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Your AI Rack’s Power Surge Happens Every Boot. Here’s What It Looks Like.

Untitled — Enova Technologies

Managing Inrush Current in AI GPU Data Centers

AI GPU servers like the NVIDIA H100 and A100 draw massive power spikes during startup, creating infrastructure challenges that can damage equipment and disrupt operations. Understanding and controlling inrush current is critical for data center operators managing high-performance computing workloads at scale.

The Raritan PX4 intelligent power distribution unit provides real-time monitoring and management of inrush current surges that reach 3-5 times steady-state current levels. By delivering precise power sequencing and load balancing across AI racks, this technology prevents breaker trips, protects sensitive hardware, and optimizes your data center’s power efficiency during peak demand periods.


Enova Technologies  |  Raritan PX4

Your AI Rack’s Power Surge Happens Every Boot. Here’s What It Looks Like.

Inrush Current (AI GPU Server)

Inrush current is the brief peak current drawn by a device at the moment of power-on, as internal capacitors charge from zero. In AI GPU servers carrying hardware such as NVIDIA H100 or A100 GPUs, this peak reaches 3 to 5 times the rated steady-state current and lasts 20 to 50 milliseconds. It occurs at every boot and power cycle. Standard PDUs polling at 1-second intervals do not capture it. Intelligent PDUs with dedicated inrush measurement circuitry, such as the Raritan PX4, log it per outlet in real time.

Every time an AI GPU server powers on, the first 20 to 50 milliseconds look nothing like steady-state operation. Current spikes to three, four, sometimes five times the rated draw before settling. That spike happens at every boot, every restart, every power cycle.

Most PDUs measure RMS current at polling intervals of one second or longer. By the time the interval fires, the inrush has already passed and the outlet reads normal. The event never appears in the logs.

In a dense AI rack, this is not a minor visibility gap. It is the reason circuit breakers trip during planned maintenance, after power restoration, and during staggered cluster restarts where the sequencing window is tighter than expected.

Per-outlet measurement, 0–150ms window from power-on event

0A 0ms 25ms 50ms 100ms 150ms Steady-state (1×) Standard server: ~3× rated AI GPU server: 3–5× rated Standard server AI GPU server

A standard server peaks at roughly 3× rated current on startup. An AI GPU server carrying H100 or A100 hardware peaks at 3–5×, with a longer decay window due to larger onboard capacitor banks. Standard PDU polling (1-second cycle) misses the event entirely.

Eight GPU servers, one 32A circuit: simultaneous vs sequenced power-on

Simultaneous Boot

32A circuit limit S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7 S8

Cumulative inrush exceeds circuit rating

Breaker trips before any server finishes booting

Sequenced Boot (PX4)

32A circuit limit S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7 S8

Peak load stays within safe margin

PX4 per-outlet delay prevents cumulative inrush

Standard PDU vs Raritan PX4, same boot event, same outlet

Standard PDU Log

12:04:01  OUT-03  310W  NORMAL

12:04:02  OUT-03  316W  NORMAL

12:04:03  OUT-03  OFF    POWER-ON

12:04:04  OUT-03  308W  NORMAL

12:04:05  OUT-03  311W  NORMAL

Inrush window (20–50ms) falls between polling intervals. Event not recorded.

Raritan PX4 Log

12:04:01  OUT-03  310W  NORMAL

12:04:02  OUT-03  316W  NORMAL

12:04:03  OUT-03  OFF    POWER-ON

12:04:03  OUT-03  INRUSH-PEAK  4.7×

12:04:04  OUT-03  308W  NORMAL

Peak current captured mid-event. Stored against the outlet for capacity review.

The PX4 uses dedicated inrush measurement circuitry that operates independently of the standard telemetry polling cycle. Peak current is captured the moment a power-on event is detected at an outlet, and stored against it for later review via the web interface, API, or Sunbird DCIM integration.

What your PDU can tell you about AI GPU server power behaviour

Capability Standard PDU Raritan PX4
Steady-state RMS per outlet
Inrush current measurement per outlet
Peak current capture at boot event
Remote outlet control for boot sequencing
Configurable per-outlet power-on delay
Total harmonic distortion (per outlet)
Metering accuracy (IEC 62053-21)
The surge is real. It happens at every boot. A standard PDU never sees it because it resolves faster than the polling interval. That invisibility is not a minor gap. It is the difference between a planned boot sequence and a breaker trip at 2AM.

Common Questions

What is inrush current in AI GPU servers?

Inrush current is the brief, high-amplitude current spike that occurs when a device powers on. In AI GPU servers such as those carrying NVIDIA H100 or A100 GPUs, this spike reaches 3 to 5 times the rated steady-state draw and lasts for 20 to 50 milliseconds as internal capacitor banks charge. It happens at every boot, restart, or power cycle.

Why do standard PDUs fail to detect GPU server inrush current?

Standard PDUs measure RMS current at polling intervals of one second or longer. The inrush event from an AI GPU server lasts 20 to 50 milliseconds. The spike completes before the next polling cycle fires, so the PDU records only the settled steady-state value and logs the outlet as normal. The inrush event does not appear in the log.

How can simultaneous GPU server boot cause a circuit breaker trip?

When multiple AI GPU servers on the same circuit power on simultaneously, their individual inrush spikes combine into a cumulative peak. A single AI GPU server drawing 5× its 6A rated current contributes 30A of inrush. Eight servers doing so at the same time exceeds a typical 32A circuit rating, tripping the breaker even though the steady-state load is well within capacity.

How does the Raritan PX4 measure inrush current?

The Raritan PX4 uses dedicated inrush measurement circuitry that operates independently of the standard telemetry polling cycle. When a power-on event is detected at an outlet, the PX4 captures the peak current value in real time and stores it against the outlet record. This data is available via the PX4 web interface, API, and DCIM integrations such as Sunbird.

What is boot sequencing and how does the PX4 support it?

Boot sequencing is the practice of powering on servers with a deliberate delay between each outlet activation, preventing cumulative inrush from exceeding the circuit rating. The Raritan PX4 supports per-outlet configurable power-on delay, allowing each server to complete its inrush window before the next device powers on. This keeps peak load within safe margins across the circuit.

Is the Raritan PX4 suitable for high-density AI GPU rack deployments?

Yes. The Raritan PX4 is designed for high-density deployments where per-outlet instrumentation, inrush capture, and remote outlet control are essential. It supports metering accuracy to IEC 62053-21 (±0.5%), integrates with Sunbird DCIM for capacity planning, and operates reliably in racks exceeding 20kW. Enova Technologies is an authorised Raritan partner in Singapore and deploys PX4 across data centre environments in the region.