Data Center CNC Machining Kings Mountain NC | Precision Parts for Power and Cooling | Farris Group
What machined parts show up most often in data center construction?
When you support data center construction, you deal with tight timelines, specialized equipment, and long-lead procurement. Data center projects are fast-paced and high-stakes, especially for logistics and supply chain management, and that proactive procurement matters.
Machined parts in this environment often tie into:
- Power distribution hardware and mechanical support points
- Cooling system brackets, plates, and interface components
- Skid-mounted equipment bases and alignment components
- Precision spacers, bushings, and mounting elements that support service access
You need parts that fit the first time, because rework creates schedule risk during preconstruction, installation, and closeout.
Every project runs within an ISO 9001:2015 certified quality system.
How do you machine components that support power, cooling, and redundancy requirements?
Data center design emphasizes reliable power, cooling, redundancy, and scalability. If you are machining parts that support these systems, process control matters. Farris Group’s machining capability is positioned within an ISO-certified contract manufacturing environment.
For prismatic components, you rely on multi-axis milling strategies that protect flatness, perpendicularity, and hole-pattern accuracy. For round parts, CNC turning maintains diameters, runout, and concentricity so assemblies align and remain serviceable.
If your data center build includes modular strategies, machining can support repeatable modules and standardized component families that match scalable deployment patterns. Modular construction is an emerging approach that can reduce on-site work and support adaptability.
How do inspection plans help data center teams reduce installation friction?
You reduce friction by linking inspection plans to critical features. Datums, hole positions, bore sizes, and interface surfaces drive fit across power and cooling assemblies. Inspection reporting can be formatted around ballooned drawings so engineering and field teams can approve parts quickly.
Rigorous quality control and inspections during project closeout are vital to protect long-term reliability and safety. You can align machining documentation to that same mindset, especially when closeout packages and audit trails matter.
How does FedLinks status fit into data center procurement workflows?
If your data center project includes public funding or regulated procurement, vendor documentation becomes part of delivery success. Farris Group blog content states the company is a FedLinks Verified Federal Vendor, positioned to support compliant operations and traceability.
That can translate into clear inspection summaries, material certifications when required, and consistent labeling for staged deliveries.
If you want a machining-for-data-center scope review, call 704-629-4879 or submit drawings through Farrisgrp.com.
Delivery & Service Areas: United States; Mexico; Western Europe.
Frequently Asked Questions about Kings Mountain, NC Data Center Fabrication
Can Farris Group support repeated part families for modular data center construction?
Yes. Repeatable programs and inspection plans support modular and scalable deployment patterns.
Can Farris Group format inspection reports for fast approvals?
Yes. Reports can map to critical features and ballooned drawings when provided.
Can parts ship in kits aligned to install sequence?
Yes. Kitting can follow room, skid, or zone-based staging.



