Products / ABB / 003 Motor Incl Pinion
ABB 003 Motor Incl Pinion

ABB 3HAC046404-003 Motor Incl Pinion – Obsolete IRB 6700 Spare Part

Model: IRB67003HAC046404-003 IRB67003HAC058121-006 IRB67003HAC051384-003

Brand ABB
Series 003 Motor Incl Pinion
Model IRB67003HAC046404-003 IRB67003HAC058121-006 IRB67003HAC051384-003
RFQ-ready model route Obsolete and surplus sourcing Export follow-up by model list

Product Overview

Commercial availability is handled through direct RFQ, model verification and export-oriented follow-up rather than public cart checkout.

Datasheet Preview

Datasheet Preview

Use attached product manuals when available. If the manual is not public yet, request the full file directly through RFQ.

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Commercial Path

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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

ABB 3HAC046404-003 Motor Incl Pinion – Obsolete IRB 6700 Spare Part

When an ABB IRB 6700 axis motor fails and the part is no longer available through standard distribution channels, the consequences are not limited to a single machine. A single robot arm going offline can halt an entire welding cell, press-tending line, or palletizing station. The cost of a full robot replacement — including mechanical integration, safety re-certification, and PLC reprogramming — routinely exceeds USD 150,000 per unit. For multi-robot cells, that figure multiplies accordingly.

DriveKNMS maintains verified stock of the ABB 3HAC046404-003 motor assembly (cross-referenced as 3HAC058121-006 and 3HAC051384-003), sourced through controlled industrial channels. This is not a commodity listing. It is a targeted solution for maintenance engineers and plant managers who cannot afford production downtime while waiting on a 6–18 month OEM lead time — or who have been told the part is simply no longer manufactured.

Technical Specifications

Primary Part Number 3HAC046404-003
Cross-Reference Part Numbers 3HAC058121-006 / 3HAC051384-003
Description Motor Incl Pinion
Compatible Robot ABB IRB 6700 Series
Manufacturer ABB Robotics
Country of Origin Sweden
Part Status Discontinued / Obsolete – Limited aftermarket stock available
Typical Axis Application IRB 6700 axis drive (confirm axis with your robot serial number)

Note: Electrical parameters vary by axis configuration. Contact us with your robot serial number and axis position for precise confirmation before ordering.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The ABB IRB 6700 is a high-payload robot platform widely deployed in automotive body shops, foundries, and heavy-duty material handling lines. Its design lifespan exceeds 20 years under proper maintenance schedules, yet OEM spare part availability typically contracts sharply after the 10–12 year mark from initial production.

The motor assembly — including the integrated pinion gear — is a wear component subject to thermal cycling, lubrication degradation, and mechanical fatigue. When this assembly reaches end-of-life, there is no field-repairable alternative: the entire motor-pinion unit must be replaced as a matched set to maintain axis repeatability within specification.

For plant managers facing pressure to retire aging robot cells, the arithmetic is straightforward. A verified replacement motor at aftermarket pricing represents a fraction of the capital expenditure required to procure, install, and commission a new robot. Facilities that maintain a strategic buffer stock of critical axis motors routinely extend productive robot life by 5 to 10 years beyond the OEM support window — without requalifying their production processes or retraining operators.

The IRB 6700 platform integrates tightly with ABB's IRC5 controller and RobotWare software environment. Replacing the robot arm forces a controller upgrade, a RobotWare relicensing event, and in many cases a full safety function revalidation under current machinery directives. None of these costs appear on the capital request for a robot replacement. They appear later, as project overruns. A replacement motor eliminates all of them.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

Obsolete parts sourced outside the OEM channel carry inherent risk if not properly evaluated. DriveKNMS applies a structured 5-step inspection protocol to all servo motor assemblies before dispatch:

Step 1 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Internal drive capacitors are inspected for bulging, leakage, and ESR deviation. Capacitors beyond service life are flagged and replaced before shipment where applicable.

Step 2 – Firmware and Encoder Version Verification: Firmware revision and encoder protocol are confirmed against the target robot's IRC5 controller compatibility matrix.

Step 3 – Pin and Connector Corrosion Inspection: All mating connectors and motor terminals are inspected under magnification for oxidation, fretting corrosion, and mechanical deformation. Affected contacts are cleaned or the unit is rejected.

Step 4 – Pinion Gear Integrity Check: The integrated pinion is inspected for tooth wear, chipping, and concentricity. Units with measurable gear wear beyond tolerance are not offered for sale.

Step 5 – Functional Rotation and Insulation Test: Shaft rotation is verified for smoothness and insulation resistance is measured to confirm winding integrity.

Units that do not pass all five stages are not listed. Condition grade (New / Refurbished-Grade-A) is disclosed at point of inquiry.

Key Features for System Maintenance

The 3HAC046404-003 motor assembly is a direct mechanical and electrical replacement for the original factory-fitted unit. Installation does not require axis recalibration software beyond the standard fine-calibration procedure documented in the IRB 6700 product manual. There is no firmware flashing, no PLC logic modification, and no changes to the IRC5 controller configuration.

This drop-in replacement characteristic is operationally significant. A maintenance team familiar with the IRB 6700 platform can complete the motor swap within a planned maintenance window, return the robot to production, and avoid the multi-week engineering engagement that a system upgrade would require. The total cost of the repair — parts, labor, and lost production — remains within the maintenance budget rather than triggering a capital approval process.

For facilities running multiple IRB 6700 units, holding one or two spare motor assemblies per axis type is a defensible asset protection strategy. The cost of carrying that inventory is fixed and predictable. The cost of an unplanned axis failure with no spare available is neither.

FAQ

What warranty applies to an obsolete spare part?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against defects in materials and workmanship on all inspected units. Warranty terms are confirmed in writing at the time of order. Extended warranty arrangements are available for volume purchases.

How do I confirm this is a genuine or quality-refurbished unit, not a counterfeit?
All units are sourced from documented industrial channels — decommissioned facilities, authorized surplus dealers, and controlled OEM overstock. We do not source from anonymous secondary markets. Upon request, we can provide sourcing documentation and inspection records for the specific unit being shipped.

Should I buy one unit or build a buffer stock?
For any robot platform where the OEM has confirmed end-of-life on spare parts, the standard recommendation among reliability engineers is to hold a minimum of one critical-axis motor per robot cell. For high-utilization lines running two or three shifts, a two-unit buffer per axis type is more appropriate. The window to acquire verified stock at reasonable cost closes as remaining aftermarket inventory is consumed.

What is the lead time after order confirmation?
In-stock units are prepared for dispatch within 1–3 business days. We ship internationally and can coordinate with your freight forwarder if required.

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