Adn333 New
Upgrading to the ADN333 New is not a drop-in replacement if you are using legacy wiring harnesses. However, the manufacturer provides an adapter plate (sold separately: Model ADN-ADAPT).
As of this writing, the ADN333 New is available through authorized distributors. Beware of counterfeit units flooding online marketplaces—always verify the holographic seal on the side panel.
| SKU | Description | MSRP (USD) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | ADN333-N-BASE | Base unit, 32 I/O, no fieldbus | $189.00 | | ADN333-N-ECAT | Base + EtherCAT slave | $279.00 | | ADN333-N-PN | Base + Profinet IRT | $299.00 | | ADN333-N-ADAPT | Backward compatibility adapter plate | $39.00 | | ADN333-N-DIAG | 1-year advanced diagnostics license (cloud) | $99.00 | adn333 new
Volume discounts (10+ units): Contact a B2B sales rep.
The ADN333 New replaces the legacy ARM Cortex-M3 with a dual-core Cortex-M7/M4 architecture. This hybrid architecture allows one core to handle deterministic I/O scanning while the second core manages diagnostic data. Result? A deterministic scan rate of 250 microseconds—a 16x speed improvement. Upgrading to the ADN333 New is not a
If your operation requires deterministic control, mixed signal handling, or a bridge between legacy relays and modern cloud dashboards, the ADN333 New presents a compelling upgrade. The thermal improvements alone justify the investment for high-temperature environments like foundries or engine test cells.
However, if you are running a simple, static system (e.g., a single conveyor with four sensors) and have no plans to adopt real-time ethernet, the legacy ADN333 (available as refurbished) might still suffice. The ADN333 New replaces the legacy ARM Cortex-M3
Final Verdict: The ADN333 New is not incremental—it is foundational. It transforms a "dumb I/O block" into an intelligent edge node. For system integrators, the reduced footprint and increased speed open design possibilities that were previously cost-prohibitive.
