FORCE SYS68K/CPU-30BE16 REV 3 VME CPU Board – Obsolete SYS68K Spare Part
FORCE SYS68K/CPU-30BE16 REV 3 VME CPU Board – Obsolete SYS68K Spare Part When a VME-based CPU board fails on a…
Model: SYS68K/CPU-6 REV. 4.1
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 SYS68K/CPU-6 REV. 4.1 processor board fails, the consequences extend far beyond a single module replacement. This board sits at the heart of VMEbus-based control architectures deployed across industrial automation, defense electronics, and scientific instrumentation installations built in the late 1980s and 1990s. A forced system retirement triggered by one unavailable board can cascade into a full platform migration — a project that routinely costs manufacturing operations between $500,000 and several million USD when engineering hours, downtime, revalidation, and retraining are factored in. DriveKNMS maintains verified stock of this discontinued module specifically to prevent that outcome.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | FORCE COMPUTERS GmbH |
| Part Number | SYS68K/CPU-6 REV. 4.1 |
| Series | SYS68K |
| Form Factor | VMEbus (IEEE 1014) Single-Board Computer |
| Processor Architecture | Motorola 68020 / 68030 family |
| Bus Standard | VMEbus (VME64 compatible) |
| Country of Origin | Germany |
| Product Status | Discontinued / End-of-Life (EOL) |
| Revision | REV. 4.1 |
Note: Detailed electrical parameters (clock speed, RAM configuration, I/O specifications) vary by sub-revision and installed options. Confirmed specifications are provided upon request based on physical inspection of available units. No parameters are stated here that have not been verified.
FORCE COMPUTERS' SYS68K series was a dominant VMEbus platform through the 1990s, deployed in process control, military embedded computing, and laboratory automation. The SYS68K/CPU-6 in particular served as the central processing element in multi-board VME chassis configurations where it managed real-time task scheduling, inter-board communication, and I/O arbitration.
The core problem facing maintenance engineers today is architectural lock-in. Systems built around the SYS68K/CPU-6 were designed with tight hardware-software coupling. Application firmware, RTOS configurations, and I/O driver stacks were written specifically for the Motorola 68k instruction set and the VMEbus timing characteristics of this board. Replacing the processor board with a modern alternative is not a drop-in exercise — it requires porting software, revalidating timing-critical routines, and in regulated industries, re-certifying the entire system. That process is measured in years and millions, not weeks and thousands.
Sourcing a verified replacement SYS68K/CPU-6 REV. 4.1 eliminates that path entirely. The existing software stack runs without modification. The VMEbus backplane continues to operate within its validated parameters. The maintenance team retains institutional knowledge of the system. The capital asset — whether a production line, a test bench, or a defense platform — continues generating value rather than becoming a liability.
For plant managers and asset owners operating under budget constraints, this is the calculation that matters: the cost of one verified spare board versus the cost of a forced system retirement. The arithmetic is not close.
Facilities running SYS68K-based VME systems face a predictable pressure cycle. OEM support ended years ago. Third-party repair houses are thinning. Each passing year reduces the pool of engineers who understand the platform. Against this backdrop, a structured spare parts strategy is the most cost-effective form of asset protection available.
Recommended approach for extending system life:
Sourcing obsolete industrial boards from the secondary market carries real risk. DriveKNMS applies a structured 5-step incoming quality process to every SYS68K/CPU-6 unit before it is offered for sale.
What warranty applies to discontinued boards?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty covering functional defects on all tested units. Warranty terms for specific units are confirmed at the time of sale based on condition grade.
How do I know the board is genuine and not counterfeit?
All units sourced by DriveKNMS are inspected for manufacturer markings, PCB layer construction, and component dating codes consistent with authentic FORCE COMPUTERS production. Counterfeit VMEbus boards are rare but not unknown in the secondary market; our inspection process specifically screens for inconsistencies.
Should I buy more than one unit?
For any production system where downtime cost exceeds the cost of a spare board within a single shift, the answer is yes. For critical lines, a minimum of two spares per chassis is the standard recommendation. Inventory held now is inventory available during a crisis; inventory sourced during a crisis is subject to availability constraints and premium pricing.
Can you source other SYS68K series boards?
Yes. DriveKNMS specializes in the full FORCE COMPUTERS SYS68K product line as well as other discontinued VMEbus platforms. Contact us with your full bill of materials for a consolidated sourcing assessment.
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