Supermicro detailed new expansions in U.S.-based manufacturing and direct liquid-cooling capabilities to accelerate deployment of next-generation AI infrastructure built around NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin and Rubin platforms. The company said its Data Center Building Block Solutions (DCBBS) architecture, combined with in-house design and manufacturing, shortens production cycles for large-scale, liquid-cooled AI systems aimed at hyperscalers and enterprise customers.
Supermicro said close engineering collaboration with NVIDIA positions it to deliver rack-scale Vera Rubin systems at platform launch, including the flagship Vera Rubin NVL72 SuperCluster and compact HGX Rubin NVL8 platforms. These systems integrate compute, networking, storage, and liquid cooling into validated building blocks, allowing customers to scale AI clusters while managing rising power density, thermal constraints, and deployment timelines.
The company also highlighted advances in its advanced direct liquid cooling stack, including warm-water cooling and in-row coolant distribution units, designed to support high-density AI racks while reducing energy consumption and water usage. Supermicro said these capabilities align with NVIDIA’s next-generation networking roadmap, including Spectrum-X Ethernet and InfiniBand fabrics optimized for large-scale AI training and inference.
- Supermicro expands U.S. manufacturing and liquid-cooling capacity to support NVIDIA Vera Rubin and Rubin platforms
- Vera Rubin NVL72 SuperCluster integrates 72 Rubin GPUs and 36 Vera CPUs with NVLink 6 and scale-out InfiniBand or Ethernet fabrics
- HGX Rubin NVL8 targets enterprise and HPC deployments in a compact 2U liquid-cooled form factor
- Direct liquid cooling enables higher rack density with warm-water operation and lower energy overhead
- Modular DCBBS architecture supports faster configuration, validation, and scaling of AI data center deployments
“Supermicro’s long-standing partnership with NVIDIA and our agile building block solutions enable us to bring the most advanced AI platforms to market faster than others,” said Charles Liang, president and CEO of Supermicro. “With expanded manufacturing and liquid-cooling expertise, we’re helping customers deploy Vera Rubin infrastructure at scale with speed and efficiency.”
🌐 Analysis
This announcement highlights how system vendors increasingly compete on full data center execution rather than server design alone. As NVIDIA’s Rubin generation drives higher rack power densities and tighter integration between compute and networking, suppliers with validated liquid-cooling stacks and domestic manufacturing capacity may reduce deployment risk and shorten time-to-online compared with less vertically integrated competitors.






