Molex 5136-CN-VME VMEbus Interface Module – Obsolete Industrial Spare Part
Molex 5136-CN-VME VMEbus Interface Module – Obsolete Spare Part, Limited Inventory When a VMEbus interface module fails in a legacy…
Model: PCIE2000ETH APP-EPB-PCIE
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 PCIe Ethernet adapter card fails inside a legacy industrial control workstation, the consequences extend far beyond a single component. The Molex PCIE2000ETH (also referenced as APP-EPB-PCIE) is embedded in automation infrastructure that was engineered to run for decades — not to be replaced on a software vendor's upgrade schedule. A single failed card of this type, if left unresolved, can force a full control system migration: new hardware platforms, new software licensing, re-engineering of I/O maps, operator retraining, and production downtime measured in weeks. Conservative estimates place such migrations at USD $500,000 to several million dollars depending on system complexity. DriveKNMS holds verified stock of this discontinued card. Securing a spare now is not a procurement decision — it is an asset protection decision.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Molex |
| Part Number | PCIE2000ETH / APP-EPB-PCIE |
| Product Category | Industrial PCIe Ethernet Adapter Card |
| Interface | PCI Express (PCIe) |
| Network Protocol | Ethernet |
| Country of Origin | United States |
| Discontinuation Status | Obsolete – No longer in production; replacement sourcing required |
| Typical System Compatibility | Industrial PC-based control workstations, legacy SCADA hardware platforms, embedded automation controllers utilizing PCIe expansion slots |
Note: Electrical parameters beyond the above are not published in available documentation. No parameters have been assumed or fabricated. Contact us for datasheet support.
The Molex PCIE2000ETH was designed for industrial-grade Ethernet connectivity in environments where standard commercial networking hardware cannot meet the reliability, temperature, or vibration tolerances required. It is commonly found in PC-based control workstations integrated with legacy distributed control systems and SCADA platforms — systems that were built to last 20 to 30 years and were never designed with a migration path in mind.
When Molex discontinued this card, the installed base did not disappear. Thousands of machines worldwide continue to depend on this exact hardware. The PCIe form factor, driver stack, and firmware version are often locked to the host system's operating environment. Substituting a generic commercial Ethernet card introduces driver incompatibility, interrupt conflicts, and in some cases, complete communication failure with field devices. There is no drop-in commercial replacement. The only viable path — short of a full system overhaul — is sourcing the original part.
Factory managers facing end-of-life pressure from OEMs and system integrators should understand that the cost of a single verified spare is a fraction of one day of unplanned downtime. Maintaining a buffer stock of two to three units per critical workstation is a standard risk mitigation practice in asset-intensive industries.
How to extend your automation asset life by 5 to 10 years using critical spare parts:
These measures, applied consistently, allow facilities to defer capital expenditure on system replacement by five to ten years while maintaining full production reliability. The investment in spare parts is recoverable; the cost of an unplanned line stoppage is not.
Sourcing obsolete hardware from the secondary market carries inherent risk. DriveKNMS applies a structured 5-step quality assurance process to every unit before shipment:
Units are supplied as New Old Stock (NOS) where available, or as Tested & Refurbished (T&R) with full condition disclosure. Condition is confirmed in writing prior to order confirmation.
Q: What warranty applies to obsolete parts?
A: DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty on all tested and refurbished units, covering functional failure under normal operating conditions. New Old Stock units carry a 180-day warranty. Warranty terms are confirmed in the sales order.
Q: How do I know the unit is genuine and not counterfeit?
A: All units are sourced through verified industrial surplus channels. Physical markings, PCB revision codes, and component profiles are cross-referenced against known genuine units. We do not source from unverified brokers. A condition and authenticity report is provided with each shipment.
Q: Can you supply multiple units for long-term spare holding?
A: Yes. We recommend customers requiring long-term asset protection discuss volume requirements directly. Reserved stock arrangements are available for qualified buyers, with staged delivery options to manage storage and budget constraints.
Q: What if my system requires a specific firmware version?
A: Provide your current system firmware version at the time of inquiry. We will confirm compatibility before shipment. If firmware matching is not possible, we will advise accordingly — we do not ship units with known compatibility conflicts.
Q: What is the lead time?
A: In-stock units ship within 3 to 5 business days after order confirmation and payment. Express shipment options are available for urgent requirements.
Status: DRAFT