What the part is
The ABB ACS850-04-202A-5+J400+N7501+P92-0+0R715 ships as a configured industrial drive inverter from the ACS850-04 frame, carrying the +J400, +N7501, +P92-0 and +0R715 option codes at the factory rather than as a base unit that gets optioned up in the panel. The 202A current frame and the 5 (400 V class) suffix are the load-bearing selections in the string; the four plus-codes are the software/hardware tailoring the buyer committed to on the original PO. At 10.29 kg the unit sits at the upper end of what a single installer can shoulder onto a wall plate — plan for a second pair of hands or a panel hoist at the lift-in step, not because the drive is unusual, but because the four-plus-code configuration usually lands on a deeper module than the bare frame.
Option codes and what they imply for the BOM line
The plus-code string is the part of this order code that drives a contract buyer's deviation risk: each of +J400, +N7501, +P92-0 and +0R715 is a factory-fitted selection, and dropping or swapping one on a re-order changes the firmware personality and possibly the hardware build. Substitution discipline matters here — an approved alternate on the customer's AVL has to match the plus-code set, not just the base frame, or the panel will arrive with a different control interface than the prints call out.
