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GE DS200SDCCG1AHD Mark V Drive Control Card

  • Model: DS200SDCCG1AHD
  • Brand: GE
  • Series: Mark V
  • Core Function: Primary drive control
  • Product Type: Drive control card
  • Key Specs: 3 microprocessors, RAM access by multiple processors, Mark V platform
  • Condition: New Original / New Surplus
Categories: , , , , SKU: DS200SDCCG1AHD Brand:

Description

Key Technical Specifications

  • Manufacturer: GE
  • Model: DS200SDCCG1AHD
  • Series: Mark V Speedtronic
  • Product Type: Drive control card / drive control board
  • Function: Primary drive controller
  • Processor Architecture: 3 microprocessors
  • Memory Access: RAM accessible by multiple
  • Application: Wind, steam, and gas turbine control systems
  • Condition: Commonly sold as new surplus or refurbished through industrial spare-part channels

 

Product Introduction

GE DS200SDCCG1AHD is a Mark V drive control card used in turbine and industrial drive control systems. Suppliers describe it as a primary drive controller or drive control board, and the board architecture includes three microprocessors with shared RAM access.

For replacement work, the important issue is exact board identity. The DS200 family is revision-sensitive, so verify the suffix, cabinet role, and physical board match before you install it.

 

Troubleshooting Quick Reference

Symptom Possible Cause Relevance to This Part Quick Check Method Recommendation
Drive will not start Board failure, power issue, or missing enable signal ✅ High Measure cabinet power, check enable inputs, and inspect board LEDs if present Verify the drive chain first, then suspect the board
Controller faults immediately on boot Revision mismatch or corrupted configuration ✅ High Compare the replacement label to the original board and review the rack configuration Use an exact suffix match before swapping
Intermittent trip during operation Loose connector, grounding issue, or thermal stress ✅ High Inspect connectors, cabinet grounding, and board seating Reseat and verify wiring before replacing
No communication with host system Network or drive-side configuration issue ❌ Low Check the host, cable, and cabinet communications status This is often not a board failure
Board runs but output is unstable Analog path or upstream control issue ✅ Medium Compare command signals and feedback values at the cabinet terminals Validate external signals before condemning the card
Burn mark or hot spot on PCB Internal hardware failure ✅ High Power down and inspect the board for heat damage and shorted parts Replace the card after checking for downstream shorts

If the problem is still unclear, send photos of the board, rack slot, and fault history to technical support.

DS200SDCCG1AHD
DS200SDCCG1AHD
DS200SDCCG1AHD
DS200SDCCG1AHD

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is DS200SDCCG1AHD a direct replacement for my old card?
A: It can be, but only if the suffix and board family match exactly. Mark V hardware is not a “close enough” system, and a similar-looking board can still fail at power-up.

Q: What does this board do?
A: It acts as the primary drive control card in the Mark V system. In plain terms, it helps manage the drive logic that keeps turbine and industrial drive systems running in the expected control envelope.

Q: How many processors are on it?
A: Supplier documentation states three microprocessors with shared RAM access. That architecture is one reason the board is sensitive to revision and configuration mismatches.

Q: Is this part new, refurbished, or surplus?
A: It is commonly sold through surplus and refurbishment channels unless the seller states otherwise. Ask for the exact condition and test record instead of assuming the listing title tells the full story.

Q: Can I hot-swap it?
A: No, I would not. Power down the cabinet first, because drive control boards do not forgive live insertion mistakes.

Q: What usually causes problems after replacement?
A: The usual suspects are suffix mismatch, wrong slot or cabinet position, connector damage, and skipping the original configuration photo. I have seen more downtime from bad identity checks than from actual board failure.

Q: Why do some listings call it a drive control card and others a drive control board?
A: That is mostly vendor wording. The important part is the exact GE part number and the Mark V application it serves.