| Manufacturer: | MOTION SCIENCE |
| Availability: | 10 |
| In Stock: |
A failed servo drive can stop an otherwise healthy machine at the axis level. When the drive is part of an older motion platform, the real issue is usually not whether a new system exists. It is whether production can get back to stable movement without redesigning the whole machine.
This Motion Science collection currently lists the MP3-404HR2 servo drive module. That makes the page relevant for buyers supporting installed motion equipment where exact replacement and fast verification matter more than broad product selection.
Servo drive modules belong in applications where commanded motion, feedback, and motor power have to stay aligned. In day-to-day maintenance work, replacing the original drive is often the shortest path when the machine mechanics are still sound and the control program already fits the installed hardware.
That is why buyers sourcing Motion Science parts usually work from a known part number, panel reference, or failed drive label rather than from general catalog descriptions.
This kind of listing is useful for plants and machine builders that need to keep a legacy motion axis alive without spending days hunting through substitute options that may still need mechanical or electrical rework.
Servo drives like the MP3-404HR2 are typically associated with positioning, indexing, feed control, and repeatable axis motion in packaging lines, converting equipment, assembly machines, and other automated systems that depend on stable motor control. If the original drive drops out, the machine may lose position accuracy, fail to home, or stop cycling altogether.
For many buyers, the goal is simple: restore the existing motion channel with the least disruption to wiring, control logic, and commissioning time.
If the machine has been modified over time, it is worth sending photos of the drive label and terminal layout. That prevents buyers from losing time on a part that matches the family name but not the installed version.
Moore supports spare-part sourcing for legacy automation hardware across multiple brands. For motion-control buyers, that means practical help with part-number checking, product-photo confirmation, and shipment planning when the machine cannot stay idle for long.
Instead of treating a drive failure like a future upgrade project, many plants need a replacement path that keeps the current line running now. That is where a specialist spare-parts supplier is useful.
Include the part number, motor model if known, quantity, delivery country, and urgency. If possible, attach the drive nameplate and a photo of the installed wiring side so the request can be reviewed faster.


