Description
Product Introduction
GE DS200LPPAG1AAA is a critical power supply assembly specifically designed for the DS200 series of drive controllers. If you’re maintaining legacy GE Fanuc equipment, this module is the heart of the power distribution system, converting line voltage into the stable 24VDC needed for the control board logic. It’s a direct replacement part for systems requiring the G1AAA configuration, often found in turbine control or heavy industrial drives.Unlike generic power supplies, this unit is engineered to handle the electrical noise and vibration common in industrial motor control centers. The design focuses purely on durability and heat dissipation; there are no fancy digital displays or software updates here—just hardened electronics built to keep a drive running for decades. For maintenance teams, the goal is simple: swap it out quickly to minimize downtime, as a failed PSU is usually the culprit when the entire drive goes dark.
Key Technical Specifications
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Power Supply Module |
| Model Number | DS200LPPAG1AAA |
| Manufacturer | GE Fanuc (General Electric) |
| Series | DS200 |
| Input Voltage | 120 / 240 VAC (Auto-ranging or selectable) |
| Output Voltage | 24 VDC |
| Application | Drive Controller Logic Power |
| Compatibility | GE DS200 Drive Systems |
Application Scenarios & Pain Points
The “Mid-Shift Meltdown”
It’s 2 a.m. in the steel mill, and the coil coating line suddenly stops. The operators call it a “logic fault,” but you know the drill: no lights on the control rack. You pull the DS200LPPAG1AAA out, and the smell of ozone hits you—classic capacitor failure. In these legacy GE systems, the power supply takes the brunt of the plant’s dirty power. The pain point? Lead times. If you don’t have this specific revision (G1AAA) on the shelf, you’re looking at hours of downtime while the supply chain kicks in.
- Power Generation: Supplying control logic for turbine governors where redundancy and uptime are non-negotiable.
- Petrochemical: Running pumps and compressors in hazardous areas where the drive must operate 24/7.
- Manufacturing: Keeping conveyor drives and extruders running in environments with high electromagnetic interference (EMI).
- Water/Wastewater: Driving large lift stations where a power supply hiccup could cause a sewage overflow violation.




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Application Scenarios & Pain Points