GPU ROI Analysis
Three-year TCO delta for consolidating GPU workloads onto VergeOS with NVIDIA vGPU 20. Built for board-level scrutiny.
Twenty-two endpoints. Four cards.
Meridian currently runs fourteen dedicated CAD workstations and eight stand-alone AI inference servers. The roadmap adds 280 engineering VDI seats over twenty-four months. Four RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Server Edition cards in a single 4U chassis replace every endpoint in that footprint with capacity to spare.
Current GPU footprint
| Workload class | Endpoints today | Annual hardware cost |
|---|---|---|
| Dedicated CAD workstations (SolidWorks, Catia) | 14 seats | $92,400 |
| AI inference servers (parts QA, NLP knowledge) | 8 servers | $144,000 |
| Engineering VDI seats (roadmap, none today) | 0 of 280 | $0 |
| Total endpoints | 22 endpoints | $236,400 |
Proposed VergeOS footprint
| Resource | Configuration | Capacity |
|---|---|---|
| RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell SE cards | 4 cards in 4U chassis | 96 GB GDDR7 each |
| MIG partitions per card | 4 hardware-isolated slices | 16 partitions total |
| vGPU profiles per partition | Up to 12 time-sliced | 192 VMs maximum |
| Effective covered workloads | 22 current + 170 of 280 VDI | 192 VMs |
Footprint reduction
Twenty-two dedicated endpoints collapse to one 4U chassis. Phase-two VDI rollout extends to 170 of the 280 planned engineering seats without adding hardware.
Capacity headroom for Phase 2
The 192-VM ceiling on a single 4U chassis leaves headroom for the engineering VDI rollout to start without additional GPU hardware. Year-three growth above 192 concurrent vGPU workloads adds a second chassis at incremental cost rather than a per-seat workstation refresh cycle.
Capacity assumes universal MIG plus vGPU time-slicing as confirmed by NVIDIA in the vGPU 20 release notes. 192 VMs is the documented ceiling; production deployments typically run at 60-75 percent of ceiling for headroom. Meridian-specific consolidation assumes a 12-month roll-forward of the engineering VDI program.
- NVIDIA RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Server Edition specification sheet, March 2026.
- VergeOS 26.1.3 validated configurations matrix.
- Meridian current-state inventory captured during May 14, 2026 Technical Whiteboard Session.
Post-Broadcom pricing is the easiest dollar to recover.
Meridian renewed vSphere Enterprise Plus in Q4 2025 at the post-acquisition price tier, net of a 25 percent negotiated renewal discount. The VergeOS subscription model and the consolidation footprint produce a $700K reduction over three years.
Annual VMware spend — 24 hosts · vSphere Enterprise Plus · vSAN Advanced · vCenter · NSX Standard · 24x7 support · net of 25% discount.
Annual VergeOS spend — 14 nodes at $6,000/node · integrated storage and networking · NVIDIA vGPU 20 · 24x7 support.
Current vSphere posture
| Line item | Quantity | Annual cost |
|---|---|---|
| vSphere Enterprise Plus (per-core) | 24 hosts × 32 cores | $201,600 |
| vSAN Advanced (bundled) | 768 cores | $72,000 |
| vCenter Standard | 1 instance | $6,375 |
| NSX Standard (firewall and segmentation) | 768 cores | $40,800 |
| Production support, 24x7 | Bundle | $43,650 |
| Annual VMware spend (net of 25% discount) | $364,425 |
Proposed VergeOS posture
| Line item | Quantity | Annual cost |
|---|---|---|
| VergeOS subscription (per-node) | 14 nodes × $6,000 | $84,000 |
| NVIDIA vGPU 20 licensing | 192 CCU | $19,200 |
| Production support, 24x7 | Bundle | $28,000 |
| Annual VergeOS spend | $131,200 |
VMware pricing reflects Broadcom's published list price for the per-core Enterprise Plus tier as of March 2026, less Meridian's negotiated 25 percent renewal discount captured during Q4 2025. VergeOS pricing reflects current VergeIO list price at $6,000 per node for the 14-node subscription tier. Both numbers exclude implementation services.
- Broadcom vSphere Foundation pricing, effective March 2026.
- VergeIO standard subscription pricing at $6,000 per node, May 2026.
- Meridian Q4 2025 renewal documentation captured during the Technical Whiteboard Session.
- NVIDIA vGPU 20 concurrent-user licensing, NVIDIA partner portal, May 2026.
The GPU DR runbook is the gap nobody costs.
Meridian's current DR plan covers the vSphere estate end-to-end. GPU workloads sit outside that plan. The current runbook for the eight AI inference servers requires manual GPU reassignment at the recovery site, with an estimated 4-hour recovery time and 24-hour recovery point. The CAD workstations have no DR path at all.
24-hour RPO on AI inference. Manual vGPU device reassignment at recovery site. Sixteen hours of skilled labor per DR exercise. CAD has no DR path.
5-minute RPO. RTO inherits from the standard VergeOS replication path. GPU device configuration travels with the VM. No manual steps. Full coverage.
Risk-adjusted cost of the current gap
Meridian's engineering downtime carries a productivity cost of approximately $18,400 per hour based on the engineering payroll burden distributed across the 280 active seats. AI inference downtime carries an additional throughput cost tied to the parts-QA pipeline. Risk-adjusted over a three-year window assuming one 8-hour incident annually and one 24-hour incident across the period.
| Cost driver | Current state | 3-year risk-adjusted cost |
|---|---|---|
| Engineering downtime (1 incident/yr × 8 hr) | $18,400/hr | $441,600 |
| AI throughput loss (1 incident/3 yr × 24 hr) | $6,200/hr | $148,800 |
| DR exercise labor (quarterly × 16 hr × $165) | 4 exercises/yr | $31,680 |
| Total current-state risk-adjusted cost | $622,080 |
RTO/RPO improvement factor of 0.85 reflects industry-standard risk reduction modeling when recovery time drops by an order of magnitude. Downtime cost per hour is calculated as fully-loaded engineering payroll multiplied by 0.55 productivity recovery factor, sourced from Gartner IT Operations Benchmark 2025. AI throughput cost is conservative; actual cost depends on parts-QA throughput value at production scale.
- Gartner IT Operations Benchmark, 2025 — downtime cost methodology.
- Meridian engineering payroll summary captured during the Technical Whiteboard Session.
- VergeOS replication recovery times, validated configurations, VergeOS 26.1.3 release notes.
Meridian does not have a GPU specialist on staff. With VergeOS, it does not need one.
The expansion of AI inference and the planned engineering VDI rollout would require Meridian to either hire a dedicated GPU operations engineer or engage an external consultant for the deployment and ongoing management. VergeOS removes that requirement by treating GPU as a first-class infrastructure resource managed through the same interface the IT generalists already use.
New headcount required
VergeOS folds GPU management into the existing infrastructure operations role. No GPU operations engineer to hire. No specialist consulting retainer. No certification track for net-new hires.
Headcount and consulting cost without VergeOS
| Role / engagement | Scope | Three-year cost |
|---|---|---|
| GPU Operations Engineer (full-time) | 1 FTE, $185K loaded | $555,000 |
| Or: external consultant for deployment | 4 months × $48K/mo | $192,000 |
| Plus: ongoing managed services | $8K/mo × 36 months | $288,000 |
| Plus: training and certification | 3 staff × $14K each | $42,000 |
| Realistic three-year specialization cost | FTE path | $597,000 |
The FTE path is the more likely Meridian scenario based on the existing IT operations org structure. Either path produces a six-figure cost that does not exist with VergeOS, where GPU management lives inside the standard infrastructure operations role.
Operations cost with VergeOS
| Role | Scope | Three-year cost |
|---|---|---|
| VergeOS administrator (existing IT generalist) | No new headcount required | $0 incremental |
| Initial training (existing staff) | 2-day course, 2 staff | $4,800 |
| Three-year incremental operations cost | $4,800 |
GPU Operations Engineer compensation reflects Robert Half 2026 Technology Salary Guide for the Midwest US market, fully loaded with benefits at 1.35x base. Consulting and managed services rates reflect the published rates of three NVIDIA-authorized service partners. Training cost reflects current NVIDIA vGPU certification course pricing. VergeOS training cost reflects the standard VergeIO administrator course.
- Robert Half 2026 Technology Salary Guide, GPU Operations / DevOps Specialist track.
- Aggregated rates from three NVIDIA-authorized GPU consulting partners, May 2026.
- NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute vGPU certification course pricing.
- VergeIO administrator training program.
Three-year TCO delta, rolled up.
Sections 01 through 04 aggregate to a single positive three-year TCO delta. Section 05 shows the rollup, the VergeOS-side investment that offsets it, and the net number.
Section rollup
VergeOS-side investment
| Line item | Scope | Three-year cost |
|---|---|---|
| RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell SE cards (4) | One-time hardware | $84,000 |
| NVIDIA vGPU 20 licensing | 192 CCU × 3 yr | $57,600 |
| VergeOS subscription (14 nodes × 3 yr) | Already in licensing model | Counted in Section 02 |
| Implementation services (one-time) | VergeIO field engineering | $45,000 |
| Total VergeOS-side investment | $186,600 |
Positive return over three years. Math shown. Assumptions sourced.
This analysis is calibrated conservatively. Engineering productivity, AI throughput, and consulting costs are bracketed against published benchmarks rather than aggressive projections. VMware pricing is net of a 25 percent negotiated discount captured during Meridian's Q4 2025 renewal. The recovery-tier risk adjustment uses an industry-standard 0.85 factor, not a perfect-recovery assumption. Year-four numbers do not appear because the VergeOS subscription model and the vGPU licensing model both bend favorably beyond year three, which would skew the analysis toward VergeOS. Three years was selected to keep the comparison honest.