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Intel United States

Intel Is Trucking a 916,000-Pound 'Super Load' Across Ohio To Its New Fab (tomshardware.com) 51

Intel has begun ferrying around 20 "super loads" across Ohio for the construction of its new $28 billion Ohio One Campus. The extensive planning and coordination required for these shipments are expected to cause road closures and delays during the nine days of transport. Tom's Hardware reports: Intel's new campus coming to New Albany, OH, is in heavy construction, and around 20 super loads are being ferried across Ohio's roads by the Ohio Department of Transportation after arriving at a port of the Ohio River via barge. Four of these loads, including the one hitting the road now, weigh around 900,000 pounds -- that's 400 metric tons, or 76 elephants. The super loads were first planned for February but were delayed due to the immense planning workload. Large crowds are estimated to accumulate on the route, potentially slowing it even further.

Intel's 916,000-pound shipment is a "cold box," a self-standing air-processor structure that facilitates the cryogenic technology needed to fabricate semiconductors. The box is 23 feet tall, 20 feet wide, and 280 feet long, nearly the length of a football field. The immense scale of the cold box necessitates a transit process that moves at a "parade pace" of 5-10 miles per hour. Intel is taking over southern Ohio's roads for the next several weeks and months as it builds its new Ohio One Campus, a $28 billion project to create a 1,000-acre campus with two chip factories and room for more. Calling it the new "Silicon Heartland," the project will be the first leading-edge semiconductor fab in the American Midwest, and once operational, will get to work on the "Angstrom era" of Intel processes, 20A and beyond.
The Ohio Department of Transportation has shared a timetable for how long this process will take.
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Intel Is Trucking a 916,000-Pound 'Super Load' Across Ohio To Its New Fab

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  • I watched them move Endeavor and that giant rock across LA (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levitated_Mass) but that was a mere 380 tons.

    • I saw both. The rock cracked the avenue as it passed by, and the cracks are still there. Watching the teams of semi tractors slowly moving along in formation with all their flashers on reminded me a heavy metal version of the Electric Light parade at Disneyland. The Endeavor prime mover was elegant as the dozens of wheels synchronized the criss-cross of the boulevard to avoid poles and trees. In both cases worker teams went along and trimmed branches or unlugged poles to tilt them out of the way when necess

  • by cephalien ( 529516 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @07:37PM (#64545027)

    I wish my mom had said she was moving.

  • by penguinoid ( 724646 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @07:46PM (#64545043) Homepage Journal

    Aye that's the length of a football field, 1/8th the width of a football field, and weighs in at three score and sixteen elephants. It's also 0.035 furlongs high, but I can't remember how high that is in football fields.

  • Egyptians Needed (Score:4, Informative)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @08:16PM (#64545105) Homepage Journal

    The Kemite Egyptians moved 1300 *ton* stones 600 miles across the land.

    Whomever made the structure at Balbek moved a 3000 ton stone from Egypt and up a thousand foot hill to build a foundation.

    These guys had expensive tastes.

    We can't do that yetagain but hopefully we figure it out soon.

    • by cirby ( 2599 )

      Baalbek's foundation was made from three 1000+ ton stones, not a single 3000 ton stone. (Each stone was 19x4x4 meters.)

      Still an amazing feat, though.

      You'd be surprised how well a bunch of people can move something heavy, though (as long as you don't need it to move very fast).

    • or rather we know there was a dozen or so methods they had available to move the stones. The only debate among historians is which method they used, because they had several available to them they could have and would have used.

      It's like how we don't know exactly how life started on Earth because there's too many possibilities that all lead to the exact same result of me sitting here typing this out :).
    • by jonadab ( 583620 )
      > We can't do that yetagain but hopefully we figure it out soon.

      We have the *technology* to do that, we just don't have the proper socioeconomic structure. What you have to do is take all the resources and power away from everyone that has any, and give it all to a very small number of people (preferably, just one person) and make everyone else do *whatever* that person says, on pain of death. This allows you to divert a two-digit percentage of the GDP of an entire empire, to a megabuild project.

      If you
  • by silvergig ( 7651900 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2024 @10:25PM (#64545297)

    "But I have never beamed up 400 tons before"
    "400 tons?"
    "It's not just the whales, it's the water!"
  • That way they can calculate how much power the hotel will need to provide so that they can slightly beat an AMD Ryzen while overlooked during upcoming trade shows on one specific benchmark...

    BTW I delivered a "super load" on your mom's face

  • I have a theory that the standard US journalism curriculum includes a section on measuring things in football fields and other wacko units to prove to the world that an American wrote the article.

  • Who is building these assemblies?

    What companies?

    Where are they located?

    • Hard to tell who Intel uses, but the big players in this area are Linde , Air Liquide, Matheson, and a few others. Linde makes theirs in Florida I think.
  • by jimbobxxx ( 1019396 ) on Thursday June 13, 2024 @06:54AM (#64545867)

    transit process that moves at a “parade pace” of 5-10 miles per hour

    I would consider 5 miles/hour to be a fast walking pace.

    10 miles/hour is a decent running pace. (You would be doing around an 18 minute 5K race - which in my book is pretty pacey).

    I would like to see a marching band at 10 mph.

    • by jonadab ( 583620 )
      The military could probably pull that off. It's basically a ruck march, with a few adjustments to the uniform and what gear you are carrying.
  • by Un-Thesis ( 700342 ) * on Thursday June 13, 2024 @10:22AM (#64546307) Homepage

    This article took down the entire https://www.transportation.ohi... [ohio.gov] ...

    It's the first time I've seen Slashdot cause The Slashdot Effect in years and years...

  • This sounds like the exact use case for a heavy-lift airship (CargoLifter, LTA Research, etc.). Too bad those don't exist... :(

    Hollywood suggests half a dozen Chinoook helicopters.
  • I assumed this was EUV technology or something. Not a 'really, really big + good freezer'. Can't you just assemble more of it on site?

    Guess an infographic would be kind of useful for it. A general layout of what is where, and why this can't be done with lots of smaller units or something. Should make it cheaper to repair and maintain if they could too.

    • It's a giant air distillation column. It pulls purified O2, Ar, and N2 out of the air. It must be cheaper than getting bottled gasses from the nornal gas supply companies.

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