MOXA EDS-316 Series Modules
MOXA EDS-316 Series: Comprehensive Module Range and Technical Overview The MOXA EDS-316 series is a line of managed industrial Ethernet…
Model: EDS-205A
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 Moxa EDS-205A is a compact, DIN-rail mountable, unmanaged industrial Ethernet switch widely deployed across manufacturing plants, process automation facilities, and machine control cabinets throughout the 2000s and early 2010s. Moxa has since discontinued this model as part of the broader EDS-200 series phase-out, and sourcing a verified replacement unit through official channels is no longer possible.
For plant managers and maintenance engineers still operating legacy control architectures built around this switch, the calculus is straightforward: a single failed EDS-205A can sever the Ethernet backbone connecting PLCs, HMIs, and SCADA nodes within a production cell. The downstream consequence is not merely a switch replacement — it is an unplanned line stoppage that, in high-throughput environments, can cost tens of thousands of dollars per hour. If the failure triggers a broader infrastructure review, procurement teams may face pressure to upgrade the entire network layer, pulling adjacent controllers, cabling, and software licenses into scope. Conservative estimates place full-cell network modernization costs at USD $200,000–$800,000 depending on plant scale. Against that backdrop, securing a verified spare EDS-205A at a fraction of that cost is not a purchasing decision — it is a risk management decision.
DriveKNMS maintains limited verified stock of the Moxa EDS-205A sourced through controlled industrial surplus channels. Each unit undergoes our in-house QA protocol before dispatch.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Model | EDS-205A |
| Manufacturer | Moxa |
| Series | EDS-200 (Discontinued) |
| Product Status | Obsolete / End-of-Life (EOL) |
| Number of Ports | 5 x 10/100BaseT(X) RJ45 |
| Switching Method | Store-and-Forward |
| Mounting | DIN-Rail |
| Operating Temperature | 0°C to 60°C (standard); -40°C to 75°C (EDS-205A-T variant) |
| Input Voltage | 12–45 VDC |
| Protection Rating | IP30 |
| Certifications | CE, FCC, UL (verify against original unit label) |
| Compatible Legacy Systems | Siemens S7-300/400 Ethernet networks, Rockwell ControlLogix Ethernet I/O, Schneider Modicon Quantum Ethernet backbones, GE Fanuc Series 90 networked cells |
Note: Parameters marked with no value are not confirmed across all hardware revisions and are intentionally omitted to avoid misrepresentation. Always cross-reference with the original unit label and documentation.
The EDS-205A was engineered for deterministic, low-latency Ethernet communication in environments where managed switches were unnecessary overhead. Its five-port unmanaged topology made it the default choice for small production cells, machine-level networks, and distributed I/O clusters where simplicity and reliability outweighed configurability.
The problem facing maintenance teams today is not technical — it is logistical. Moxa's EDS-200 series reached end-of-life, and the recommended migration path involves newer EDS-300 or EDS-400 series hardware with different form factors, power requirements, and in some cases different port configurations. For a plant running 40 or 60 of these switches embedded across a decade-old automation architecture, replacing them is not a maintenance task — it is a capital project.
How to extend your automation asset lifespan by 5–10 years using critical spare parts:
Sourcing obsolete industrial hardware from unverified channels carries real risk. Age-related component degradation, improper storage, and undisclosed prior damage are common failure modes in the secondary market. DriveKNMS applies a structured 5-step QA protocol to every EDS-205A unit before dispatch:
Units are dispatched as Tested Pulls (removed from operational equipment and tested) or New Old Stock (NOS) where applicable. Condition is specified explicitly on each order confirmation.
Q: What warranty applies to an obsolete part like the EDS-205A?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day functional warranty on all tested units, covering failure under normal operating conditions within specified electrical parameters. Extended warranty arrangements are available for volume orders.
Q: How do I know the unit is genuine Moxa hardware and not a counterfeit?
A: Each unit is inspected for Moxa OEM markings, PCB silkscreen, and component sourcing consistent with known genuine hardware. We provide photographs of the actual unit — including label, PCB, and port detail — prior to shipment on request.
Q: Should I buy multiple units as long-term spares?
A: For any facility operating more than three EDS-205A units in production-critical roles, holding a minimum of two verified spares is advisable. Market availability of discontinued hardware is finite — once existing stock is exhausted globally, sourcing becomes speculative.
Q: Can you source specific hardware revisions or temperature-rated variants (EDS-205A-T)?
A: Availability varies by revision and variant. Contact us with your specific requirement — including the hardware revision from your existing unit's label if known — and we will confirm against current stock.
Q: What is your lead time?
A: In-stock units ship within 3–5 business days of order confirmation. We do not quote lead times for stock we do not hold.