Vertiv
E 31U 24IN 32IN BLACK MESH FR MESH RR
Out of Stock
Vertiv E 31U 24 in x 32 in Black Mesh Rack | Floor Standing, Enterprise
Vertiv
MPN: GL600E-2432-B-SQM6MS
$2,355.71$3,571.00
Free shipping on orders over $500
Authorized Dealer — Full manufacturer warranty
Key Features
- 31 U rack height
- 24 in external width
- 32 in external depth
- Mesh front door
- Mesh rear door
- Floor-standing rack enclosure
- Black cabinet finish
- MPN: GL600E-2432-B-SQM6MS
Build a tighter rack footprint without giving up structure. Vertiv E 31U 24 in x 32 in Black Mesh FR Mesh RR is a floor-standing enclosure designed for compact enterprise deployments that still need disciplined cable paths, defined mounting space, and airflow-friendly door construction. With 31 U of capacity, it supports smaller server stacks, network gear, and supporting power equipment in environments where every inch of floor space counts.
The mesh front and rear doors are a practical choice for equipment that depends on ventilation. They help maintain airflow through the cabinet while preserving the enclosed-rack benefits that open frames do not provide. The 24 in width and 32 in depth make this cabinet a strong fit for branch offices, edge rooms, and network closets that need a controlled rack environment without the footprint of a larger enclosure.
For infrastructure teams, this model offers a clear balance: compact size, enclosed protection, and a layout that supports orderly service. It is the kind of rack enclosure that earns its place when you need to standardize a smaller deployment, keep equipment accessible, and avoid the cost and clutter of oversized cabinets.
Ideal For
- Branch office network closet deployment
- Edge computing enclosure for compact hardware stacks
- Small server room rack standardization
- Airflow-focused cabinet for switch and patching installations
Why This Product
- 131 U capacity for compact deployments
- 2Mesh front and rear doors for airflow support
- 324 in width and 32 in depth for smaller footprints
- 4Enclosed cabinet design versus open-frame alternatives