Products / General Electric / VCRC H1B
General Electric VCRC H1B

GE IS200VCRCH1BBC Circuit Board Card – Obsolete VCRC H1B Spare Part

Model: VCRC H1B IS200VCRCH1BBC

Brand General Electric
Series VCRC H1B
Model VCRC H1B IS200VCRCH1BBC
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.

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Commercial Path

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

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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

GE IS200VCRCH1BBC Circuit Board Card – Obsolete VCRC H1B Spare Part

When a circuit board like the IS200VCRCH1BBC fails in a legacy GE control system, the consequences extend far beyond the cost of the card itself. A forced migration to a modern control platform — driven by a single unavailable spare — routinely carries engineering, commissioning, and production-loss costs measured in the millions of dollars. For plant managers operating aging turbine control or excitation systems, the calculus is straightforward: a verified spare part on hand is not a line item expense. It is asset protection.

DriveKNMS maintains sourced inventory of the GE IS200VCRCH1BBC (VCRC H1B) circuit board card. This is a hard-to-find component with no current production run. Availability is not guaranteed beyond existing stock.

Technical Specifications

Parameter Detail
Part Number IS200VCRCH1BBC
Series / Board ID VCRC H1B
Manufacturer GE (General Electric)
Product Type Circuit Board Card
Production Status Discontinued / Obsolete – No longer manufactured
Country of Origin United States
Compatible Systems GE Mark VI Turbine Control System; GE EX2100 Excitation Control System
Condition Available New surplus; Refurbished (tested)

Note: Electrical parameters beyond those listed above are not published here to prevent misapplication. Confirm compatibility with your system revision before ordering.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The IS200VCRCH1BBC is a functional component within GE's Mark VI turbine control architecture and the EX2100 excitation platform — both of which remain in active service at power generation facilities, petrochemical plants, and heavy industrial sites worldwide, despite GE having transitioned its control portfolio to newer generations.

The Mark VI and EX2100 platforms were engineered for decades of service life. The installed base is enormous. Yet GE's official parts support for these legacy systems has progressively narrowed. When a VCRC board fails, the plant faces a binary choice: locate a verified spare, or begin a capital project to replace the entire control system.

That capital project — even a partial one — involves hardware procurement, software migration, I/O rewiring, loop checkout, and a planned outage. Conservative estimates for a Mark VI-to-MarkVIe migration on a single gas turbine unit run from USD $800,000 to over USD $2,000,000, depending on scope. Against that figure, the cost of maintaining a strategic spare parts inventory is not a maintenance budget discussion. It is a capital preservation decision.

How to extend the service life of a GE Mark VI or EX2100 system by 5–10 years through targeted spare parts management:

  • Identify single-point-of-failure boards. The VCRC card handles voltage regulation and control feedback. A single failed unit can trip the unit. Maintain at minimum one verified spare per operating unit.
  • Establish a cold-spare rotation policy. Boards in storage degrade. Electrolytic capacitors dry out over 7–10 years. Rotate spares into service periodically and return pulled boards for refurbishment.
  • Document firmware revisions. Mark VI boards are firmware-specific. Before purchasing a spare, confirm the revision level matches your installed system. A board with an incompatible firmware revision will not function as a drop-in replacement without re-flashing, which requires GE tooling.
  • Source from verified industrial distributors. Counterfeit and non-functional boards circulate in the secondary market. Require documentation of test results and provenance before accepting any spare.
  • Negotiate long-term supply agreements. As secondary market inventory of obsolete GE boards depletes, prices rise and availability narrows. Locking in supply now — even for 2–3 units — provides a multi-year operational buffer at today's pricing.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

DriveKNMS applies a 5-step quality process to all refurbished boards before shipment:

  • Step 1 – Visual Inspection: Full board inspection for physical damage, burnt components, cracked solder joints, and pin corrosion. Boards with compromised connectors are rejected at this stage.
  • Step 2 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Capacitor aging is the primary failure mode in boards of this generation. Each electrolytic capacitor is tested for capacitance and ESR. Out-of-spec capacitors are replaced with equivalent-rated components.
  • Step 3 – Firmware Version Verification: The board's firmware revision is read and documented. This is provided to the buyer to confirm compatibility with their installed system revision before shipment.
  • Step 4 – Functional Bench Test: Where test fixtures are available, boards are powered and tested for correct signal output and communication response.
  • Step 5 – Anti-Static Packaging: Boards are shipped in ESD-safe bags with rigid protective packaging. Handling instructions are included.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The IS200VCRCH1BBC is a direct form-fit-function replacement for the same part number within compatible system revisions. No hardware modification is required.
  • No reprogramming required: Provided the firmware revision matches your installed system, the board operates without re-engineering. This eliminates the need for GE field service involvement in most replacement scenarios.
  • Avoids engineering reconstruction costs: Using a verified spare avoids the trigger event that initiates a full control system upgrade project. The cost differential between a spare board and a system migration is not marginal — it is structural.
  • Supports extended asset life: Facilities that maintain adequate spare parts inventories for legacy GE control systems routinely operate those systems 10–15 years beyond the manufacturer's stated support window.

FAQ

Q: What warranty applies to obsolete or refurbished boards?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty on refurbished boards covering functional failure under normal operating conditions. New surplus boards carry a 12-month warranty. Warranty terms are confirmed in writing at the time of order.

Q: How do I confirm this is a genuine GE board and not a counterfeit?
A: We provide documentation of the board's origin and test results upon request. Boards are inspected for GE markings, PCB revision codes, and component authenticity as part of our standard QA process.

Q: Should I purchase more than one unit?
A: For any facility operating a GE Mark VI or EX2100 system, holding a minimum of one cold spare per critical board type is standard practice. Given the declining availability of IS200VCRCH1BBC units in the secondary market, purchasing two units now — one active spare, one long-term reserve — is a defensible asset protection strategy.

Q: Can you source specific firmware revisions?
A: We document firmware revisions on all boards in stock. Contact us with your required revision and we will confirm availability before invoicing.

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