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GE IC752WTD802 GE Fanuc Display Station 18-inch HMI Panel

Product Model: GE IC752WTD802
Product Brand: GE (General Electric) / GE Fanuc
Product Series: Display Station 2000 Series
Product Features:

  • Large 18.1-inch active matrix graphic display station designed for operator interaction in industrial settings.
  • Integrated HMI platform from GE’s legacy Display Station line, suited to automation and process control visualization.
  • Industrial-grade construction with robust housing and display for reliable use on plant floors.
  • Often available refurbished or surplus with extended warranties from third-party suppliers due to OEM discontinuation.
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Description

Product Model: GE IC752WTD802
Product Brand: GE (General Electric) / GE Fanuc
Product Series: Display Station 2000 Series
Product Features:

  • Large 18.1-inch active matrix graphic display station designed for operator interaction in industrial settings.
  • Integrated HMI platform from GE’s legacy Display Station line, suited to automation and process control visualization.
  • Industrial-grade construction with robust housing and display for reliable use on plant floors.
  • Often available refurbished or surplus with extended warranties from third-party suppliers due to OEM discontinuation.

Technical Specifications Table

Specification Detail
Model GE IC752WTD802
Series Display Station 2000 Series
Display Size 18.1 inches active matrix graphic panel
Panel Type Industrial HMI / Display Station
Integration Designed to interface with GE Fanuc automation systems
Internal Architecture PC-compatible HMI platform (legacy)
Housing Industrial enclosure suitable for plant environments
Weight ~33 lbs (approximate)
OEM Status Discontinued legacy module
Warranty Distributor/third-party dependent
Availability New surplus, refurbished units available
Typical Use HMI visualization, operator control panel
IC752SPL013- BA
IC752WTD802
IC752SPL013- BA
IC752WTD802

Product Role & System Fit

The GE IC752WTD802 served as a core operator interface in GE Fanuc’s Display Station 2000 Series—a lineup designed to provide robust human-machine interaction with automation hardware across factories and process installations. Its role was never limited to simply showing data: it was a critical conduit between machine logic and the human operators who need to understand, override, or adjust that logic based on real-time conditions.

Within a GE automation system, this display station typically interfaced with programmable logic controllers (PLCs), rack I/O, and supervisory control layers. It provided an interactive display of machine status, operator controls, alarm visualization, and sometimes logging interfaces. In many integration architectures, this type of panel sat alongside or replaced older text terminals, offering far richer graphical content.

Because legacy automation installations often mix older control elements with newer infrastructure, the IC752WTD802 found utility in retrofit projects. Engineers could integrate it into established systems without reworking existing PLC logic or communications stacks, preserving continuity while upgrading operator visibility. The panel’s support for active matrix graphics made it particularly valuable for complex visualization tasks such as multi-trend overlays or color coded alarm summaries.

In wider control architectures, this model was frequently paired with GE’s CIMPLICITY HMI environment or similar supervisory packages running on the display station’s internal PC-class hardware. That configuration enabled localized supervision tasks—such as setpoint tuning, manual overrides, or localized recipe control—without delegating everything back to a central SCADA server. It enhanced responsiveness by keeping critical visualization close to the operator.

While modern HMIs now boast touch gestures and high-resolution widescreens, older models like the GE IC752WTD802 still fulfill essential roles in industrial networks where legacy controller support and electrical compatibility are priorities. Their continued use speaks to the enduring importance of scalable, readable operator interfaces in automation.