built and delivered a complete refresh designed for performance, continuity, and long term reliability.
The customer now operates on a modern infrastructure foundation supported by expert planning, proven vendor direction, and hands on delivery.
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Components: HPE DL360 Servers | Aruba 25GBE Switching | HPE Alletra MP All Flash Storage | VMware Hosting Infrastructure | Disaster Recovery Planning | Implementation Services

Customer Success Highlight

“Paragon Micro gave us clear guidance, understood what mattered, and delivered a solution our team trusted.”

Downtime Starts
Before The Outage.

Most data center outages do not start with the server. They start with power instability and thermal stress that go unnoticed until operations are already at risk. Paragon Micro treats power and cooling as first tier infrastructure from day one, helping prevent downtime, protect equipment, and reduce the operational fallout that comes when supporting systems fail.
IT Pain Points Sequence Chart

POWER FAILS

52% of data center outages are tied to power issues.

COOLING LIMITS

Cooling uses roughly 40% of data center energy.

AI BREAKS DESIGN

AI racks are pushing beyond 30 kW, with some GPU racks reaching 142 kW today.

DOWNTIME BLEEDS

54% of serious outages cost more than $100,000.

GRID COSTS RISE

U.S. electricity prices rose 17.2% since 2018.

Sources: Uptime Institute

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How We Help Build the Right Solution for You

Our Solution Architects design resilient power and cooling systems built for uptime, density, and growth without thermal risk or capacity surprises.

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Why Paragon Micro?

Paragon Micro designs power and cooling around the failure scenarios, load demands, and growth pressures that put critical infrastructure at risk before an outage happens. From UPS and precision cooling to DCIM visibility and redundancy planning, we help teams keep data center environments protected, cooled, and constant when uptime matters most.

We design for failure scenarios.

Resilient environments are not built by hoping nothing goes wrong. We design power and cooling architecture that accounts for failure modes, redundancy, load distribution, and thermal headroom long before a single rack goes in, so recovery is always an option.

We match design to actual load.

Standard per-rack power envelopes do not account for high-density AI and GPU compute. We model your actual thermal and power load; including peak demand and future expansion so the infrastructure you build today does not limit what you can run tomorrow.

We give you visibility, not guesswork.

Real-time monitoring across power draw, thermal load, and environmental conditions means you know what your facility is doing before it tells you by failing. We integrate DCIM and management platforms that give your team the data to act, not react.

FAQsUPS & Power Protection

How do we determine the right UPS capacity and configuration for our environment?

We start with your actual load not your theoretical maximum. That means auditing current power draw across every critical system, identifying growth projections, and calculating the runtime requirements your operations actually need during an outage. From there, we size the UPS platform and determine whether N+1 or 2N redundancy is appropriate based on your uptime requirements and budget. Oversizing a UPS is as much a problem as undersizing it — we get the number right.

Our UPS batteries are aging but the units still work. How do we know when replacement becomes urgent?

Battery degradation is gradual and largely invisible until a real power event exposes it. Most UPS batteries have a design life of 3 to 5 years, but their actual capacity degrades well before then, particularly in environments with high ambient temperatures. We conduct load bank testing and battery health assessments that tell you exactly how much runtime you actually have versus what the display panel shows. That gap is usually where organizations get caught off guard during an outage.

We have multiple sites with different power requirements. Can you manage UPS refresh across a distributed environment?

Yes, and we specifically plan for consistency across sites. We assess each location independently — load profile, runtime requirements, physical constraints, and criticality then build a refresh program that standardizes where it makes sense and customizes where it does not. Centralized monitoring across all sites is built into the design, so your team has one view of UPS health across the entire estate.

FAQsPrecision Cooling & Thermal Management

Our existing CRAC units are struggling to keep up with heat loads from newer equipment. What are our options?

When legacy room cooling can no longer keep pace with density, the answer is usually supplemental or replacement precision cooling closer to the heat source. In-row cooling, rear-door heat exchangers, and targeted airflow management can dramatically improve thermal performance without requiring a full facility redesign. We assess your current airflow patterns, hot-spot locations, and equipment density before recommending an approach because the right solution depends heavily on your specific layout and rack loading.

We are planning to deploy GPU compute nodes. How does that change our cooling requirements?

Significantly. Standard data center cooling is designed around four to ten kilowatts per rack. High-density GPU nodes can push thirty to forty kilowatts or higher per rack, which traditional air cooling cannot handle efficiently or economically at that density. We design the thermal infrastructure around the actual GPU load, including rear-door heat exchangers, in-row liquid-assisted cooling, and in some cases direct liquid cooling before the equipment goes in, not after it starts throttling.

How do you approach hot and cold aisle containment as part of a cooling upgrade?

Containment is almost always the first intervention we recommend because it delivers the highest impact for the lowest cost. Uncontained aisles mix hot exhaust with cold supply air, forcing cooling systems to work significantly harder than necessary. We assess your current airflow discipline, identify containment gaps, and design a containment approach, whether blanking panels, aisle containment systems, or a hybrid that improves cooling efficiency immediately and reduces the load on your mechanical systems.

FAQsPower Distribution (PDU)

What is the difference between basic, metered, and switched PDUs and how do we know which we need?

Basic PDUs distribute power with no visibility or control, making them acceptable for low-criticality environments where remote management is not required. Metered PDUs add outlet-level power monitoring so you can see exactly what each device is drawing in real time, which is valuable for capacity planning and energy reporting. Switched PDUs add remote outlet control, allowing power cycling of individual devices without physical access to the rack. For most enterprise environments, we recommend metering at a minimum and switching wherever remote management of individual devices has operational value.

How do we plan PDU capacity for racks that may need to support higher-density equipment in the future?

Plan for the highest credible load, not the current one. We size PDU capacity around your three- to five-year equipment roadmap, factoring in the power draw of next-generation compute, storage, and networking hardware that may land in those racks. An undersized PDU for future density creates an expensive retrofit problem. Getting it right at the design stage costs nothing extra and eliminates a forced upgrade at the worst possible time.

Our current PDUs have no monitoring capability. Is retrofitting worth it or should we replace them?

It depends on the age and form factor of your existing PDUs and how much visibility your operations team actually needs. For older PDUs that are also approaching end-of-life, replacement with intelligent units is usually the right call, as you get monitoring, outlet control, and a new service lifecycle in one step. For newer basic PDUs with remaining life, add-on monitoring solutions can bridge the gap. We assess both options and provide an honest cost comparison before recommending a direction.

FAQsDCIM & Environmental Monitoring

We currently have no centralized visibility into our data center environment. Where do we start?

Start with sensors. Temperature, humidity, and airflow monitoring at the row and rack level gives you an immediate baseline and identifies thermal hotspots that may already be stressing equipment. From there, integrating power data from intelligent PDUs and UPS platforms builds a complete picture of your environment. We design monitoring deployments in phases, so you get immediate value from day one rather than waiting for a full DCIM platform rollout before anything is visible.

What does a DCIM platform actually give us that we cannot get from individual vendor management tools?

Individual vendor tools give you visibility into a single system in isolation. A DCIM platform correlates data across power, cooling, compute, and environmental sensors into a single operational view — so you can see the relationship between a thermal spike in rack twelve and the power draw from a new workload that landed two rows away. That correlation is where real capacity planning and incident prevention happen. It also gives you a single source of truth for compliance reporting, energy audits, and capacity forecasting.

How do we set alerting thresholds that are actually useful without creating alarm fatigue?

Threshold design is as important as the monitoring itself. We configure alerting in tiers — warning thresholds that give your team advance notice and critical thresholds that require immediate action, with suppression logic that prevents a single event from generating hundreds of duplicate alerts. We also baseline your environment during normal operation before setting thresholds, so the numbers reflect your actual operating envelope rather than generic defaults that trigger constantly or miss real events.

FAQsResilience & Redundancy Planning

How do we determine the right level of redundancy for our environment without overbuilding?

Redundancy requirements should align with the criticality of what you are protecting, not a blanket standard. We work through a tiered classification of your systems, identifying which workloads genuinely require 2N redundancy, which can tolerate N+1, and which are not critical enough to justify the cost of full redundancy at all. That classification drives the infrastructure design and keeps capital investment proportionate to actual business risk rather than worst-case-scenario engineering across every rack in the facility.

We have never formally tested our failover and recovery capabilities. How do you approach that?

With a structured tabletop first, then a controlled live test. We document your current redundancy assumptions, map out every potential failure scenario, power path, cooling, network, UPS, and walk through the expected response before anything is tested in production. That process almost always surfaces gaps between what the design intended and what is actually in place. Live failover testing follows with defined rollback procedures and a monitoring team watching every system in real time throughout.

What is the most commonly overlooked single point of failure in enterprise data center environments?

The transfer switch. Organizations invest heavily in redundant UPS systems and generators, but underestimate the risk sitting in the automatic transfer switch that connects them. A single ATS failure can make dual power paths irrelevant. We include transfer switch assessment in every resilience review and specifically look for environments where a single-path assumption has been hidden inside an otherwise redundant design, which is far more common than most facilities teams realize.

FAQsNew Build & Expansion Support

At what point in a new build or expansion project should we bring in a partner like Paragon Micro?

As early as possible, ideally at the design phase, before any commitments to a facility layout or electrical infrastructure are made. The decisions made in the first thirty days of a build project have the longest-lasting consequences for power capacity, cooling approach, rack density limits, and future expansion headroom. Coming in after the civil work is done significantly narrows what is still changeable. We add the most value when we can influence the design, not just execute against it.

How do you coordinate between IT infrastructure requirements and the facility and construction teams on a new build?

We act as the translation layer. Facility and construction teams work in electrical loads, BTUs, and physical square footage. IT teams work in compute density, network architecture, and application requirements. Those conversations rarely connect cleanly on their own. We translate IT requirements into facility specifications, rack power envelopes, cooling BTU loads, floor weight ratings, cable pathways, and stay engaged with both sides throughout the build to make sure nothing gets lost between disciplines.

How do we future-proof a new build without massively overbuilding for day-one requirements?

Design for density headroom, not for peak load. We right-size the active infrastructure for current and near-term requirements while designing the facility infrastructure electrical capacity, cooling plant, cable pathways — with headroom for the density levels the next generation of compute will demand. That approach avoids the cost of overbuilding day one while ensuring the facility does not need a structural redesign every time rack density increases. The key is knowing which elements are expensive to change later and investing specifically in headroom there.

Ask us about...Configuration, Integration, and End-to-end Support.

From rack power to thermal strategy, Paragon Micro helps bring every element of your data center environment together before deployment.

Power capacity, cooling performance, rack density, space planning, and workload requirements are aligned so infrastructure does not just fit, it performs reliably.

You do not have to coordinate across disconnected vendors, facility teams, and hardware workstreams. We bring it together as one environment planned, integrated, and ready to run.
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DISCUSS YOUR NEXT DECISION

Connect with Paragon Micro to plan, design, and deliver solutions aligned to your environment, your priorities, and what comes next.