Schneider TSX3721001 Modular Base Controller – Momentum Series
Schneider TSX3721001 Modular Base Controller: Procurement Strategy & Asset Value in a Constrained Supply Chain The Schneider Electric TSX3721001 is…
Model: VDM01D10AA00 MC-4/11/10/400
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
When a servo drive fails on a production line built around the Schneider Electric Lexium MC-4 platform, the clock starts immediately. The VDM01D10AA00 is a discontinued axis module from the MC-4/11/10/400 series — a drive that has been out of standard production for years and is no longer available through Schneider Electric's authorized distribution channels. Replacing it with a modern-generation drive is not a swap; it requires re-engineering the motion controller architecture, rewriting PLC logic, recalibrating servo loops, and in many cases, replacing the motor and cabling. That engineering project carries a price tag that routinely runs into the hundreds of thousands of dollars — before accounting for production downtime. DriveKNMS maintains verified physical stock of the VDM01D10AA00. For plant managers and maintenance engineers who need to protect an existing asset rather than fund a capital replacement project, this is a direct path to restoring operation without touching the surrounding system.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Schneider Electric |
| Part Number | VDM01D10AA00 |
| Series | Lexium MC-4 |
| Model Reference | MC-4/11/10/400 |
| Product Type | Servo Drive / Axis Module |
| Production Status | Discontinued – No longer manufactured or distributed by OEM |
| Country of Origin | France |
| Compatibility | Schneider Electric Lexium MC-4 multi-axis servo system |
Note: Electrical parameters such as rated current, bus voltage, and power rating are not published here to avoid inaccuracy. Confirmed specifications are provided upon request with supporting documentation.
The Lexium MC-4 platform was widely deployed in packaging, printing, and material handling lines during the 2000s and early 2010s. Its multi-axis architecture — where a single controller coordinates multiple VDM axis modules on a shared DC bus — made it a cost-effective solution for synchronized motion applications. That same architecture is now its vulnerability: the entire motion system depends on the continued availability of each axis module. A single failed VDM01D10AA00 can take an entire multi-axis cell offline.
Schneider Electric has transitioned its servo portfolio to the Lexium 32 and Lexium 62 generations. These platforms are not backward-compatible with MC-4 hardware at the drive or controller level. A plant running MC-4 hardware today has three realistic options when a drive fails: source a replacement VDM01D10AA00 from the secondary market, undertake a full motion system retrofit, or accept extended downtime while engineering evaluates options. The retrofit path is the most disruptive. It requires new servo drives, a new motion controller, updated PLC programming, motor compatibility verification, and full recommissioning — a process that typically takes weeks and costs far more than the original equipment.
For factories where the MC-4 system controls a critical production cell, sourcing a verified replacement drive is the only option that preserves operational continuity without triggering a capital expenditure cycle. DriveKNMS specializes in exactly this scenario: locating, verifying, and supplying discontinued Schneider Electric servo components to industrial facilities that need to maintain existing infrastructure rather than replace it.
How to extend the life of your Lexium MC-4 system by 5 to 10 years:
Discontinued servo drives present specific failure modes that differ from standard wear. DriveKNMS applies a five-step inspection protocol to all MC-4 series drives before shipment:
Units that do not pass all five stages are not offered for sale. Condition grade and test results are documented and available to the buyer.
What warranty applies to a discontinued drive like the VDM01D10AA00?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty covering functional defects identified under normal operating conditions. Given the discontinued status of this part, we recommend customers treat the purchased unit as an operational spare and maintain it in a controlled storage environment.
How do I know the unit is genuine and not counterfeit?
All units sourced by DriveKNMS are inspected for OEM markings, label authenticity, and internal construction consistency. We do not source from unverified brokers. Documentation of origin is available upon request for units where provenance records exist.
Should I buy more than one unit?
For any MC-4 axis module that is critical to production, holding a minimum of two spare units is a defensible maintenance strategy. The secondary market supply of VDM01D10AA00 units is not replenished. Each unit sold reduces the available pool. Facilities that have experienced one drive failure on this platform will experience another.
Can DriveKNMS source other MC-4 series components?
Yes. Contact us with your full part number list. We maintain relationships with industrial surplus sources globally and can advise on availability and lead times for other Lexium MC-4 components.
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