Description
Key Technical Specifications (For Spare Parts Verification)
- Product Model: 125720-01
- Manufacturer: Bently Nevada
- System Family: 3500 Machinery Protection System
- Module Type: 3500/15 Power Supply (Single or Redundant Configuration)
- Input Voltage Options:
- 88–132 VAC (47–63 Hz) or
- 100–150 VDC (field-configurable via jumper)
- Output Voltages:
- +5 VDC @ 8 A (logic power)
- ±15 VDC @ 1.5 A each (analog/sensor power)
- Redundancy Support: Yes – can be paired with a second 125720-01 in a 3500 rack using diode-oring for seamless failover
- Status Indicators: LEDs for “AC OK,” “DC OK,” “Fault,” and “Redundancy Active”
- Form Factor: Full-height module (occupies one slot in 3500 rack)
- Certification: Designed for use in API 670-compliant systems; supports SIL 2 applications when used in redundant architecture
- Operating Temperature: 0°C to +65°C
- MTBF: >100,000 hours (per Bently historical data)
System Role and Downtime Impact
The 125720-01 is the power backbone of the 3500 system. It supplies clean, regulated power to vibration monitors (e.g., 3500/42M, /44M), relay modules (3500/53), communication gateways (3500/92), and other I/O. In non-redundant configurations, a single power supply failure results in:
- Immediate shutdown of the entire 3500 rack
- Loss of all vibration monitoring and alarm/trip outputs
- Potential inability to initiate a safety shutdown during overspeed, high vibration, or bearing failure
Even in redundant setups, degradation of one unit increases stress on the remaining supply and may go unnoticed until a second failure occurs. Given that 3500 systems protect multi-million-dollar rotating assets, power supply reliability is foundational to process safety.
Reliability Analysis and Common Failure Modes
Despite robust industrial design, aging 125720-01 units are prone to several failure mechanisms after 10–20 years of service:
- Electrolytic capacitor drying: Primary cause of failure—capacitors in the input filter and output regulation stages lose capacitance, leading to voltage ripple, brownouts, or thermal shutdown.
- Fan failure (in older variants): Some versions include a small cooling fan; bearing wear causes overheating and thermal derating.
- Input rectifier or switching transistor degradation: Results in inability to handle full load or voltage spikes, triggering “Fault” LED.
- Backplane connector arcing: Corrosion or loose seating causes intermittent power delivery, manifesting as random module resets.
- Redundancy diode failure: In redundant pairs, a failed diode can prevent proper load sharing or cause backfeed issues.
Design limitations include lack of remote health monitoring (no digital diagnostics) and dependence on passive cooling in high-ambient environments. For preventive maintenance, technicians should:
- Perform annual infrared thermography on power supplies under load
- Measure output voltages at test points during outages (±15 VDC ±0.5 V, +5 VDC ±0.1 V)
- Verify redundancy switchover by simulating a primary supply disconnect
- Replace units proactively after 12–15 years of service, even if operational

BENTLY 125720-01
Lifecycle Status and Migration Strategy
Bently Nevada has discontinued the 125720-01 as part of its shift toward the 3500/15R (enhanced redundancy) and integration with modern System 1 v22+ platforms. No new production exists, and factory repair services are no longer offered. Continued reliance on this module introduces significant risk:
- No access to genuine replacements
- Increasing likelihood of counterfeit or re-marked units
- Inability to meet audit requirements for “verifiable spare parts” under API 670 or ISO 13374
As an interim measure, facilities may:
- Source only from Bently Nevada–authorized service centers that provide full load-bank testing reports
- Maintain at least one tested spare per critical 3500 rack
- Implement external UPS and power conditioning to reduce stress on aging supplies
For long-term sustainability, Bently recommends upgrading to the 3500/15R (if still available) or migrating the entire system to the 3500 Enhanced Architecture with modern gateway and power options. This includes:
- Replacing legacy power supplies and backplanes
- Leveraging 3500/94 Enhanced Gateway for Ethernet-based monitoring
- Integrating with Bently’s Plantweb™ or APM for cloud-based diagnostics
Given that the 125720-01 is the lifeline of the 3500 protection system, its obsolescence represents a high-severity operational risk. Proactive sparing or inclusion in a capital modernization plan is essential to maintain machinery protection integrity and avoid catastrophic asset failure.



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