Products / Yokogawa / E-1D Data Acquisition Unit
Yokogawa E-1D Data Acquisition Unit

Yokogawa MW100-E-1D Data Acquisition Unit – Obsolete MW100 Series Spare Part

Model: MW100-E-1D

Brand Yokogawa
Series E-1D Data Acquisition Unit
Model MW100-E-1D
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

Yokogawa MW100-E-1D Data Acquisition Unit – Obsolete MW100 Series Spare Part

When the MW100-E-1D fails and no replacement unit is available through standard distribution channels, the consequences extend far beyond a single instrument. The MW100 series sits at the data collection backbone of numerous process monitoring and quality assurance systems built in the 2000s and early 2010s. A forced migration away from this platform — driven solely by a single failed module — routinely triggers engineering re-validation, software reconfiguration, and full system requalification costs that run well into six figures. DriveKNMS maintains verified stock of the MW100-E-1D specifically to prevent that scenario. This is not a commodity listing. It is a targeted asset-protection resource for facilities that cannot afford unplanned capital expenditure.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Detail
Manufacturer Yokogawa Electric Corporation
Model Number MW100-E-1D
Series MW100 (Discontinued)
Product Category Data Acquisition Unit / DAQ Module
Country of Origin Japan
Discontinuation Status Officially discontinued by Yokogawa; no longer available through standard OEM channels
Communication Interface Ethernet (as indicated by the -E suffix)
Compatible Systems Yokogawa MW100 mainframe-based DAQ configurations; legacy SCADA and DCS data collection architectures

Note: Electrical parameters not independently verified. Specifications above are based on published series documentation. Buyers are advised to cross-reference against their system documentation prior to ordering.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The Yokogawa MW100 platform was widely deployed across pharmaceutical batch monitoring, power generation data logging, and chemical process quality systems throughout the 2000s. Its modular architecture — combining a central mainframe with interchangeable I/O modules — made it a preferred choice for facilities requiring high channel-count, high-accuracy analog data acquisition without the overhead of a full DCS expansion.

Yokogawa's formal discontinuation of the MW100 series has left a significant installed base without a direct upgrade path that preserves existing wiring infrastructure, calibration records, and validated software interfaces. The MW100-E-1D, as the Ethernet-connected mainframe unit, is the single most critical component in any MW100 deployment. Its failure does not merely interrupt data collection — it severs the entire network-accessible DAQ node.

Facilities operating validated environments (FDA 21 CFR Part 11, ISO/IEC 17025 calibration labs, or IEC 61511 safety-instrumented systems) face a particularly acute problem: replacing the MW100 platform requires re-validation of the entire data acquisition chain, a process that can take 6–18 months and consume engineering resources that are rarely available on short notice. Maintaining a spare MW100-E-1D unit eliminates this risk entirely. The cost of one spare unit is, in most cases, less than two days of engineering time required to begin a platform migration.

For plant managers and reliability engineers operating aging automation infrastructure, the calculus is straightforward: a verified spare on the shelf extends the productive life of the surrounding system by years, defers capital expenditure to a planned budget cycle, and keeps production running on a known, validated platform.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

DriveKNMS applies a 5-step quality assurance process to all discontinued and legacy hardware before shipment:

  • Step 1 – Visual and Mechanical Inspection: Full external examination for physical damage, connector pin integrity, and housing condition. Units with bent pins, cracked housings, or evidence of prior repair are quarantined.
  • Step 2 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Aging electrolytic capacitors are the primary failure mode in equipment of this vintage. Each unit undergoes targeted inspection of capacitor condition, with particular attention to the power supply section.
  • Step 3 – Firmware Version Verification: Where accessible, firmware revision is documented and cross-referenced against known compatibility requirements for the MW100 mainframe ecosystem.
  • Step 4 – Pin and Contact Corrosion Check: All I/O connectors and backplane contacts are inspected under magnification for oxidation, corrosion, or contamination that could cause intermittent faults in service.
  • Step 5 – Functional Power-On Test: Units are powered and observed for normal initialization behavior prior to packaging.

Units are shipped in anti-static packaging with condition documentation. Stock condition (new surplus, refurbished, or tested used) is disclosed at the time of quotation.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The MW100-E-1D is a direct hardware replacement for existing MW100 mainframe installations. No rewiring, no reconfiguration of downstream SCADA or historian software, no re-engineering of I/O module assignments.
  • No reprogramming required: Configuration data stored in the system is not resident on the mainframe unit itself in most deployment architectures, meaning a hardware swap does not require re-entry of channel configurations.
  • Avoids engineering reconstruction costs: A platform migration away from MW100 requires new hardware procurement, software integration, loop testing, and — in regulated environments — full revalidation. A spare MW100-E-1D eliminates all of that expenditure for the duration of the asset's planned service life.
  • Extends system ROI: Capital equipment surrounding the MW100 DAQ node — sensors, transmitters, wiring infrastructure — retains its full value as long as the DAQ platform remains operational. Maintaining spare mainframe units is the lowest-cost mechanism for protecting that surrounding investment.

FAQ

What warranty applies to discontinued parts?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against defects in materials and workmanship on all tested units. Warranty terms for new surplus stock are disclosed at quotation. Extended warranty arrangements are available for volume orders.

How do I know the unit is genuine and not counterfeit?
All units sourced by DriveKNMS are inspected for authenticity markers including label integrity, PCB markings, and component consistency. We do not source from unverified secondary markets. Provenance documentation is available upon request for regulated-industry buyers.

Should I buy more than one unit?
For any facility with more than one MW100 node, holding a minimum of one spare mainframe unit per site is a defensible maintenance strategy. Given that the MW100-E-1D is no longer manufactured, available inventory in the secondary market will continue to decline. Procurement decisions deferred to the point of failure carry significantly higher cost and lead time risk than planned spare stock acquisition.

What is the lead time?
In-stock units ship within 3–5 business days. Contact us to confirm current availability before placing an order.

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