What you're actually sourcing
The ABB ACS800-04-0610-7+D150+Q967 is an industrial AC drive from the ACS800-04 frame, listed by ASEA BROWN BOVERI under the Motor Drives category, with the configured option string +D150 and +Q967 encoded into the order code rather than ordered as separate line items. The 04 in the family designation points to the wall-mount / cabinet-built ACS800 platform rather than the larger regenerative modules, so a buyer reading this code should treat it as a stand-alone drive assembly, not a parallel-coupled inverter section. The full suffix — base code plus +D150 plus +Q967 — defines what ships, which means the same base ACS800-04-0610-7 ordered without those options is a different deliverable; verify the suffix on every BOM line, every replacement RFQ, and every surplus buyback before committing.
Same-class cross-shop, not a panel swap
The closest same-function part in the available peer set is the ACS880-01-156A-5, an ABB ACS880-01 wall-mount drive at 55.00 kgs. The ACS550-U1-157A-4 sits at 89.81 kgs; the ACS880-01-065A-5 at 23.13 kgs; all three share the Motor Drives category, but frames and generations differ.
Integration and EMC notes worth flagging early
The drive belongs in the ACS800 wall-mount / cabinet-built family, so grounding and cable entry should follow the EMC practices ABB publishes for the ACS800-04 frame: short, bonded power cabling, segregated control and signal runs, and a clean PE bond at the cabinet entry rather than a daisy-chained ground loop — these are the application-note points that decide whether a CE site acceptance test passes first time. At 205.00 kgs the unit belongs on a frame that can take the static load and the vibration load of a loaded line, so a floor stand or a reinforced wall bracket is part of the install scope, not an afterthought; commissioning should start with a megger of the motor cable insulation and a visual on the PE bond before any power-up, because a drive in this mass class is not something you de-energize and re-pull cables on casually.
