GE Multilin UR Series Modules: UR9GH UR 9GH CPU Module —
GE Multilin UR Series: Comprehensive Module Range and Technical Overview The GE Multilin Universal Relay (UR) Series represents one of…
Model: 269PLUS-D/O-211-100P-HI
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 GE Multilin 269Plus relay fails in a live production environment, the consequences are not limited to a single motor going offline. In facilities running legacy motor control centers (MCCs) built around the 269Plus platform, a single failed protection relay can cascade into a full line shutdown. The cost of an unplanned outage — lost production, emergency labor, expedited freight — routinely exceeds six figures within 48 hours. A full control system migration to a modern protection platform, including engineering, commissioning, and revalidation, typically runs into the millions of dollars and takes 12 to 24 months to execute.
DriveKNMS maintains verified stock of the GE 269PLUS-D/O-211-100P-HI. This is not a substitute or cross-reference — it is the exact part number your system was built around.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Part Number | 269PLUS-D/O-211-100P-HI |
| Manufacturer | GE Multilin (General Electric) |
| Series | Multilin 269Plus |
| Function | Motor Protection Relay – Enhanced Thermal Model |
| CT Input Range | 1–100A (100P designation) |
| Communication | D/O designation indicates DeviceNet / RS485 communications option |
| Thermal Model | HI – High-Inertia motor thermal model variant |
| Discontinuation Status | Discontinued by GE Multilin; no direct OEM replacement available |
| Country of Origin | United States |
Note: Electrical parameters listed reflect published GE Multilin 269Plus series specifications. Any parameters not confirmed by physical unit inspection are excluded per our accuracy protocol.
The GE Multilin 269Plus was a dominant motor protection platform across petrochemical, mining, water treatment, and heavy manufacturing facilities throughout the 1990s and 2000s. Its thermal model accuracy and DeviceNet integration made it the relay of choice for high-inertia motor applications — large compressors, crushers, and pump stations where nuisance tripping carries severe operational penalties.
GE Multilin has since migrated its product line to the 369 and 469 series. These successors are not drop-in replacements for the 269Plus. They carry different form factors, different communication protocols, and different parameter structures. Replacing a 269Plus with a 369 in an existing MCC panel requires physical panel modification, relay re-parameterization, and in networked installations, PLC or DCS communication reconfiguration. In a DeviceNet-integrated facility, this is not a weekend project.
For plant managers facing this reality, the calculus is straightforward: a verified spare 269PLUS-D/O-211-100P-HI, sourced and held in inventory, costs a fraction of one day of unplanned downtime. Facilities that maintain a two-unit buffer for critical protection relays routinely extend the operational life of their legacy MCC infrastructure by 5 to 10 years — deferring capital expenditure until a planned, budgeted migration cycle rather than an emergency one.
The 269Plus is also deeply embedded in systems that communicate upstream to Honeywell TDC3000 and Experion PKS DCS platforms, as well as ABB MasterPiece 200 and Freelance control systems. In these environments, the relay is not just a protection device — it is a data node. Replacing it disrupts historian data continuity and alarm management configurations that took years to tune.
Discontinued hardware sourced from the secondary market carries inherent risk. DriveKNMS applies a structured 5-step inspection protocol to every 269Plus unit before it is offered for sale:
Step 1 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: The 269Plus power supply board uses electrolytic capacitors with a rated service life of 10–15 years. Each unit undergoes ESR (Equivalent Series Resistance) measurement to identify capacitors approaching end-of-life before they cause field failure.
Step 2 – Firmware Version Verification: The 269Plus had multiple firmware revisions addressing thermal model accuracy and communication stability. We document the firmware version of each unit and flag any known revision-specific issues.
Step 3 – Terminal and Pin Corrosion Inspection: All I/O terminals, CT input pins, and communication port contacts are inspected under magnification for oxidation and corrosion. Affected contacts are cleaned and re-tested for continuity.
Step 4 – Functional Power-On Test: Each unit is powered and tested for display function, relay output response, and communication port activity where applicable.
Step 5 – Packaging and ESD Protection: Units are packaged in anti-static bags with desiccant and shipped in double-wall cartons to prevent transit damage.
The 269PLUS-D/O-211-100P-HI is a direct, drop-in replacement for any existing 269Plus installation with matching CT ratio and communication configuration. No panel re-wiring is required. No PLC or DCS reprogramming is required. Parameter sets from the failed unit can be re-entered manually or, where a backup exists, restored from the original configuration file.
This means your maintenance team can execute a relay replacement during a planned outage window — typically 2 to 4 hours — rather than committing to a multi-week engineering project. The cost differential between a spare relay and a forced system upgrade is not marginal. It is structural. Facilities that treat critical protection relay inventory as a capital asset, rather than a consumable, consistently demonstrate lower unplanned downtime rates and longer asset service lives.
Q: What warranty applies to discontinued parts?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty covering functional defects identified under normal operating conditions. Extended warranty options are available — contact us to discuss your specific requirements.
Q: How do I confirm the unit is new or quality-refurbished?
A: Each unit ships with a condition report documenting inspection results from our 5-step QA process. We clearly distinguish between new-in-box units and professionally refurbished units. We do not sell units that have not passed functional testing.
Q: Should I purchase more than one unit?
A: For any facility running more than two motors protected by the 269Plus platform, we recommend holding a minimum of one spare per critical motor circuit. For facilities where a motor failure would trigger a full process shutdown, a two-unit buffer is the standard practice among asset-intensive industries. Secondary market availability of the 269Plus is finite and declining. Units available today may not be available in 18 months.
Q: Can you source specific firmware versions?
A: We document firmware versions for all units in stock. If your application requires a specific revision, contact us before ordering and we will confirm availability.