iWebFusion refreshes its dedicated server lineup across five US locations for growing businesses
iWebFusion has quietly done something a lot of infrastructure buyers have been waiting for. Specifically, the US-based provider just refreshed its dedicated server clearance program, and as a result, the updated lineup covers considerably more ground than before, from entry-level hardware for smaller teams to AMD EPYC-powered systems built for workloads that need serious core counts.
The hardware range itself is worth walking through carefully. On the lighter end, configurations start with Intel E3-1230 series processors and between 16GB and 32GB of RAM, which suits developers and smaller hosting operations that do not need more than they actually use. Step up from there, and dual Intel Xeon E5 setups and Core i7-7700K platforms take over, handling up to 128GB RAM and 30TB of monthly traffic.
At the top end, meanwhile, dual Intel Gold and Platinum processor systems bring NVMe storage and up to 512GB RAM for workloads that chew through resources quickly. The AMD tier, furthermore, featuring Ryzen 9 and EPYC hardware, pushes the core count up to 128, which is the range where virtualization environments and containerized pipelines start to breathe more easily.
Five US data center locations cover the geographic spread: Bend, Charlotte, Los Angeles, Monticello, and Las Vegas. For companies with users distributed across different parts of the country, that variety genuinely matters. In practice, picking a server location closer to where most traffic originates cuts latency in ways that are easy to measure and hard to replicate through software alone.
Beyond the core hardware, customers can additionally choose 10Gbps uplinks, extra IPv4 addresses, SAN storage, RAID configurations with hardware RAID and battery backup, managed services, and licensed operating systems including Windows Server and CloudLinux. Moreover, billing runs quarterly, semi-annual, or annually, with volume discounts available for longer commitments.
A spokesperson noted the program targets a broad range of customers, from growing businesses to hosting companies that need stable US-based infrastructure at predictable costs. That last point, predictable costs, tends to be what pushes teams away from cloud and toward dedicated hardware once their workloads stabilize enough to make the math work in their favor.
Consequently, for teams sitting at that crossover point, the refreshed lineup gives them more concrete options to land on the right configuration without overpaying for headroom they will never use.

