Products / Berger Lahr / TLC Series
Berger Lahr TLC Series

Berger Lahr TLC411F Stepper Motor Control Drive – Obsolete TLC Series Spare Part

Model: TLC411F

Brand Berger Lahr
Series TLC Series
Model TLC411F
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

Berger Lahr TLC411F Stepper Motor Control Drive – Obsolete TLC Series Spare Part

When a Berger Lahr TLC411F fails on the production floor, the immediate question is not where to find a replacement — it is whether the entire line must stop. Berger Lahr's TLC series stepper drives were embedded into thousands of automated packaging, textile, printing, and precision assembly systems throughout the 1990s and 2000s. Following Schneider Electric's acquisition of Berger Lahr, the TLC411F was discontinued and removed from active distribution channels. Today, sourcing a verified unit requires navigating a shrinking pool of specialist distributors. A single unplanned line stoppage caused by this module's failure — followed by a forced migration to a modern motion control architecture — routinely costs manufacturers between USD 200,000 and USD 2,000,000 when engineering hours, PLC reprogramming, mechanical retrofitting, and production downtime are fully accounted for. A confirmed spare unit on the shelf eliminates that exposure entirely.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Detail
Manufacturer Berger Lahr (now Schneider Electric)
Part Number TLC411F
Series TLC
Product Category Stepper Motor Control Drive
Discontinuation Status Discontinued – No longer manufactured or supported by OEM
Country of Origin Germany
Typical Application Stepper motor positioning control in legacy automation systems
Compatible Systems Berger Lahr TLC-series stepper motor systems; legacy CNC and packaging line controllers

Note: Electrical parameters not confirmed from verified datasheets are intentionally omitted. Contact us for documentation support.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The TLC411F was designed as a dedicated stepper motor control drive within Berger Lahr's TLC architecture. In legacy systems — particularly those built around Berger Lahr's own motion controllers or integrated into older Siemens and Mitsubishi PLC environments — this drive communicates via proprietary signal interfaces that have no direct equivalent in current-generation drives. Replacing it with a modern substitute is not a plug-and-swap operation. It requires signal conditioning hardware, firmware-level reconfiguration of the motion controller, and in many cases, mechanical adaptation of the motor mounting. For a factory running three shifts, the engineering window to execute such a retrofit without production impact is narrow and expensive.

The practical alternative is asset protection through verified spare inventory. A confirmed TLC411F unit on the shelf converts a potential catastrophic failure event into a scheduled two-hour maintenance task. For plant managers operating under capital expenditure constraints, this is the lowest-cost path to sustaining production continuity on equipment that still delivers acceptable throughput and has years of mechanical life remaining.

Extending the operational life of a legacy stepper drive system by five to ten years through strategic spare parts management is a documented practice in industries where the cost of full system replacement — including revalidation, operator retraining, and integration testing — exceeds the value of the remaining asset life. The TLC411F, properly maintained and supported by verified spare units, fits this model precisely.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

Every TLC411F unit processed through DriveKNMS undergoes a structured five-step quality assessment before it is offered for sale:

  • Step 1 – Visual and Mechanical Inspection: Full external inspection for physical damage, connector pin corrosion, and housing integrity. Units with compromised connectors or cracked housings are rejected at this stage.
  • Step 2 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Legacy drives of this generation are susceptible to electrolytic capacitor degradation. Capacitors are inspected for bulging, leakage, and ESR deviation. Units with aged capacitors are flagged for component-level refurbishment before sale.
  • Step 3 – Firmware and Label Verification: Where accessible, firmware version markings and internal revision labels are cross-referenced against known production batches to confirm authenticity and revision consistency.
  • Step 4 – Functional Power-On Test: Units are bench-tested under controlled conditions to verify basic power-on behavior and signal response where test infrastructure permits.
  • Step 5 – Packaging and ESD Protection: Cleared units are packaged in anti-static materials with desiccant to prevent moisture ingress during storage and transit.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The TLC411F is a form-fit-function replacement for the original unit. No mechanical modification or wiring change is required in a correctly maintained legacy installation.
  • No reprogramming required: In systems where the original motion controller configuration is intact, substituting the drive does not require PLC or motion controller reprogramming. Maintenance can be completed within a standard planned downtime window.
  • Avoids engineering retrofit costs: Keeping a verified spare eliminates the need to engage a systems integrator for a forced migration. The cost differential between a spare unit and a full retrofit is typically one to two orders of magnitude.
  • Long-term asset protection: For facilities operating on five-to-ten-year capital replacement cycles, a small inventory of critical spare drives is a standard risk mitigation measure. The TLC411F qualifies as a critical single-point-of-failure component in any system where it is installed.

FAQ

What warranty applies to an obsolete part like the TLC411F?
DriveKNMS provides a standard 90-day warranty on tested and verified units covering functional failure under normal operating conditions. Extended warranty terms are available on request for volume orders.

How do I confirm the unit is genuine and not a counterfeit?
All units are sourced through traceable supply channels. Physical markings, revision labels, and construction details are verified against known authentic units. Documentation of the inspection process is available upon request.

Should I purchase more than one unit?
For any system where the TLC411F represents a single point of failure, holding a minimum of two spare units is the standard recommendation. Given the shrinking availability of this part, procurement decisions made today carry significantly lower cost and lead time risk than those made after a failure event.

Can you source additional units if I need more than one?
Contact us with your quantity requirement. DriveKNMS maintains active sourcing channels for legacy Berger Lahr components and can advise on availability timelines.

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