What you're actually getting on the pallet
The ACS800-07-0260-3+P901: Listed weight is 299.82 kgs. That's the figure a rigging plan needs to be built around — bring a fork truck rated for it and a clear floor path, not a hand truck and a prayer. For an apprentice walking up to the crate, the question 'do I need rigging or can two of us muscle it?' gets answered by the spec sheet before the bands come off: at this mass, this is a rigged lift, not a carry.
Footprint delta versus the wall-mount ACS880-01 siblings
If the question is whether an ACS880-01 will drop into a cabinet that was originally specified around this ACS800-07, the honest answer starts with the mass gap. The ACS880-01-156A-5 sits at 55.00 kgs, the ACS880-01-065A-5 at 23.13 kgs, and the ACS880-01-040A-5 at 18.14 kgs — versus the 299.82 kgs on this ACS800-07-0260-3+P901. That is not the same product class physically: the ACS800-07 is a cabinet build with line filter, input contactor and cabling integrated inside the enclosure; the ACS880-01 is a wall-mount module that the panel builder has to integrate. Same family lineage, very different mechanical envelope.
Sourcing posture
For an MRO storeroom evaluating a spare, the weight figure alone tells you this isn't a shelf part — it's a bay spare, with rigging access and a floor-space reservation kept clear. If you're spec'ing a replacement cabinet drive for an existing line, lead with the order code and the cubicle footprint; the RFQ carries the rest.
