Products / General Electric / Speedtronic Mark V
General Electric Speedtronic Mark V

GE URSHB Power Supply Module – Obsolete Speedtronic Mark V Spare Part

Model: URSHB

Brand General Electric
Series Speedtronic Mark V
Model URSHB
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.

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Commercial Path

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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

GE URSHB Power Supply Module – Obsolete Speedtronic Mark V Spare Part

When a power supply module fails inside a GE Mark V Speedtronic turbine control system, the consequences extend far beyond a single component. The Mark V platform—deployed across gas turbines, steam turbines, and compressor trains worldwide—was engineered for decades of continuous operation. GE discontinued the Mark V series, and with it, the URSHB module entered the category of hard-to-find industrial spares. Replacement is not a matter of ordering from a distributor catalog. It is a procurement challenge that can stall production for weeks.

A forced migration from Mark V to a current-generation control platform—such as the Mark VIe—carries engineering, commissioning, and downtime costs that routinely exceed USD $1,000,000 per turbine unit when factoring in I/O rewiring, software reconfiguration, operator retraining, and lost generation revenue. Against that figure, securing a verified URSHB spare represents a straightforward asset protection decision. DriveKNMS maintains limited physical inventory of this module. Once this stock is exhausted, sourcing lead times become unpredictable.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Detail
Part Number URSHB
Manufacturer GE (General Electric)
Series Speedtronic Mark V
Function Power Supply Module
Country of Origin United States
Product Status Discontinued / Obsolete
Compatible Systems GE Mark V Speedtronic Turbine Control (gas turbine, steam turbine, compressor control applications)
Condition Available New surplus / Professionally refurbished

Note: Electrical parameters (input voltage range, output rails, current ratings) vary by revision. DriveKNMS will confirm exact revision and specifications upon inquiry. No parameters are published here that cannot be verified against physical hardware.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The GE Mark V Speedtronic platform was the dominant turbine control architecture from the 1980s through the early 2000s. Thousands of units remain in active service across power generation, oil and gas, and petrochemical facilities. GE's end-of-support for this platform means that OEM spare parts are no longer manufactured. The URSHB power supply module is a critical sub-assembly within the Mark V rack structure. Without a functioning power supply, the entire control rack loses operational integrity—triggering turbine trip and halting production.

Facilities operating Mark V systems face a binary choice: maintain a strategic spare inventory to absorb component failures, or accept the financial and operational exposure of an unplanned upgrade project. The upgrade path is not simply expensive—it is disruptive. Reconfiguring a Mark V installation to accept a modern controller requires months of engineering work, regulatory re-approval in many jurisdictions, and a planned outage window that may not align with production schedules. For facilities where turbine availability is directly tied to revenue or grid stability, this exposure is unacceptable.

Extending the operational life of a Mark V system by 5 to 10 years through targeted spare part procurement is a documented, cost-effective strategy. The core principle: identify the modules with the highest failure probability—power supplies, I/O cards, communication modules—and hold verified spares on-site. The URSHB module falls squarely in the high-priority category. Power supply components are subject to electrolytic capacitor aging, thermal cycling fatigue, and voltage regulation drift over time. A proactive replacement or on-shelf spare eliminates the single-point-of-failure risk that this module represents.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

DriveKNMS applies a 5-step quality process to all obsolete modules before shipment:

  • Step 1 – Visual and Mechanical Inspection: Full board inspection for physical damage, corrosion, burnt components, and pin integrity. Connector pins are examined under magnification for oxidation and mechanical deformation.
  • Step 2 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Capacitors are the primary failure point in aged power supply modules. Each unit is assessed for capacitor bulging, leakage, and ESR (equivalent series resistance) deviation. Where degradation is confirmed, capacitors are replaced with specification-matched components.
  • Step 3 – Firmware and Revision Verification: The hardware revision is documented and cross-referenced against known Mark V compatibility matrices. Firmware version (where applicable) is recorded and disclosed to the buyer prior to shipment.
  • Step 4 – Functional Power-On Test: The module is bench-tested under controlled conditions to verify power output stability and protection circuit behavior.
  • Step 5 – Anti-Static Packaging and Documentation: Units are packaged in ESD-safe materials with a condition report. Traceability documentation is included where available.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The URSHB is a direct form-fit-function replacement within the Mark V rack. No rack modification, no I/O rewiring, no software reconfiguration required.
  • No re-engineering cost: Swapping a like-for-like module eliminates the engineering hours associated with any platform migration. Maintenance technicians familiar with Mark V can execute the replacement without specialist contractor involvement.
  • Preserves existing operator interface: The Mark V HMI, historian connections, and alarm logic remain intact. There is no retraining burden on operations staff.
  • Protects capital investment: The turbine itself—often a multi-million-dollar asset with decades of remaining mechanical life—continues operating on a proven, stable control platform.
  • Reduces unplanned downtime risk: On-site spare availability converts a potential multi-week procurement crisis into a same-shift maintenance event.

FAQ

Q: What warranty applies to obsolete parts?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty covering functional defects identified under normal operating conditions. Warranty terms are confirmed in writing prior to order confirmation.

Q: How do I know the unit is new or properly refurbished—not a worn-out pull?
A: Every unit shipped by DriveKNMS is accompanied by a condition report generated during our 5-step QA process. We disclose the condition category (new surplus, tested refurbished, or inspected pull) before invoicing. We do not ship units that fail functional testing.

Q: Should I buy one spare or multiple units?
A: For facilities with more than one Mark V system, holding a minimum of two URSHB spares is a standard risk mitigation practice. Given the unpredictable availability of this module on the secondary market, procurement in quantity—when stock exists—is the lower-risk posture. We can discuss volume pricing for multi-unit orders.

Q: Can you source other Mark V modules?
A: Yes. DriveKNMS specializes in GE Speedtronic Mark IV, Mark V, and Mark VI spare parts. Contact us with your full bill of materials for a consolidated sourcing assessment.

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