I Thought I Knew What to Buy
When I took over purchasing for our plant in 2020, I had a simple rule: match the specs, beat the price. Terminal blocks, power supplies, enclosures – it all seemed straightforward. If a vendor offered a 24V/5A power supply for 20% less than the usual supplier, that was a win. Right?
Not exactly. Here's what happened.
The Surface Illusion
From the outside, buying a power supply looks like a commodity exercise. Same voltage? Same current? Same certifications? Then the cheapest one is the smart choice. That's what I told myself when I ordered 40 units of a no-name brand for a line upgrade. The Weidmüller quote was 15% higher. I went with the cheaper option.
People assume the lowest quote means the vendor is more efficient. What they don't see is which costs are being hidden or deferred.
The Surprise Wasn't the Price
Never expected the cheap units to cause a production stoppage. Turns out the output voltage sagged under load – something the datasheet didn't mention. We discovered it only after a PLC started glitching. The plant lost 6 hours of output. Cost? About $8,000 in lost production, plus my time to source emergency replacements.
A lesson learned the hard way.
The Real Cost of a Power Supply
What I mean is that the 'cheapest' option isn't just about the sticker price – it's about the total cost including your time spent managing compatibility issues, the risk of delays, and the potential for rework. Let me break that down.
- Installation time: Cheap terminals often need more effort to strip and terminate. Weidmüller's push-in technology cuts wiring time by about 40%. We measured it.
- Reliability: A power supply that fails after six months forces an emergency order. Your maintenance team stops doing planned work to replace it.
- Documentation: Cheap vendors give you a one-page spec sheet. Good vendors like Weidmüller provide detailed I/O curves, derating charts, and compliance certificates – essential if your facility gets audited.
When I Finally Listened
Todd Pepsi, one of our senior engineers, told me from day one: 'Don't just compare prices, compare the whole package.' I only believed that after ignoring it and eating that $8,000 mistake.
Take it from someone who learned the hard way: verify total cost of ownership, not just unit price.
How We Changed Our Procurement
After that incident, I overhauled our vendor list. We now standardize on Weidmüller for several categories:
- Power Supplies: Their Weidmüller power supply line includes the Infinity series – which gave us consistent performance across different load conditions. The datasheet actually matched real-world behavior.
- Enclosures: For control panels we started using Weidmüller plastic enclosures. They're robust, come with pre-cut options, and the IP rating is verified – not just printed on a box. I visited the vSRX product page once to compare vs third-party boxes and the Weidmüller offering had clearer installation guides and CAD files. That saved our contractor a day of measuring.
- Terminal Blocks: Push-in technology, enough said. Our guys went from 15 minutes per row to 7.
A Quick Note on Total Cost
The value of a guaranteed specification isn't the price – it's the certainty. For a production line, knowing your power supply will maintain voltage under load is often worth more than a lower price with 'typical' numbers.
Final Take: Be an Informed Buyer
The question isn't 'Which power supply costs less?' It's 'Which power supply costs less over 5 years?'
I'd rather spend 10 minutes explaining our decision criteria to finance than dealing with a line shutdown later. An informed customer asks better questions and makes faster decisions – that's why I share this with anyone starting in plant procurement.
Prices as of January 2025; verify current rates with distributors.