
Nate
·shared a thread session in group #ScholER
I was always super skeptical if Boom would ever actually become commercialized, but the power angle might just work.
Best part of this whole thing is that Blake Sholl didn’t start out as an expert on aviation or power
#ScholER

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372107215122910/photo/1
A new product, a new customer, a new financing!
Introducing Superpower: a 42MW natural gas turbine optimized for AI datacenters, built on our supersonic technology. Superpower launches with a 1.21GW order from @CrusoeAI Backstory


@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372111522673038
1/ Three years ago when we started working on our Symphony supersonic engine, we knew that it would one day make for a breakthrough power turbine

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372112856392103
2/ Back then, we registered some energy-related domains and put power on our product roadmap—but expected we'd ship supersonic first, then launch our energy product

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372114991386851
3/ But we've watched an energy crisis develop in America. Our grid has flatlined while China has raced ahead. Hyperscalers have racks of GPUs sitting idle with no electricity to power them


@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372117298208894
4/ Like all great ideas, this started with reading X. As I was pushing to legalize supersonic, I kept hearing about how AI companies couldn't get enough electricity. Both XAi and OpenAI were building their own power plants with large arrays of converted jet engines

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372118636200226
5/ There's something brilliant in this approach: large arrays of mid-size turbines are the blade servers of the energy world. Just as blade servers are more reliable and efficient than mainframes, so would be an array of turbines. But there was a major problem:

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372119932190745
6/ The existing "aeroderivative" turbines were old technology—based literally on 1970s jet engines. This means they didn't perform well in the real world, had no cloud connectivity. Nonetheless, AI companies were snapping up all they could get... engines were effectively old out

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372121572176031
7/ I texted @sama, who had been a Boom investor for more than a decade. Would a 42MW nat gas turbine be helpful? The answer was a resounding yes. 90 days later, we had a launch order for 1.21GW and well over $1.25B in backlog

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372124206211572
8/ Later, we visited @CrusoeAI's data center in Abilene, TX, where they were building one of the first vertically integrated power plants. Many of the pads were sitting empty, waiting for big OEMs to deliver.

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372126022304251
9/ Worse, it was 110°F that day—and the turbines took the heat even worse than the humans. With 1970s tech designed for subsonic flight—where effective temperatures are -50°, the only way to avoid a meltdown was to throttle back.


@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372173493465328
10/ Our engine was designed to run at Mach 1.7, where effective temperatures are 160°F. This means that under real world conditions, four of our Superpower turbines could do the job of seven legacy units. Without the cooling water required by legacy turbines!

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372174785323185
11/ I believe our job @boomsupersonic is to tackle industrial scale product development that others can't or won't. No one else is building a supersonic airliner. No one else was building a new turbine. Even plans to ramp production of existing units were tepid.

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372176211431591
12/ So we decided it was time to pull energy forward in our product roadmap. Shipping our engine first as a power turbine not only solves an acute customer and American paint point—it also solves the biggest problems facing supersonic flight.

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372178304372870
13/ Today's new $300M financing fully funds the Superpower turbine—and Superpower accelerates profitability, allowing us to self-fund Overture supersonic development


@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372180305076301
14/ Additionally, Superpower provides a proving ground for our engine. When it carries passengers, we'll have hundreds of thousands of hours of real world experience, making it the most tested new jet engine ever to carry passengers.

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372182330908903
15/ To overcome supply chain bottlenecks, we're vertically integrating manufacturing. We've already started building the first Superpower turbine, and we're building a new Superfactory in Denver which will make 2GW/year of turbines from raw materials

@bscholl
https://x.com/bscholl/status/1998372184134394228
16/ We'll share more about the Superpower Superfactory early next year. It's time to build supersonic.
