ABB SNAT-7120 Circuit Board – SNAZ7120J Series
ABB SNAT-7120 / SNAZ7120J Circuit Board: Sourcing Strategy & Asset Return Value in a Constrained Global Supply Chain The ABB…
Model: IRB66203HAC024540-004 3HNA016431-001 3HEA800964-003
Product Overview
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Datasheet Preview
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Commercial Path
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Technical Dossier
When the Serial Measurement Board (SMB) on an ABB IRB6620 robot fails, the production line does not pause politely. It stops. For facilities running IRC5-controlled robotic cells, a single failed SMB unit can trigger a cascade: unplanned downtime, emergency engineering assessments, and – in the worst case – a forced migration to a newer robot platform that carries a capital expenditure measured in hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars. The IRB6620 is a proven workhorse in automotive body-in-white, heavy material handling, and arc welding applications. Its mechanical structure and IRC5 controller remain deeply embedded in production infrastructure that was engineered around its specific motion envelope and payload characteristics. Replacing the robot is not a maintenance decision – it is a capital project. DriveKNMS holds verified stock of the 3HAC024540-004 SMB 2-Axis board, one of the most difficult-to-source components in the IRB6620 assembly. This is not a commodity part. Securing a spare now is a direct investment in the operational continuity of your existing automation asset.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Part Number (Primary) | 3HAC024540-004 |
| Cross-Reference Part Numbers | 3HNA016431-001 / 3HEA800964-003 |
| Description | Serial Measurement Board (SMB), 2-Axis, Standard |
| Compatible Robot Model | ABB IRB6620 |
| Compatible Controller | ABB IRC5 |
| Protection Rating | IP65 |
| Manufacturer | ABB Robotics |
| Country of Origin | Sweden |
| Discontinuation Status | Obsolete – No longer in ABB standard production supply chain |
The ABB IRC5 controller platform, paired with the IRB6620 mechanical unit, represents a generation of industrial robotics that delivered exceptional reliability over 15–20 year service cycles. That longevity is now a double-edged reality: the robots continue to perform, but the supporting electronics – particularly motion-critical boards like the SMB – have exited the standard supply chain.
The SMB (Serial Measurement Board) is the component responsible for reading resolver signals from the robot's axis motors and transmitting accurate position data back to the IRC5 controller. Without a functioning SMB, the controller cannot establish axis positions, and the robot cannot operate safely. There is no software workaround. There is no firmware patch. The board must be replaced with a compatible unit.
For plant managers facing this situation, the strategic calculus is straightforward. A verified replacement SMB board, sourced now, costs a fraction of one hour of unplanned downtime on a high-throughput production line. Facilities that maintain a single spare SMB unit on the shelf have consistently avoided the emergency procurement cycle – a cycle that, for obsolete parts, routinely extends to 8–16 weeks and carries significant price volatility.
The IRB6620 is commonly deployed alongside ABB IRC5 single-cabinet and dual-cabinet controller configurations. It is frequently integrated into robotic cells managed by ABB RobotStudio offline programming environments and RAPID code libraries that have been refined over years of production tuning. Replacing the robot platform would require re-validation of every tool path, every safety zone, and every PLC interface – a project scope that no maintenance budget absorbs without executive escalation.
Extending the service life of an IRB6620 installation by 5–10 years through strategic spare parts management is not a compromise. It is a defensible capital preservation strategy. The key components to monitor and stock proactively include the SMB board, the axis computer (DSQC 668/similar), the drive units, and the teach pendant cable assembly. A structured spare parts audit conducted every 24 months, cross-referenced against ABB's published obsolescence notices, provides the earliest possible warning before a critical component becomes genuinely unobtainable.
Sourcing obsolete electronics from the secondary market carries inherent risk. DriveKNMS applies a structured 5-step quality assurance process to every SMB unit before it is offered for sale.
Step 1 – Visual and Physical Inspection: Each board is examined under magnification for physical damage, burn marks, cracked solder joints, and corrosion on connector pins and PCB traces. Units with any evidence of thermal event or mechanical stress are rejected at this stage.
Step 2 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Electrolytic capacitors are the primary failure point in boards of this age. Each capacitor is checked for bulging, leakage, and ESR (Equivalent Series Resistance) deviation. Capacitors showing degradation are replaced with specification-matched components before the board proceeds.
Step 3 – Firmware Version Verification: Where accessible, firmware revision is documented and cross-referenced against known compatible versions for the IRC5 controller. Boards with unverifiable or mismatched firmware are flagged and handled separately.
Step 4 – Connector and Pin Integrity Check: All connector housings are inspected for pin corrosion, deformation, and retention force. Corroded pins are treated or the connector assembly is replaced. This step directly addresses the most common field failure mode for boards that have been in storage or removed from service.
Step 5 – Functional Bench Test (where applicable): Units are powered and tested against baseline operational parameters where test fixtures permit. Results are documented and accompany the unit.
The 3HAC024540-004 SMB board is a direct drop-in replacement for the original unit installed in the IRB6620. No hardware modifications to the robot arm or controller cabinet are required. The IRC5 controller recognizes the board through its standard resolver interface – there is no re-parameterization of axis data required beyond the standard SMB calibration procedure documented in ABB's IRC5 maintenance manual.
This means engineering time is limited to the physical swap and the standard post-replacement calibration check. There is no requirement to engage ABB field service for a controller reconfiguration, no need to re-validate RAPID programs, and no disruption to the existing safety system configuration. For a maintenance team operating under production pressure, this is the critical distinction between a 4-hour planned maintenance window and a multi-day engineering project.
Avoiding a forced platform upgrade also preserves the investment in operator training, tooling fixtures, and the accumulated process knowledge embedded in the existing RAPID codebase. These are real costs that do not appear on a spare parts budget but are immediately visible when a robot platform is retired prematurely.
What warranty applies to this obsolete part?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against defects in materials and workmanship on all refurbished units, and a 30-day warranty on used/tested units. Warranty terms are confirmed in writing at the time of sale. Given the obsolete status of this component, we recommend purchasing a minimum of two units to establish an on-site spare inventory.
How do I confirm the unit is genuine ABB and not a counterfeit?
All units sourced by DriveKNMS are verified against ABB's original part markings, PCB revision codes, and component layout. We provide documentation of the unit's condition and, where available, its service history. We do not sell unmarked or re-labeled boards as OEM parts.
Should I stock multiple units?
For any facility running more than one IRB6620 robot, maintaining a minimum of one spare SMB board per controller generation is standard practice. Given that this part is no longer in active production, current market availability is finite. Procurement decisions made today will not be available at the same cost or lead time in 12–24 months. A long-term spare parts reserve for critical obsolete components is the lowest-cost insurance available against unplanned downtime.
What is the lead time?
In-stock units ship within 2–5 business days after order confirmation and payment. Contact us to confirm current inventory status before placing an order.
For pricing, availability confirmation, and technical pre-sales questions:
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