ABB SNAT-7120 Circuit Board – SNAZ7120J Series
ABB SNAT-7120 / SNAZ7120J Circuit Board: Sourcing Strategy & Asset Return Value in a Constrained Global Supply Chain The ABB…
Model: NINT-73C
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 an ABB NINT-73C interface board fails in a running production line, the consequences are not limited to a single drive going offline. The NINT-73C sits at the communication backbone of the ACS600 and ACS800 drive series, managing fieldbus and I/O interface functions that the entire control architecture depends on. A single failed board can halt a complete production cell. Replacing the drive series entirely — including engineering, rewiring, PLC reprogramming, and recommissioning — routinely costs manufacturers between USD 80,000 and USD 400,000 per line, before accounting for lost production time.
DriveKNMS holds verified physical stock of the NINT-73C. For plant managers and maintenance engineers operating legacy ABB drive systems, this is not a commodity purchase — it is an asset protection decision.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Part Number | NINT-73C |
| Manufacturer | ABB |
| Product Series | ACS600 / ACS800 Drive Series |
| Module Function | Interface Board (Fieldbus & I/O Communication) |
| Compatible Drives | ACS600, ACS800 series AC drives |
| Country of Origin | Finland |
| Discontinuation Status | Discontinued / Obsolete – No longer in ABB active production |
| Availability | Limited – Existing stock only |
Note: Electrical parameters not listed here are drive-configuration dependent. We do not publish unverified specifications. Contact us for datasheet confirmation prior to order.
The ACS600 and ACS800 drive families were workhorses of industrial automation through the 1990s and 2000s. Thousands of units remain in active service across pulp and paper mills, water treatment facilities, cement plants, and heavy manufacturing lines worldwide. ABB has long since moved its active portfolio to the ACS880 and ACS580 platforms, leaving ACS600/ACS800 operators without factory support for critical sub-components like the NINT-73C.
The NINT-73C is not a peripheral accessory. It handles the communication layer between the drive and the plant's control network — whether that is PROFIBUS, DeviceNet, or hardwired I/O. Without a functioning NINT-73C, the drive cannot receive speed references or status commands from the PLC or DCS. In facilities running Siemens S7, Allen-Bradley ControlLogix, or Honeywell DCS architectures, the loss of this board means the drive is effectively blind to the control system.
Sourcing a replacement from the secondary market is the only viable path that does not require a full drive replacement. DriveKNMS specializes in exactly this supply chain gap — locating, verifying, and delivering obsolete ABB drive components to maintenance teams that cannot afford extended downtime.
The business case for maintaining an ACS600/ACS800 installation rather than replacing it is straightforward when the numbers are examined honestly. A full drive replacement project — including new hardware, engineering hours, cable modifications, PLC program changes, and production downtime — typically represents a capital expenditure that cannot be justified when the mechanical load equipment (motors, gearboxes, pumps) still has a decade of service life remaining.
The practical strategy for extending drive system life by 5 to 10 years rests on three pillars:
The cost of holding a NINT-73C spare is a fraction of one hour of unplanned production downtime. For plant managers facing pressure to defer capital expenditure, this is the lowest-cost insurance available.
Sourcing obsolete boards from the secondary market carries legitimate risk. DriveKNMS applies a 5-step quality process to every NINT-73C unit before shipment:
Q: What warranty applies to an obsolete part like the NINT-73C?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty against defects on all tested units. New-in-box units carry a 180-day warranty. Warranty terms are confirmed in writing at the time of order.
Q: How do I know the unit is genuine ABB and not a counterfeit?
A: All units are sourced from verified industrial decommissioning channels or authorized secondary distributors. ABB part markings, board revision codes, and serial number formats are inspected as part of our intake process. We do not source from unverified brokers.
Q: Should I buy more than one unit?
A: For any installation where the NINT-73C is a single point of failure, holding a minimum of one cold spare is standard practice. For multi-drive installations or facilities with no local repair capability, two units is a reasonable buffer given the declining availability of this component on the secondary market.
Q: Can you source other ABB ACS600/ACS800 spare parts?
A: Yes. Contact us with your full part number list. DriveKNMS maintains sourcing relationships across the ABB legacy drive portfolio.