What this order code actually is
The ABB ACS800-01-0009-3+E200+P901+P915+R700 is a configured wall-mount AC drive from the ACS800-01 series — the smaller IP21-style frame that mounts directly beside the motor cabinet rather than inside a MCC lineup. The base code ACS800-01-0009-3 and the trailing +E200, +P901, +P915 and +R700 suffixes are ABB factory option codes layered onto one order string, so the part ships as a single configured unit and any replacement has to match the full suffix block or be re-ordered through ABB as an equivalent configuration.
Class and what the suffix string implies for sourcing
This listing sits in the Motor Drives class — the wall-mount single-drive category rather than a cabinet-built industrial drive — which is the frame size buyers typically specify for direct-on-machine retrofits where the drive is bolted next to the motor it controls, not parked in a control room. Because the suffix string on ACS800-01-0009-3+E200+P901+P915+R700 is the actual shipping configuration, the unit a buyer receives is not electrically or dimensionally interchangeable with a bare ACS800-01-0009-3 — the +E200, +P901, +P915 and +R700 options change the I/O, control and braking sub-assemblies inside the enclosure, so a like-for-like spare must carry the same suffix block.
Lifecycle and sourcing posture
Configured drives of this generation are typically supplied through the ABB configured-product channel and through independent stocking distributors who hold option-coded units against long-running frame agreements; for a BOM line that calls for the exact suffix block, the realistic path is to quote against an RFQ with the full order string so the distributor can confirm whether a factory build, a configured spare, or a surplus unit from a decommissioned line is the available route.
Not a direct second-source against the ACS880
Buyers often ask whether an ACS880-01-11A0-5 can drop into a panel that was originally specified around the ACS800-01 frame — it cannot, because the ACS880-01 is the successor platform with different control board firmware, different terminal mapping, and different option-module slot assignments, so a swap is a re-commissioning job, not a wiring-only change. The other siblings on file — ACS880-01-07A6-5 and ACS580-01-031A-2 — are likewise different generations or different ampere frames within the ABB low-voltage drive range, and none of them is a parameter-compatible substitute for this specific configured ACS800-01-0009-3 unit; if a spare is needed against this exact BOM line, the configured order code has to be respected.
Sourcing takeaway
Submit the full ACS800-01-0009-3+E200+P901+P915+R700 string on the RFQ so the supply channel can match the suffix block exactly; if the configured unit is no longer buildable, ask for the closest in-channel equivalent built from a fresh ACS800 base plus the same +E200, +P901, +P915, +R700 options, rather than accepting a near-code cross that would change the I/O or braking configuration.
