Below-zero temperatures. Scorching heat. Constant humidity. Vibrations that would make any circuit tremble…
And yet, electronics keep working.
How do they do it?
Welcome to the fascinating world of electronics in extreme environments, where every component becomes a small technological hero. And where the engineering that was born in railways now travels across the seas and ventures into the energy sector.
The Train: A Laboratory of Resilience
Trains are not a friendly place for electronics. They vibrate, heat up, cool down, and are exposed to dust, humidity, and thousands of hours of continuous use.
To survive there, equipment must comply with very strict standards, such as EN 50155, which governs how onboard electronic systems should perform.
Every time a passenger rides a modern train, dozens of devices work simultaneously: controlling air conditioning, lighting, braking systems, or internal communications. Everything must work flawlessly.
This high demand makes railways an ideal testing ground for developing robust technology. And it is precisely this learning that now allows many of these solutions to go beyond the tracks.
From Steel to Saltwater: When Electronics Go Maritime
The maritime sector presents a different challenge: here, there are no constant vibrations, but there is a persistent and invisible enemy—salt corrosion—along with voltage fluctuations and constant humidity.
Interestingly, much of the electronics that now sails was born on rails.
Systems designed to withstand the rattling and dust of trains adapt surprisingly well to the marine environment, with the added use of protective coatings, anti-corrosive materials, and sealed designs.
In this way, railway knowledge is “marinized” to endure on deck.
Same principle: absolute reliability under harsh conditions.
Energy Under Pressure: Control That Never Shuts Down
In the energy sector, the challenge is different: maintaining control, always.
Whether in a solar plant in the middle of the desert or an electrical substation under torrential rain, electronics must continue measuring, communicating, and regulating without pause.
Here, the key words are redundancy and resilience.
Systems are designed to remain operational even if part of them fails, and to withstand electromagnetic interference or voltage spikes that could disable conventional equipment.
Technology That Survives Its Environment
In all these sectors—railways, maritime, and energy—electronics becomes a form of resilience.
Behind every circuit are hours of engineering, precisely selected materials, and tests simulating the harshest imaginable conditions.
What Electronics in Extreme Environments Teaches Us
Beyond its applications, electronics designed for extreme environments offers a broader lesson:
Innovation is not always about creating something new, but about making things last longer, perform better, and endure more.
From trains to the sea, and from the sea to energy, engineering continues finding ways to make the impossible work… even when the environment seems determined to do the opposite.