Cross Reference
Allen-Bradley Bulletin 1606-XLE Power Supply Replacement Guide
This cross-reference page gives a cautious professional path for narrowing replacements around Allen-Bradley Bulletin 1606-XLE Power Supply, with the emphasis on manual verification of ratings, accessories, fit, and certification context before any substitution is approved.
Cross-reference guide
Start with the original family
Cross-reference work on allen-bradley bulletin 1606-xle power supply should start with the installed family and application type, not with a keyword search alone.
If the original family is uncertain, capture the nameplate, the surrounding assembly details, and the exact job conditions before comparing anything else.
Common replacement path
The usual path is to identify the original duty, then compare the replacement family on steady-state burden, startup inrush, redundancy needs, diagnostics, and cooling, plus accessories, fit, and certifications.
Family-level mapping table
Use this table as the first narrowing step. It is not a part-number interchange list, but it does show the typical path engineers follow from the installed family into a current family or equivalent platform.
| Original family or installed situation | Typical current path | What to verify before approval |
|---|---|---|
| Allen-Bradley Control transformer or supply family | Current family with the same control-power role | Confirm input voltage, output voltage, burden, inrush tolerance, and protection method. |
| Allen-Bradley Redundant or buffered control-power assembly | Current supply arrangement with the same availability strategy | Redundancy modules, reserve margin, and load sharing need to stay intentional. |
| Allen-Bradley Panel-mounted control-power package | Current family that fits the same space, thermal conditions, and terminal layout | The replacement has to fit both electrically and mechanically in the panel. |
What to verify before substitution
| Verify item | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Original family and installed job | Cross-reference work starts with the installed platform and actual duty, not with a loose text search. |
| Control power supply ratings | The alternate has to stay aligned on steady-state burden, startup inrush, redundancy needs, diagnostics, and cooling. |
| Supporting parts and accessories | DC distribution, redundancy modules, fusing, and diagnostic contacts can change the replacement path even when the main frame looks close. |
| Mechanical fit and certifications | Mounting, spacing, and approvals can stop a near match from being usable. |
When to stop and review the application
Stop treating the job like a simple cross-reference when the duty is severe, the enclosure is unusual, accessories are missing, or the original part markings are incomplete.
Important verification notes
Treat this page as a screening tool. If the ratings, control details, accessories, fit, or certifications stop lining up, pause the substitution and review the original application again before ordering.
What to verify before substitution
| Item to verify | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Original family and application | A mismatch here can change performance, fit, safety acceptance, or expected service life. |
| Voltage and load rating | A mismatch here can change performance, fit, safety acceptance, or expected service life. |
| Control details and accessories | A mismatch here can change performance, fit, safety acceptance, or expected service life. |
| Mechanical fit and wiring space | A mismatch here can change performance, fit, safety acceptance, or expected service life. |
| Certifications and surrounding assembly fit | A mismatch here can change performance, fit, safety acceptance, or expected service life. |
Compatibility warning
Technical Information Notice
The information in this article is provided for general educational and reference purposes. Industrial equipment selection, installation, and operation should always be verified against manufacturer documentation, applicable electrical codes, and the requirements of the specific application.
Strike Industrial does not design electrical systems and cannot evaluate every operating condition. Before installing or modifying industrial equipment, consult qualified personnel such as a licensed electrician, controls engineer, or equipment manufacturer when appropriate.