Products / AI-Tek Instruments / Tek 70085-1010-001 Passive Speed Sensor
AI-Tek Instruments Tek 70085-1010-001 Passive Speed Sensor

AI-Tek 70085-1010-001 Passive Speed Sensor – Obsolete T77 Series Spare Part

Model: 70085-1010-001

Brand AI-Tek Instruments
Series Tek 70085-1010-001 Passive Speed Sensor
Model 70085-1010-001
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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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

AI-Tek 70085-1010-001 Passive Speed Sensor – Obsolete T77 Series Spare Part

When a passive speed sensor fails on a legacy motion control or process line, the consequences extend far beyond a single component. For plants running AI-Tek T77-series speed monitoring systems integrated into older PLCs or DCS architectures — such as Honeywell TDC 3000 or Allen-Bradley PLC-5 platforms — a single unavailable sensor can force a full-system engineering review. Replacement with a modern equivalent requires signal recalibration, wiring modifications, and in many cases, a complete control loop re-engineering project. Conservative estimates place such forced upgrades at $200,000–$1,500,000 USD per line, excluding production downtime losses.

DriveKNMS maintains verified stock of the AI-Tek 70085-1010-001. For maintenance engineers and plant managers operating aging assets, this is a direct drop-in replacement that eliminates the upgrade trigger entirely.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Detail
Manufacturer AI-Tek Instruments (Airpax)
Part Number 70085-1010-001
Series T77 Passive Speed Sensor
Sensor Type Passive Variable Reluctance (VR) Speed Sensor
Output Signal Sinusoidal AC voltage (amplitude proportional to speed)
Country of Origin United States
Discontinuation Status Obsolete / Discontinued – No longer in active production
Typical System Compatibility Honeywell TDC 3000, Allen-Bradley PLC-5, legacy tachometer/speed monitoring modules

Note: Electrical parameters such as coil resistance, air gap, and thread specification vary by sub-variant. Confirmed specifications are provided upon request with unit verification. No parameters are assumed or fabricated.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The AI-Tek T77 series passive speed sensors were widely deployed across North American and European industrial facilities from the 1980s through the early 2000s. Their integration into legacy motion control architectures — particularly in paper mills, steel processing lines, chemical plants, and power generation facilities — was extensive. The passive variable reluctance design required no external power supply, making it a preferred choice for fail-safe speed monitoring in hazardous or remote locations.

With AI-Tek's T77 series now discontinued, the supply chain for these sensors has collapsed to secondary market sources only. Plants that have not pre-positioned spare inventory face a hard choice when a unit fails: source from the secondary market under time pressure, or commit to a forced system upgrade.

The forced upgrade path carries compounding costs. Beyond the direct engineering and procurement expense, production lines must be taken offline during integration. Validation and recommissioning of a modified control loop can take weeks. For facilities operating 24/7 continuous processes, this is not a theoretical risk — it is a budget-breaking event.

Maintaining a small buffer stock of the 70085-1010-001 is the lowest-cost insurance available to operations teams managing these assets. A single unit on the shelf eliminates the emergency sourcing premium and the upgrade trigger entirely. For plants with multiple lines using the same sensor, a 3–5 unit reserve is a standard asset protection practice.

How to extend your automation asset life by 5–10 years with critical spare parts:

  • Audit your installed base. Identify every AI-Tek T77 sensor on your site. Cross-reference against your CMMS for failure history and mean time between failures (MTBF).
  • Establish a minimum stock level. For high-criticality lines, maintain at least one cold spare per sensor position. For lower-criticality applications, a shared pool of 2–3 units per sensor model is typically sufficient.
  • Source before failure, not after. Secondary market availability for obsolete sensors is finite and unpredictable. Procurement under emergency conditions carries a 30–200% price premium over planned purchasing.
  • Document your sensor configuration. Record air gap settings, cable routing, and connector pinout for each installed unit. This documentation is essential for rapid replacement by any technician, not just the original installer.
  • Evaluate refurbished units with a defined acceptance protocol. Not all secondary market stock is equal. Require documented QA inspection results before accepting any refurbished unit into your critical spare inventory.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

DriveKNMS applies a 5-step inspection protocol to all passive speed sensors sourced for resale. This process is designed specifically for the failure modes common to long-stored or field-returned electromechanical sensors:

  1. Visual and mechanical inspection. Thread condition, housing integrity, and connector pin examination. Units with corrosion, thread damage, or cracked housings are rejected.
  2. Coil continuity and resistance verification. Coil resistance is measured and compared against known-good reference values for the 70085-1010-001. Open circuits or significant deviation from specification result in rejection.
  3. Pin corrosion and contact resistance check. Connector pins are inspected under magnification. Contact resistance is measured to confirm signal integrity under load.
  4. Magnet integrity assessment. The permanent magnet assembly is checked for demagnetization, which can reduce output signal amplitude at low speeds — a common failure mode in aged units.
  5. Functional output verification. Where test equipment permits, output signal is verified against a rotating ferrous target at controlled speed to confirm sensor is generating a usable signal.

Units that pass all five stages are classified as Inspected – Ready for Service. Units with minor cosmetic issues but full electrical function are classified as Inspected – Cosmetic Wear and are disclosed as such. No unit is shipped without a completed inspection record.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement. The 70085-1010-001 installs directly into the existing mounting position with no mechanical modification required. Thread specification and connector type match the original installation.
  • No reprogramming required. Passive VR sensors generate their own signal from rotor tooth movement. There is no firmware, no configuration, and no calibration software involved in replacement. Swap the sensor, verify the air gap, restore operation.
  • No control loop re-engineering. The signal characteristics of a passive VR sensor are determined by physical geometry, not electronics. A replacement unit of the same part number produces an electrically identical output. Your existing speed monitoring module, PLC input card, or tachometer reads it without modification.
  • Avoids forced system upgrade. Keeping this part available on the shelf is the single most cost-effective action available to a maintenance team managing a legacy speed monitoring system. The alternative — a forced upgrade triggered by an unavailable sensor — costs orders of magnitude more.

FAQ

What warranty applies to obsolete parts?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against defects in materials and workmanship on all inspected units. Warranty covers electrical failure under normal operating conditions. Physical damage after installation is excluded.

How do I confirm the unit is new or quality-refurbished?
Each unit shipped by DriveKNMS is accompanied by an inspection record documenting the specific tests performed and results. New-in-box units are identified as such. Refurbished units are clearly labeled with their inspection classification. We do not mix classifications within a single order without explicit disclosure.

Should I buy more than one unit?
For any line where a speed sensor failure causes an unplanned shutdown, yes. The 70085-1010-001 is no longer manufactured. Secondary market availability is finite. Procurement lead time from secondary sources under non-emergency conditions is currently manageable; under emergency conditions, it is not. A 2–3 unit reserve is a reasonable minimum for a single critical line. Multi-line facilities should conduct a formal spares analysis.

Can you source larger quantities?
Contact us directly. DriveKNMS maintains relationships with multiple secondary market channels and can often consolidate larger quantities for facilities conducting a planned spares build-up.

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