Mark IV is the generation that first brought microprocessor control to GE's Speedtronic line. Its boards carry the DS3800 prefix; you will also see DS3820 numbers, which sit alongside the Mark IV family rather than forming a generation of their own.
Mark IV predates the triple-redundant Mark V (DS200) and the VME-based Mark VI (IS200). None of the three share cards. If you are holding a DS3800 number, you are working on a Mark IV panel, and no adapter will change that.
The supply reality — read this before you plan an outage
Mark IV has been out of production for a long time. Every DS3800 board on the market is surplus, refurbished or new-old-stock. There is no factory to order from. Two consequences follow, and they drive how sensible operators buy:
- Lead times are not long — they are unpredictable. A board can be on a shelf today and unfindable for eight months. You cannot plan around an average because there isn't one.
- Reactive buying is the expensive strategy. If a Mark IV still runs your plant, the critical spares are worth holding on your own shelf. The cost of a spare board is trivial against the cost of a turbine sitting idle while someone hunts one down.
Board families you will encounter
The four letters in the middle of a DS3800 number tell you the function. Common ones in the field include DGPA (programming auxiliary), DSQD (sequencer auxiliary), HACB (Series Six receiver, on the communications side), NSFC (servo flow control), and the HIO / HPT / NEP / NCI families. Where a board name references Series Six, it is interfacing the Mark IV with GE's Series Six programmable controller equipment — useful to know, because a communications fault there presents very differently from a bad analog reading.
Diagnosing before you order
Two patterns worth knowing on a Mark IV:
- Sequencer faults show up on startup, not in steady running. If the unit purges normally and then sits, or reaches crank speed and refuses to fire while every permissive reads satisfied, look at the sequencing path. If the machine runs happily once it is up, a sequencer board is unlikely to be your problem.
- Communications boards get replaced unnecessarily more than any other card. A broken link looks identical whether the fault is at the sending end, the receiving end, or the cable between them. On panels of this age, connector corrosion is a genuine and cheap-to-fix cause. Check it before you buy a board.
Reading a DS3800 number
DS3800DSQD1A1A splits into the family prefix (DS3800, Mark IV), the functional acronym (DSQD), and the trailing group and revision digits (1A1A). Some suppliers list the short functional form only, some the full number. If a search on one form comes up empty, try the other. And read the number off the board itself — on panels this old, cabinet documentation is frequently several outages out of date.
Requesting a quote
Send us the full part number including the trailing digits, the turbine and panel it serves, whether this is a breakdown or a shelf spare, and whether you can accept a superseding revision. For Mark IV, that last question is often the difference between shipping this week and waiting months. We reply within 24 hours, ship worldwide DDP, and accept purchase orders.
















































