When strip guiding, sensing, or control electronics fail, the cost shows up fast in alignment problems, unstable tracking, and lost production time. Buyers coming to an EMG spare-parts page are usually trying to keep a running line stable, not start over with a new control concept.
This EMG collection is one of the stronger listings in the group. It currently includes IDC32-1.1 digital input/output expansion cards, NET16-1.2 network and power interface boards, EVK2.11.2 optical sensor processing boards, SPCC1-7 digital strip position controllers, SMI2.11.3 CANopen serial interfaces, and ECU01.5 control panel modules.
EMG is closely associated with strip guiding, strip position control, and related sensing technologies used in metal-processing and continuous production environments. That makes these listed boards relevant for plants that depend on stable strip edge detection, interface communication, and controller response inside an installed line.
In real maintenance work, these are not generic boards. They are system parts that usually belong to a larger guiding or measurement chain, so part-number accuracy matters from the first inquiry.
This mix tells buyers something useful right away: the page is not limited to one isolated component type. It covers control, sensing, communication, and operator-side hardware within the EMG ecosystem.
These modules fit best in lines where strip position, edge detection, actuator response, and control communication must stay coordinated. Common environments include metal processing, coil handling, rolling lines, converting equipment, and other continuous production systems where lateral tracking errors can create scrap, tension problems, or downstream stoppages.
For those buyers, the replacement job is rarely just electrical. It is operational. The right board helps preserve an installed control loop that operators already know and trust.
Because several EMG boards work together inside one system, a photo of the board label plus a photo of the surrounding rack or panel often speeds up verification and reduces ordering risk.
Moore supports buyers who need legacy and hard-to-source automation spares across multiple industrial brands. For EMG sourcing, that means fast response, help reviewing exact references, and practical support when the job is urgent and the installed system cannot wait for a long OEM procurement cycle.
Moore can also support requests that begin with incomplete information. If you only have a board photo, partial part number, or line documentation, that is still a workable starting point for a serious spare-parts inquiry.
Send the full EMG part number, quantity, delivery country, and urgency. If possible, include board photos, cabinet photos, and any line documentation that shows where the module sits in the strip-guiding or control chain.


