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Leviton Industrial

Leviton C2623 Locking Connector – Obsolete Industrial Spare Part

Model: C2623 H02106237 & 55605021 Y04511532 0021-53663

Brand Leviton
Series Industrial
Model C2623 H02106237 & 55605021 Y04511532 0021-53663
RFQ-ready model route Obsolete and surplus sourcing Export follow-up by model list

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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

Leviton C2623 Locking Connector – Obsolete Industrial Spare Part

When a locking connector fails on an aging electrical panel or industrial control enclosure, the consequences extend far beyond a simple component swap. For facilities still operating legacy wiring infrastructure built around Leviton's C2623 series, sourcing a direct replacement is no longer a matter of placing a standard purchase order. The C2623 has reached end-of-life status, and its absence from active distribution channels forces plant managers into a difficult choice: absorb the cost of a full panel or system retrofit — often running into hundreds of thousands of dollars in engineering, downtime, and recommissioning — or locate verified surplus stock from a specialist supplier.

DriveKNMS maintains a carefully managed inventory of hard-to-find industrial electrical components, including the Leviton C2623. This is not a commodity listing. Each unit in our stock is individually assessed before dispatch. If your facility depends on this connector to maintain operational continuity, the time to act is before the next failure event, not after.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Detail
Manufacturer Leviton
Part Number C2623
Associated Reference Numbers H02106237 / 55605021 / Y04511532 / 0021-53663
Component Type Locking Connector
Country of Origin United States
Product Status Discontinued / End-of-Life (EOL)
Availability Surplus / Obsolete Stock – Limited Quantity

Note: Electrical parameters (voltage rating, amperage, pole configuration) are not published here to prevent specification errors. Please contact us with your application details for confirmation prior to ordering.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

Leviton's C2623 locking connector was designed for reliable, secure electrical connections in demanding industrial environments. In legacy control panels, motor control centers (MCCs), and field junction enclosures built during the 1990s and 2000s, this connector type was specified as a standard termination point. The mechanical locking mechanism it employs — preventing accidental disconnection under vibration or thermal cycling — is not universally replicated by modern connector families without physical modification to the mating receptacle or cable assembly.

This is the core of the discontinued hardware problem: it is rarely the connector itself that is expensive to replace. It is everything around it. Rewiring a panel to accept a different connector standard requires certified electrical engineering review, potential changes to cable schedules and documentation, and in regulated industries, re-validation of the entire assembly. For a single failed connector, that cost is disproportionate.

Facilities running legacy Leviton wiring systems — particularly those integrated into older SCADA panels, relay logic enclosures, or early-generation PLC cabinets — face this calculation regularly. Maintaining a small buffer stock of C2623 units eliminates the decision entirely. A like-for-like replacement restores function without triggering a change management process.

How to extend your automation asset life by 5–10 years through strategic spare parts management:

  • Identify single points of failure. Audit your legacy panels for connector types that are no longer in active production. The C2623 is one example; there are others. A one-time audit prevents multiple emergency sourcing events.
  • Establish a minimum buffer stock. For critical connectors with no modern drop-in equivalent, holding 3–5 units per panel type is a low-cost insurance policy against unplanned downtime. The carrying cost of surplus connectors is negligible compared to a single day of lost production.
  • Source before the failure, not after. Obsolete component availability decreases over time as existing surplus stocks are consumed. Prices rise as scarcity increases. Procurement decisions made under emergency conditions are always more expensive than planned purchases.
  • Document your legacy BOM. Maintain a bill of materials for each legacy panel that includes manufacturer part numbers, not just generic descriptions. This enables faster sourcing and reduces the risk of receiving an incompatible substitute.
  • Engage specialist distributors. Standard electrical distributors do not maintain obsolete inventory. Specialist suppliers like DriveKNMS focus specifically on end-of-life and hard-to-find industrial components, with the verification processes to match.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

Surplus and obsolete components carry inherent risk if sourced without a structured quality process. DriveKNMS applies a 5-step assessment protocol to all legacy electrical components before they are offered for sale:

  1. Visual and mechanical inspection. Each connector is examined for pin corrosion, housing cracks, locking mechanism integrity, and contact surface condition. Units with visible oxidation on contact pins are rejected.
  2. Electrolytic capacitor assessment (where applicable). For components with integrated electronics, capacitor aging is evaluated. Electrolytic capacitors degrade over time regardless of use; this is a primary failure mode in aged stock.
  3. Firmware and version verification (where applicable). For intelligent components, firmware versions are confirmed against known-good references to prevent compatibility issues with existing system configurations.
  4. Contact resistance check. Connector contact resistance is verified to confirm reliable electrical continuity under rated load conditions.
  5. Packaging and storage review. Storage history is assessed where documentation is available. Components stored in uncontrolled environments (high humidity, temperature extremes) are subject to additional scrutiny.

Units that do not pass all five stages are not listed for sale. We do not offer untested surplus as a substitute for verified stock.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The C2623 is a direct mechanical and electrical substitute for the original installation. No panel modification, no rewiring, no re-termination of the mating receptacle.
  • No reprogramming required: This is a passive connector component. Replacement does not affect PLC programs, SCADA configurations, or relay logic sequences.
  • Avoids engineering change orders: A like-for-like replacement does not trigger change management requirements in most regulated facility environments, eliminating weeks of documentation and review.
  • Preserves existing cable assemblies: Compatible with original cable terminations, avoiding the cost of replacing cable harnesses or field wiring.
  • Immediate operational restoration: Replacement time is measured in minutes, not days. Production resumes without the delays associated with system redesign.

FAQ

Q: What warranty applies to obsolete and surplus components?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against defects identified through our QA process. Given the nature of obsolete stock, we recommend testing in a controlled environment before installation in a live system. Extended warranty arrangements can be discussed for volume orders.

Q: How do I confirm this is a genuine Leviton C2623 and not a counterfeit or substitute?
A: All units are sourced from documented industrial surplus channels. We do not purchase from unverified secondary markets. Physical markings, part number stamps, and construction details are verified against reference units. If you require additional traceability documentation, contact us before ordering.

Q: Should I purchase more than one unit?
A: For any legacy system where the C2623 is a critical connection point, holding at least two spare units is advisable. Obsolete stock is finite. Once current surplus supplies are exhausted, sourcing additional units becomes progressively more difficult and expensive. Purchasing a small buffer now is a straightforward risk mitigation measure.

Q: Can you source other Leviton obsolete parts?
A: Yes. DriveKNMS specializes in hard-to-find and discontinued industrial electrical and automation components. Contact us with your part number and we will advise on availability.

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