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DC Servo Drives

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DC servo drives and DC motor drives convert AC mains supply into a controlled DC output to regulate the speed and torque of brushed DC motors in industrial applications where DC drive systems remain installed and in service. PLC Direct supplies DC drives and DC converters from leading automation manufacturers as surplus sealed, refurbished, and used hardware, supporting replacement and lifecycle maintenance of installed DC motor drive systems across process industries, heavy manufacturing, and legacy machine tool environments. 

Where Are DC Servo Drives Used in Industrial Environments?  

DC servo drives are used in installed DC motor systems that require precision closed-loop speed regulation and controlled armature current, in legacy process applications where the DC motor base remains in service and AC conversion has not been executed. They are most prevalent where accurate, continuous speed control across wide load ranges is the primary requirement, winder tension drives, draw bench systems, and reversing mill drives, where the DC drive's torque characteristics and established installation make direct replacement more practical than a full drive-and-motor conversion. 

Facilities and operations that depend on DC drives include: 

  • Metals and steel processing plants running large wound-field DC motors on rolling mills, coilers, and draw bench drives, where DC motor drive control provides precise torque regulation. 

  • Pulp and paper mills maintaining installed DC servo drive and motor systems on winders, coaters, and line drives, where upgrading to AC is deferred. 

  • Printing and web press operations running DC converter systems on impression and infeed drives in installations predating AC servo adoption. 

  • Mining and heavy material handling operations running large industrial DC drives on hoist, conveyor, and ore processing equipment with long-established DC motor installations. 

When a DC drive fails on installed equipment, sourcing a matched replacement by part number is typically the fastest path to restoring the system, since retrofitting an AC drive and motor requires engineering work that extends the outage. 

Which Brands of DC Servo Drives Does PLC Direct Stock?  

PLC Direct stocks DC motor drives, DC servo drives, and DC converters from major industrial automation manufacturers. 

  • Siemens SINAMICS DCM and SIMOREG: The SINAMICS DCM (6RA80-xx series) is the current Siemens DC converter family for two- and four-quadrant DC motor drive applications; the SIMOREG (6RA70-xx and 6RA24-xx series) are legacy DC drives for maintaining older installed Siemens DC motor systems. 

  • ABB DCS800: The DCS800 is ABB's DC motor drive family for two- and four-quadrant brushed DC motor control, available across a range of current ratings. 

All DC servo drives and DC motor drives at PLC Direct are available as surplus sealed, refurbished, and used, depending on current inventory. 

What Should You Know Before Ordering DC Servo Drives?  

Hardware condition options: PLC Direct supplies DC drives as surplus sealed, refurbished, and used hardware. Surplus sealed units are factory-sealed stock in original packaging; refurbished units have been tested and restored to operational condition. Used hardware has been previously installed and carries the same 1-year PLC Direct warranty as all other condition grades.   

Compatibility and part identification: DC motor drives are matched to the installed motor by armature voltage rating, armature current rating, field voltage, and field current; a replacement DC converter must match these parameters as encoded in the original part number. For legacy DC drives and DC converters from discontinued families, the original nameplate part number is the required reference for sourcing, as variants within these families are not interchangeable and the systems are no longer in active production. 

Warranty: All DC servo drives hardware purchased from PLC Direct carries a standard 1-year warranty covering defects and functionality, applicable to surplus sealed, refurbished, and used products. 

PLC Direct supplies DC servo drive hardware for replacement and maintenance, and does not provide system design, programming, or integration services. 

Frequently Asked Questions

A two-quadrant DC drive controls motor speed and torque in one direction only, with limited braking capability. A four-quadrant drive controls speed and torque in both forward and reverse directions and supports full regenerative braking, making it suited to applications such as winders, hoists, and reversing drives that require bidirectional operation under load.
Field weakening is a technique used in DC motor drives to extend the speed range above base speed by reducing the field current, thereby reducing back-EMF and allowing higher armature speeds at the expense of available torque. It is commonly used on winder and draw bench applications where constant power rather than constant torque is required across a wide speed range.
DC motor drives supply separate armature and field windings, each requiring a specific voltage and current. A replacement drive must match both the armature output rating and the field rectifier output to ensure the motor operates correctly; mismatching the field rating will affect flux and speed regulation even if the armature circuit is correctly sized.
Thyristor (SCR) degradation, failed gate-trigger circuits, and capacitor wear are the most common failure modes in legacy DC servo drives such as the Siemens SIMOREG series. These components are subject to thermal cycling stress over decades of service, and failure of a single SCR in the converter bridge typically results in loss of control or excessive ripple in the DC output.
Retrofitting from DC to AC is technically feasible but requires replacing both the drive and the motor, re-engineering the control interface, and potentially modifying the mechanical coupling if motor frame or shaft dimensions differ. For facilities where downtime is the primary concern, sourcing a matched replacement DC drive by part number is almost always faster than performing a drive-and-motor conversion.

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