Westinghouse SAE-KA Modules | SAE-KA-40-S/T
Westinghouse SAE-KA Series: Comprehensive Module Range and Technical Overview The Westinghouse SAE-KA series is a family of analog servo amplifier…
Model: WH5-2FF 1X00416H01
Product Overview
Commercial availability is handled through direct RFQ, model verification and export-oriented follow-up rather than public cart checkout.
Datasheet Preview
Use attached product manuals when available. If the manual is not public yet, request the full file directly through RFQ.
Commercial Path
Product pages on DRIVEKNMS are designed to verify model, brand and series first, then move the buyer into one clean quotation path.
Technical Dossier
The Westinghouse WDPF (Distributed Processing Family) WH5 series represents one of the most widely deployed distributed control system (DCS) platforms in global heavy industry. Installed across petrochemical complexes, nuclear power stations, coal-fired and combined-cycle power plants, and large-scale refinery operations, the WH5 backplane architecture established a benchmark for deterministic process control in the 1980s and 1990s. Its modular card-cage design, redundant power distribution topology, and peer-to-peer data highway (WDPF Data Highway) enabled plant-wide integration at a time when centralized PLC architectures could not match its fault-tolerance profile. Facilities in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific continue to operate WH5-based control loops, making lifecycle support and spare parts availability a critical operational requirement for maintenance engineers and reliability teams.
The WDPF platform was introduced by Westinghouse Electric Corporation in the early 1980s as a response to the limitations of centralized minicomputer-based control. The WH5 card family was designed around a proprietary backplane bus operating at deterministic scan rates, with each module performing localized signal conditioning, analog-to-digital conversion, or logic execution before transmitting process data across the WDPF Data Highway to operator workstations and historian nodes.
Early WH5 modules used discrete component analog front-ends and EPROM-based firmware. By the late 1980s, Westinghouse introduced surface-mount revisions with improved noise immunity and extended operating temperature ranges. Following the acquisition of Westinghouse's power generation and process control divisions by Emerson Electric (and subsequently the WDPF product line transitioning under Ovation DCS branding), the WH5 series entered a formal end-of-life phase. Emerson's Ovation platform is the designated migration path; however, the capital cost and engineering complexity of full DCS replacement means that thousands of WH5 installations remain in active service under extended maintenance agreements or independent lifecycle support programs.
Compatibility considerations are significant: WH5 modules are not electrically or mechanically interchangeable with later Ovation I/O cards. Backplane slot assignments, termination assemblies, and firmware revision levels must be matched precisely when sourcing replacement modules. Mixed-revision installations require careful validation against the site's system configuration database.
The following SKUs represent verified, commonly sourced modules within the Westinghouse WDPF WH5 series. Each entry includes a concise functional descriptor for rapid identification by maintenance and procurement personnel.
Power Supply Modules
Analog Input (AI) Modules
Analog Output (AO) Modules
Digital Input (DI) Modules
Digital Output (DO) Modules
CPU / Controller Modules
Communication / Network Modules
The WH5 series has been formally discontinued by the original manufacturer. Standard distribution channels no longer stock new-manufacture units. DriveKNMS maintains a dedicated inventory program for WH5 lifecycle support, sourcing modules through verified industrial surplus channels, decommissioned plant asset recovery, and long-term storage stock held by authorized regional distributors.
For obsolete or low-availability SKUs such as the WH5-2FF 1X00416H01 power supply module, DriveKNMS applies a structured sourcing protocol: cross-referencing the part number against known revision histories, verifying hardware revision markings against the customer's system configuration, and confirming firmware compatibility where applicable. Customers operating under extended maintenance agreements or preparing for planned outages are advised to submit consolidated parts lists in advance to allow adequate lead time for sourcing and pre-shipment testing.
DriveKNMS ships globally and can provide documentation packages including test reports, photographs of physical condition, and revision-level confirmation upon request.
WH5 modules present specific quality control challenges due to their age, backplane bus architecture, and the prevalence of electrolytic capacitor degradation in long-stored units. DriveKNMS applies the following test procedures to all WH5 modules prior to shipment:
For sourcing inquiries, technical questions, or bulk parts requests for the Westinghouse WDPF WH5 series: