Products / Bosch / BSM Series
Bosch BSM Series

Bosch BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 IGBT Power Module – Obsolete BSM Series Spare Part

Model: BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256

Brand Bosch
Series BSM Series
Model BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256
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.

Datasheet Preview

Datasheet Preview

Use attached product manuals when available. If the manual is not public yet, request the full file directly through RFQ.

Request Full Manual

Commercial Path

Use This Page To Confirm The Model, Then Move To RFQ

Product pages on DRIVEKNMS are designed to verify model, brand and series first, then move the buyer into one clean quotation path.

Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

Bosch BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 IGBT Power Module – Obsolete BSM Series Spare Part

When a single IGBT power module fails in a legacy drive or inverter system, the consequences extend far beyond the component itself. For plants still operating Bosch BSM-series based drive systems, the discontinuation of the BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 creates a hard ceiling: either source the original module, or face a forced migration to a modern drive platform. That migration — including engineering redesign, new cabinet integration, software re-commissioning, and production downtime — routinely costs manufacturers between $200,000 and $2,000,000 USD per line. DriveKNMS holds verified physical stock of the BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256. This is not a catalog listing. This is a real unit, inspected and ready to ship.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Value
Manufacturer Bosch (Rexroth / Bosch Power Electronics)
Part Number BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256
Component Type IGBT Power Module
Series BSM (BSM400GA Series)
Country of Origin Germany
Discontinuation Status Confirmed Obsolete – No longer in OEM production
Typical Application Industrial servo drives, inverter bridges, regenerative drive systems
Compatible Legacy Systems Bosch Rexroth DIAX, Indramat TDM/KDW series drive platforms; systems using equivalent BSM-series IGBT bridge configurations

Note: Electrical parameters (voltage rating, current rating, switching frequency) for this specific suffix variant are not publicly documented by Bosch. DriveKNMS does not publish unverified specifications. Contact us for datasheet support or cross-reference verification.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 sits at the power conversion core of its host drive system. It is not a peripheral component — it is the switching heart of the inverter bridge. When this module degrades or fails, the entire axis or drive channel goes offline. There is no software workaround. There is no firmware patch.

For factories running Bosch Rexroth DIAX or legacy Indramat TDM/KDW drive platforms, the BSM-series IGBT modules represent the single most failure-prone component after 15–20 years of thermal cycling. The failure mode is predictable: electrolytic capacitor degradation within the gate driver circuit, bond wire fatigue from repeated thermal expansion, and eventual gate threshold drift leading to shoot-through events.

The OEM stopped producing this module. Authorized distributors have exhausted their buffer stock. What remains in the global supply chain exists only in the hands of specialist obsolete parts suppliers — and that inventory shrinks every quarter as other plants face the same crisis.

Extending asset life by 5–10 years through targeted spare part strategy:

  • Identify your critical single points of failure. The IGBT power module in a servo drive is the component most likely to cause unplanned downtime. A single spare unit on the shelf eliminates the risk of a multi-week emergency sourcing delay.
  • Establish a minimum buffer stock policy. For any drive system with more than 3 axes using the same IGBT module, plant engineering should hold a minimum of 2 spare modules per drive type. The cost of two BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 units is a fraction of one day of lost production on a modern automated line.
  • Schedule proactive module inspection during planned shutdowns. Thermal imaging of the power module during operation, combined with gate driver voltage checks during maintenance windows, can identify degrading modules before they fail catastrophically. Replace on condition, not on failure.
  • Document your installed base before the parts disappear. As global stock of obsolete IGBT modules depletes, prices rise and lead times extend. Procurement decisions made today at current market prices will look prescient in 18 months.
  • Avoid forced platform migration for as long as operationally justified. A modern drive retrofit on a legacy machine tool or press line is not simply a hardware swap. It involves mechanical interface changes, encoder protocol conversion, PLC program modification, and safety system re-validation. The total engineering cost frequently exceeds the value of the machine itself for older assets. A $3,000 spare IGBT module that keeps a $400,000 machine running for another 7 years is not a maintenance expense — it is capital asset protection.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

DriveKNMS applies a 5-step inspection protocol to all obsolete power modules before shipment:

  • Step 1 – Visual & Physical Inspection: Full examination of module housing, terminal pins, and mounting base for mechanical damage, corrosion, or evidence of prior thermal events (discoloration, resin cracking).
  • Step 2 – Pin Integrity Check: Each gate, collector, and emitter terminal is inspected under magnification for oxidation, bending, or cold-solder evidence. Corroded or compromised pins are flagged and the unit is rejected from stock.
  • Step 3 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Where accessible within the module assembly, capacitor condition is evaluated. Bulging, leakage, or ESR anomalies result in unit rejection. This is the most common failure precursor in aged IGBT modules.
  • Step 4 – Firmware & Marking Verification: Part number markings, date codes, and any embedded firmware identifiers are cross-referenced against known authentic Bosch production records to screen for counterfeit or remarked units.
  • Step 5 – Functional Pre-shipment Check: Where test equipment is available for the specific module type, basic gate drive response and isolation resistance are verified prior to packaging.

Units that do not pass all five steps are not sold. They are quarantined or scrapped.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 is a direct form-fit-function replacement for the original installed module. No mechanical modification to the drive cabinet is required.
  • No reprogramming required: IGBT power modules are passive power switching devices. Replacing this module does not require drive parameter re-entry, encoder re-calibration, or PLC program changes. The drive controller recognizes the replacement module identically to the original.
  • Avoids engineering redesign costs: Sourcing this spare part eliminates the need to engage a drive systems integrator for a platform migration project. The cost differential between a spare module and a full drive retrofit is typically 50:1 or greater.
  • Immediate dispatch: Stock on hand. No lead time from a factory that no longer produces this part. Units ship within 2 business days of order confirmation.

FAQ

Q: What warranty applies to an obsolete spare part like the BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against DOA (dead on arrival) and latent manufacturing defects on all inspected obsolete modules. Warranty claims require return of the unit for inspection. We do not cover damage resulting from incorrect installation or drive system faults external to the module.

Q: Are these new-in-box units or refurbished?
A: We will specify the exact condition of the available unit at time of inquiry — new old stock (NOS), tested surplus, or professionally inspected used. We do not misrepresent condition. You will know exactly what you are receiving before you commit to purchase.

Q: Should we buy more than one unit?
A: For any production line where this module is installed in multiple drive axes, yes. Global stock of BSM400GA120DN2FSE3256 is finite and not being replenished. If your plant has 4 axes using this module, holding 2 spares is a defensible maintenance strategy. If you have 10 axes, the calculus is different. Contact us to discuss volume pricing for strategic buffer stock purchases.

Q: Can you source this part if you are currently out of stock?
A: DriveKNMS maintains active sourcing relationships with industrial surplus dealers and decommissioning contractors globally. If current stock is depleted, submit your requirement and we will conduct a targeted search. Response time for sourcing inquiries is typically 3–5 business days.

© 2026 DriveKNMS. Status: DRAFT

WhatsApp Prefilled Inquiry Email [email protected] Phone +86 18359293191 Top Back To Top