Sale!

Motorola MVME162-262 VME Embedded Controller

  • Model: MVME162-262
  • Brand: Motorola
  • Series: MVME162 VMEbus SBC
  • Core Function: Legacy VME control processing
  • Product Type: Single-board computer
  • Key Specs: MC68040 at 25 MHz; 16 MB DRAM; Ethernet and 2 IndustryPack slots
  • Condition: New Surplus / Tested
  • ⚠️ Obsolete Model – Limited Stock Available
Categories: , , , , SKU: MVME162-262 Brand:

Description

Key Technical Specifications

  • Processor: MC68040
  • CPU Speed: 25 MHz
  • Cache: 8 KB on-chip cache
  • Memory: 16 MB DRAM
  • SRAM: 512 KB battery-backed SRAM
  • Flash: 1 MB flash/EPROM
  • VME Interface: A32/D64 master/slave with system controller support
  • Expansion: 2 IndustryPack slots
  • Communications: Ethernet and serial ports
  • Form Factor: 6U VME single-board computer

 

Product Introduction

Motorola MVME162-262 is a 6U VME embedded controller built around a 25 MHz MC68040 processor with 16 MB DRAM. It is used in legacy industrial control, test systems, and OEM VME racks where exact board compatibility matters.

This configuration is typically selected for its Ethernet connectivity, IndustryPack expansion, and monitor/debug firmware support. In the field, the main value is keeping an older VME system running without changing the rack architecture, software image, or I/O carrier layout.

 

Troubleshooting Quick Reference

Symptom Possible Cause Relevance to This Part Quick Check Method Recommendation
No LEDs on power-up Rack power, not CPU failure ❌ Low Measure backplane rails at the slot: +5 V, +12 V, -12 V Check PSU and backplane fuses before replacing the board
Board reaches monitor but not application Corrupt flash, wrong boot image, or config mismatch ✅ High Connect to serial console and check 162Bug output Restore the correct image and jumper settings first
Ethernet link absent Cable issue, port mismatch, or damaged PHY section ✅ Medium Check link LED and test with a known-good cable Verify the network option and physical interface revision
Serial console shows garbled text Baud rate or terminal setting mismatch ✅ Medium Verify terminal speed, parity, and stop bits Match the original site settings exactly
IP modules not recognized Bad IP card, slot issue, or carrier power problem ✅ Medium Reseat the IP module and check carrier voltages Inspect carrier wiring and slot configuration
Random resets after warm-up Battery failure, thermal stress, or unstable supply ✅ Medium Check battery voltage, airflow, and rail ripple Replace the battery and verify cooling before hardware swap

Contact technical support with photos of the board, jumper settings, console output, and rack details if the fault is still unclear.

MVME162-262
MVME162-262

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is MVME162-262 a direct replacement for every MVME162 board?
A: No. It is a specific configuration of the MVME162 family, and compatibility depends on CPU option, memory size, Ethernet presence, and installed IP hardware. Match the exact suffix and board revision before ordering.

Q: Can I hot-swap this board?
A: No. Power down the rack first. Legacy VME CPU boards were not meant to be pulled live, and doing so can stress the backplane or corrupt attached hardware.

Q: Will my existing software run on it?
A: Often yes, if the boot ROM, memory map, serial settings, and IP hardware match the old board. The real risk is configuration drift, not just CPU compatibility.

Q: Why is this cheaper than factory-new hardware?
A: Because MVME162-262 is an obsolete legacy part. Units in the market are usually surplus, pulled from service, or refurbished, so pricing reflects availability, age, and test status rather than current production.

Q: What condition should I expect?
A: Most sellers list it as New Surplus or Refurbished and tested. Ask for the test report, serial number, and actual photos, not just a stock image.

Q: What are the common failure points?
A: Battery-backed SRAM loss, bad flash contents, aged electrolytic capacitors, and network or serial configuration errors. In the field, many “bad board” calls turn out to be power, jumper, or software issues.

Q: What warranty is realistic for a board like this?
A: Limited warranty is normal for surplus industrial electronics, often 30 to 365 days depending on seller policy and test depth. Get the warranty terms in writing before you commit.