Products / ProSoft Technology / MDA16 Gas Analyzer Interface Module
ProSoft Technology MDA16 Gas Analyzer Interface Module

ProSoft 3100-MDA16 Gas Analyzer Interface Module – Obsolete System 16 Spare Part

Model: 3100-MDA16

Brand ProSoft Technology
Series MDA16 Gas Analyzer Interface Module
Model 3100-MDA16
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

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Commercial Path

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Technical Dossier

Product Details And Specifications

ProSoft 3100-MDA16 Gas Analyzer Interface Module – Obsolete System 16 Spare Part

When a gas analyzer interface module fails inside a legacy ProSoft System 16 installation, the consequences extend far beyond a single line item on a maintenance budget. A forced migration to a modern DCS or PLC platform — including engineering redesign, I/O rewiring, software reconfiguration, operator retraining, and production downtime — routinely costs plant operators between $500,000 and $2,000,000 USD per affected unit. The ProSoft 3100-MDA16 is a discontinued component. Finding a verified replacement unit on the open market is not straightforward. DriveKNMS maintains a controlled inventory of hard-to-source legacy modules specifically to protect facilities from this scenario.

Technical Specifications

Part Number 3100-MDA16
Manufacturer ProSoft Technology
Product Series System 16
Module Function Gas Analyzer Interface Module
Country of Origin United States
Lifecycle Status Discontinued / Obsolete
Compatible Platform ProSoft System 16 backplane-based control architecture
Typical Application Process gas analysis data acquisition and interface in legacy DCS environments

Note: Electrical parameters not listed here to prevent specification errors. Confirmed technical data is provided upon request with unit verification.

Solving the Discontinued Hardware Crisis

The ProSoft System 16 platform was deployed extensively across petrochemical, refining, and industrial gas processing facilities during its production lifecycle. Many of these installations remain operational today — not because operators are unaware of the discontinuation, but because the cost and risk of replacing a functioning control architecture outweigh the theoretical benefits of modernization.

The 3100-MDA16 sits at a critical junction in these systems: it handles the data interface between gas analyzers and the broader control network. A failure at this point does not merely interrupt one measurement — it can disable safety interlocks, process alarms, and regulatory compliance reporting simultaneously. There is no software patch for a failed hardware module. The only viable path, short of a full system overhaul, is a direct hardware replacement.

Facilities that have extended System 16 asset life by 5 to 10 years beyond the manufacturer's end-of-support date have done so through a consistent strategy: maintaining a controlled inventory of critical spare modules, sourced from verified suppliers before market availability collapses entirely. The 3100-MDA16 is precisely the type of module that disappears from the secondary market without warning. Once the last units are absorbed, the only remaining option is a forced platform migration.

For plant management facing capital expenditure pressure, the arithmetic is straightforward. A single verified spare module — even at a premium over original list price — represents a fraction of the engineering and downtime costs associated with an unplanned system replacement. Procurement of critical spares is not a maintenance expense; it is asset protection.

Condition & Reliability Assurance

All legacy modules supplied by DriveKNMS pass a structured 5-step inspection protocol before shipment:

  • Step 1 – Electrolytic Capacitor Assessment: Aging electrolytic capacitors are the primary failure mode in legacy industrial modules. Each unit is inspected for capacitor bulging, leakage, and ESR degradation. Units with compromised capacitors are rejected or reconditioned prior to sale.
  • Step 2 – Firmware Version Verification: Where applicable, firmware revision is confirmed and documented. Mismatched firmware versions between replacement modules and existing system configurations are a known source of post-installation failures.
  • Step 3 – Pin and Connector Inspection: All edge connectors and backplane pins are examined under magnification for oxidation, corrosion, and mechanical deformation. Contact surfaces are cleaned to restore reliable electrical connection.
  • Step 4 – Board-Level Visual Inspection: PCB surfaces are inspected for cracked solder joints, damaged traces, and component displacement resulting from thermal cycling or improper storage.
  • Step 5 – Functional Verification: Where test equipment permits, modules undergo power-on verification prior to packaging.

Condition grade and inspection findings are documented and provided with each unit.

Key Features for System Maintenance

  • Drop-in replacement: The 3100-MDA16 installs directly into the existing System 16 backplane slot. No hardware modification to the host chassis is required.
  • No reprogramming required: System 16 module replacement does not require controller reprogramming in standard configurations. The replacement module assumes the role of the failed unit without changes to the control program.
  • Avoids engineering reconstruction costs: Substituting a verified spare eliminates the need for I/O remapping, network reconfiguration, and the associated engineering hours that accompany any platform migration.
  • Minimizes production downtime: With a spare on hand, mean time to repair is measured in hours, not weeks. Waiting for a sourcing process to complete after a failure is the scenario that drives unplanned downtime costs.

FAQ

What warranty applies to discontinued modules?
DriveKNMS provides a 90-day warranty covering functional defects on all inspected legacy modules. Warranty terms are confirmed in writing prior to shipment.

How do I know the unit is genuine and not counterfeit?
All units are sourced through controlled channels and inspected for authenticity markers including manufacturer labeling, board revision markings, and component consistency. Counterfeit screening is part of the standard intake process.

Should I purchase more than one unit?
For any System 16 installation with no current spare inventory, procurement of at least two units is advisable. The 3100-MDA16 is no longer manufactured. Secondary market availability is finite and declining. A second unit held in climate-controlled storage provides insurance against a second failure event without requiring another sourcing cycle.

What is the lead time?
In-stock units ship within 2 to 5 business days. Lead time for units requiring additional inspection or reconditioning is confirmed at the time of order.

Can you source other System 16 modules?
Yes. DriveKNMS specializes in legacy industrial hardware across multiple platforms. Contact us with your full bill of materials for a consolidated sourcing assessment.

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