Support for obsolete servo drives and motion control hardware
Servo systems fail in ways that create immediate operational pressure. A single failed drive can stop a packaging machine, machine tool, robotic cell or coordinated axis application long before the rest of the automation stack becomes the limiting factor. That is why servo drive spare parts sourcing often arrives with high urgency.
We support requests involving obsolete servo drives, motion controllers and hard-to-find supporting electronics used in legacy and mixed-generation automation systems. The objective is not only to locate stock, but to move the request toward a viable recovery path as quickly as possible.
Motion failures demand a fast and practical sourcing path
When motion control goes down, downtime costs usually escalate fast because the affected machine is often central to throughput, positioning accuracy or cycle timing. Our process helps teams structure the request around the failed reference, motion family context and operating urgency so sourcing can begin without unnecessary back-and-forth.
This is especially important where servo hardware is older, retrofit history is incomplete or multiple machine generations are in service at once. In those cases, obsolete servo drives may still be operationally essential even if the OEM portfolio has moved on.
Useful for both reactive breakdowns and risk-based stocking
Not every request starts with a catastrophic failure. Some teams are reviewing high-risk servo axes and trying to secure critical spare parts before the next event. Others already have a stopped machine and need options immediately. Both situations benefit from a sourcing process that is aligned with uptime, response speed and realistic lead-time visibility.
Whether your environment uses Yaskawa, Lenze, Siemens, ABB, Mitsubishi or other motion platforms, this page is built to connect servo drive spare parts intent with a quote path that maintenance and purchasing teams can actually use.