What you're sourcing
The ABB ACS800-01-0025-3+E200+P904+R700 is a wall-mount low-voltage AC drive from the ACS800-01 family, ordered for 415 V supply and tagged with three plus-coded options (+E200, +P904, +R700) that name the factory fit-out shipped with the unit. At 6.80 kg it sits in the small-frame end of the ACS800-01 range — one installer can handle it, but the panel still wants the listed weight budgeted against the mounting plate and the enclosure thermal mass before the unit is bolted in. The plus-code string is part of the order: any replacement has to match +E200, +P904, and +R700 exactly, or the firmware image, I/O card set, or braking chopper the line was commissioned against will not match.
Where this class of drive sits
The ACS800-01-0025-3 is the standard wall-mount configuration in ABB's industrial drive family, sized for motor control on machinery and process skids where the cabinet already has its own cooling and the drive drops in as a panel-mounted module. In a hot-strip mill this kind of unit is rarely parked near the stands — it lives in the pulpit or MCC room with the rest of the controls — but the cabinet has to take the radiant heat off the back wall and stay immune to the drive EMI bleeding off the larger megawatt inverters that feed the coiler and pinch rolls.
Lifecycle and sourcing posture
The procurement move for a buyer with a live BOM line is to quote it to order against an RFQ and confirm the plus-code set (+E200, +P904, +R700) is still buildable; that confirmation, not a catalog status flag, is what decides whether to keep the BOM line or migrate it.
Cross-shop note against the ACS880 family
The closest same-class peer in the evidence is the ABB ACS880-01-07A6-5, which sits at 6.35 kg and is the ACS880-generation successor at the small-frame end of the wall-mount range. Larger ACS880-01 frames like the -021A-5 at 7.71 kg or the -052A-5 at 9.07 kg are different current/frame classes and are not direct alternatives for an ACS800-01-0025-3 BOM line.
