| Manufacturer: | AMAT |
| Availability: | 30 |
| In Stock: |
One failed I/O card can hold up an expensive piece of equipment that is otherwise ready to run. That is especially true in tool platforms where interlocks, sensors, and machine-state signals depend on one specific control card staying healthy.
This AMAT collection currently lists the 0100-11002 digital I/O card. For buyers supporting Applied Materials equipment or related installed systems, the value of a page like this is straightforward: it offers a direct route to a known spare instead of forcing a broad search through unrelated semiconductor hardware.
Applied Materials is known for semiconductor manufacturing equipment and related process tools. In that environment, a digital I/O card is rarely an isolated commodity. It is usually part of a machine-specific control architecture that ties field signals, safety conditions, and process states back into the tool controller.
That is why exact part-number sourcing matters. A near match may still create integration risk inside the installed equipment.
Even a single listed AMAT card is useful for procurement teams that already know what failed and need to move quickly on a verified replacement path.
Digital I/O cards are typically used to handle status inputs, command outputs, interlock signals, and machine communication inside equipment control cabinets. In semiconductor or high-value manufacturing environments, losing that card can stop a process sequence, block start-up, or create faults that keep the tool from returning to production.
For older tools, replacing the original card is often more practical than redesigning the machine around a newer control platform.
With I/O cards, it helps to send both the board label and the tool or rack reference if available. That shortens verification time and helps avoid confusion with similar assemblies.
Moore supports buyers who need hard-to-source automation spares for installed industrial equipment, including boards that ordinary channels may not keep readily available. That matters when the downtime cost of waiting is higher than the effort of a careful part review.
Instead of pushing buyers toward a generic substitute, Moore focuses on part identification, practical communication, and fast quoting for real maintenance scenarios.
Send the exact AMAT part number, quantity, target country, and urgency. If possible, attach the board label, equipment model, and a photo of the installed position so the request can be checked faster.


