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ABB 1 Motor with Pinion

ABB 3HAC3697-1 Motor with Pinion – Obsolete IRB4400 / IRB2400 / IRB1410 Spare Part

Model: IRB4400 3HAC3697-1 3HAC5954-1 IRB2400 IRB1410 3HAC17346-1 3HAC021740-001 IRB2400 3HAC17326-1 3HAC021346-001

Brand ABB
Series 1 Motor with Pinion
Model IRB4400 3HAC3697-1 3HAC5954-1 IRB2400 IRB1410 3HAC17346-1 3HAC021740-001 IRB2400 3HAC17326-1 3HAC021346-001
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

Use This Page To Confirm The Model, Then Move To RFQ

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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

ABB 3HAC3697-1 Motor with Pinion – Obsolete IRB4400 / IRB2400 / IRB1410 Spare Part

When a servo motor fails on an ABB IRB4400, IRB2400, or IRB1410 robot, the production line does not pause politely. It stops. For facilities still operating these platforms — many of which have been in continuous service for 15 to 25 years — the cost of an unplanned shutdown is measured in hours of lost throughput, emergency labor, and expedited freight. The cost of a forced system migration is measured in millions: new robot cells, re-integration engineering, operator retraining, and months of reduced capacity.

The ABB 3HAC3697-1 (also referenced as 3HAC5954-1, 3HAC17346-1, 3HAC021740-001, 3HAC17326-1, 3HAC021346-001 depending on robot variant and revision) is a discontinued axis motor with pinion that ABB no longer manufactures or supplies through standard channels. DriveKNMS maintains verified physical stock of this component for facilities that cannot afford to wait.

Technical Specifications

Part Number 3HAC3697-1
Cross-Reference 3HAC5954-1 / 3HAC17346-1 / 3HAC021740-001 / 3HAC17326-1 / 3HAC021346-001
Compatible Robots ABB IRB4400, IRB2400, IRB1410
Component Type Axis Servo Motor with Pinion Gear
Manufacturer ABB Robotics
Country of Origin Sweden
Product Status Discontinued – No longer available through ABB standard supply chain
Condition Available New Old Stock (NOS) / Professionally Refurbished

Note: Electrical parameters (voltage rating, encoder resolution, torque specifications) vary by robot axis and revision. Confirmed specifications are provided upon order inquiry to ensure compatibility with your specific robot serial number and axis configuration. No parameters are published here that cannot be verified against ABB documentation.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The ABB IRB4400, IRB2400, and IRB1410 robot families represent a generation of industrial automation that delivered reliable, high-precision performance across automotive body shops, foundries, machine tending cells, and general manufacturing. These platforms were engineered for 20-year service lives — and many have exceeded that. The problem is not the robots. The problem is that the supply chain for their critical wear components has dried up.

ABB's official end-of-life designation for these series means that when a servo motor fails, the facility faces a binary choice: locate a verified spare part, or commit to a capital replacement project that typically runs USD $150,000 to $500,000 per robot cell when integration, tooling, and downtime costs are included.

The 3HAC3697-1 motor with pinion is one of the highest-failure-risk components in these robots. It is a mechanical and electrical wear item subject to bearing fatigue, encoder degradation, and pinion gear wear over extended duty cycles. Its failure is not a question of if — it is a question of when. Facilities that have not secured at least one verified spare are operating with unquantified financial exposure on every production shift.

DriveKNMS sources these components through established industrial surplus and decommissioning channels. Each unit is physically inspected before listing. We do not list parts we cannot ship.

How to extend your ABB IRB robot system life by 5 to 10 years through strategic spare parts management:

  • Identify your highest-risk axis motors. On the IRB4400 and IRB2400, axes 1, 2, and 3 carry the highest mechanical load and statistically show the earliest motor wear. Prioritize spare coverage for these axes first.
  • Secure a minimum of one spare motor per robot cell. A single unplanned motor failure with no spare on hand can idle a cell for 4 to 12 weeks while a replacement is sourced. One spare unit eliminates that exposure entirely.
  • Cross-reference your part numbers against robot serial numbers before purchasing. ABB revised motor specifications across production runs. The 3HAC3697-1 family covers multiple variants — confirm your robot's axis and serial range before ordering. We assist with this verification at no charge.
  • Establish a condition-based monitoring schedule. Vibration analysis and thermal imaging on motor housings can identify bearing degradation 3 to 6 months before failure. This converts unplanned shutdowns into scheduled maintenance windows.
  • Budget spare parts as capital asset protection, not maintenance expense. The cost of one verified 3HAC3697-1 spare is a fraction of one day of lost production on a high-throughput line. Present it to finance as insurance against a quantified downside risk.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

Sourcing discontinued industrial components carries inherent risk. Our QA process is designed to eliminate the most common failure modes found in aged or improperly stored servo motors:

  • Step 1 – Visual and mechanical inspection: Housing integrity, pinion gear tooth condition, shaft runout, and connector pin condition are checked against ABB service manual tolerances.
  • Step 2 – Electrolytic capacitor assessment: Internal capacitors in the motor's encoder and feedback circuitry are evaluated for signs of electrolyte leakage, bulging, or ESR degradation — the most common cause of intermittent encoder faults in aged units.
  • Step 3 – Firmware and encoder version verification: Where applicable, encoder firmware versions are confirmed against ABB compatibility matrices for the target robot series to prevent resolver/controller mismatch faults.
  • Step 4 – Pin and connector corrosion inspection: All electrical connectors are inspected under magnification for oxidation, fretting corrosion, and pin retraction. Affected contacts are treated or the unit is rejected.
  • Step 5 – Functional verification record: Each unit that passes inspection receives a condition report. Units sold as refurbished are clearly distinguished from New Old Stock. We do not mix condition grades.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The 3HAC3697-1 is a direct mechanical and electrical replacement for the original factory-installed motor on compatible IRB robot axes. No mechanical modification to the robot arm is required.
  • No reprogramming required: Motor replacement on these ABB platforms does not require controller reprogramming. Standard ABB calibration procedures (fine calibration via FlexPendant) are sufficient to restore full axis accuracy after installation.
  • Avoids engineering reconstruction costs: Replacing a servo motor on an existing robot costs a fraction of the engineering hours required to integrate a new robot platform — no new safety fencing design, no PLC I/O remapping, no updated risk assessment, no revalidation of the production cell.
  • Preserves existing process qualifications: In regulated industries (automotive, food processing, pharmaceuticals), replacing a robot motor on a validated line is a controlled change. Replacing the entire robot platform triggers a full revalidation. The cost difference is substantial.

FAQ

What warranty applies to discontinued parts?
We offer a 90-day warranty against defects in materials and workmanship on all units sold as refurbished, and a 30-day warranty on New Old Stock units. Warranty claims require return of the unit for inspection. We do not cover damage resulting from installation errors or incompatible robot configurations.

How do I confirm this is a new or quality-refurbished unit, not a field-pulled unknown?
Every unit we ship is accompanied by a condition report generated during our QA process. New Old Stock units are identified as such with storage history where known. Refurbished units include a record of the inspection steps completed. We do not sell field-pulled units without disclosure of their condition and origin.

Should I buy more than one spare?
For facilities running multiple IRB4400, IRB2400, or IRB1410 robots, we recommend securing at least one spare per two robot cells, with priority on the highest-duty-cycle machines. Global availability of this part number continues to decline as decommissioned equipment is consumed. Units available today may not be available in 12 months.

Can you help me identify the correct part number for my specific robot?
Yes. Provide your robot's serial number and the axis in question, and we will cross-reference against ABB's revision history to confirm the correct motor variant before you order.

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