this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2025
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I don't, but these new tariffs don't match what we'd had before.
The closest I can think of is one scheme to avoid aluminum import tariffs. A company cut bar stock into longer lengths and did the cheapest/fastest/worst job of spot welding them together into the shape of a finished good (a chair or table, can't remember). The "chairs" were imported, then the receiving company simply broken the simple spot welds and fed the again-bar-stock into manufacturing processes.
It would be cheaper, but not inexpensive. This would require setting up an entire manufacturing assembly line to create and assemble the carrier product, and a reciprocal dis-assembly line on the other side to reclaim the desired CPU part. Its doable, but quite a bit of additional expense when the straight non-bypass method is a robot removing a CPU from a tray and inserting it directly into the finished product. Would it be worth it? Potentially yes! That's why I made my first post here on the topic.
Lol. That's basically the same thing as I suggested for PC part swaps.
Thanks for the example. Let's see what happens w/ the tariffs and how industry responds, because I highly doubt datacenters would be happy paying 2x for their parts.