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TPS010–100W GP Series DIN Rail Power Supply: Spec-Driven Selection for US Panels, Procurement, and Fast RFQs

By Lily March 2nd, 2026 103 views
Looking for a reliable and compact DIN rail power supply? The TPS010-100W GP Series offers a convection-cooled, IP20 solution with a wide AC/DC input range, ideal for building and industrial automation panels, as well as LED lighting control cabinets. This BoFu guide will help US system integrators, panel builders, and engineers easily select the right model for their needs and get an RFQ quickly.
TPS010–100W GP Series DIN Rail Power Supply: Spec-Driven Selection for US Panels, Procurement, and Fast RFQs
For who: system integrators, panel builders, procurement leads, or electrical engineers who require a reliable DIN rail power supply for industrial control panels and automation projects.
Short outcome: You’ll find a quick, specification-true guide for selecting the right DIN Rail Power Supply that ensures compliance and prevents rework in your projects.

If you’re a system integrator, panel builder, procurement lead, or electrical engineer, you don’t need another “what is a DIN rail power supply” overview. You need a fast, spec-true way to select a compact DIN Rail Power Supply that will survive real cabinets, pass your project’s compliance gates, and get you to an RFQ without rework.

This BoFu guide is built around the TPS010–100W GP Series—a compact, convection-cooled, IP20 DIN rail PSU family with wide AC/DC input and built-in protection. Use it to match wattage, 12V/24V adjustable outputs, cabinet thermal reality, and documentation needs—then request pricing/lead time from the TPS US DIN-rail catalog.

Ready to quote?

Tip for procurement: add the likely models to your quote list first, then confirm the exact output setpoint, ambient temperature, and load profile in the RFQ notes.

Who the GP Series is for

The TPS010–100W GP Series is a practical choice when your project needs a compact, cabinet-friendly DIN rail supply for: Building automation panels, Industrial automation I/O and PLC distribution, and LED lighting control cabinets—especially where fanless operation matters (dust, maintenance, noise, service intervals).

It is most compelling when you need: a wide AC/DC front end (90–264VAC and 120–370VDC are commonly required in mixed facilities), a simple IP20 cabinet-grade enclosure, and protection behavior that auto-recovers from common field events: Overload Protection, OVP (over-voltage protection), and OTP (over-temperature protection).

If you’re building full cabinets, these two resources help you align PSU selection with enclosure layout and integration workflow: industrial control cabinets for automation and build-to-print control panels (checkpoint process).

Compact DIN rail power supplies installed in a US industrial control cabinet with neat wiring, airflow clearance, and labeled terminal blocks
A cabinet-first view: selecting wattage is only step one—wiring, heat, clearance, and documentation drive real-world success.

TPS010–100W GP Series at a glance

Think of this series as a “global-input, cabinet-grade, fanless” DIN rail platform in four frame sizes (10W, 30W, 60W, 100W), with adjustable output variants in 12V and 24V classes. For many teams, the purchase decision hinges on five factors: input compatibility, output headroom, thermal behavior, protection behavior, and the paperwork you need to pass internal/external compliance gates.

Key features procurement and engineering typically care about

  • Wide input: 90–264VAC and 120–370VDC (useful for mixed facilities and global panel builds).
  • Fanless thermal design: Convection Cooled for lower maintenance and fewer moving parts.
  • Cabinet-grade enclosure: IP20 for in-panel use.
  • Safety posture: Double Insulation design (spec-driven safety consideration for many panel builds).
  • Protection set: Overload, OVP, OTP with auto-recovery behavior (field-friendly).
  • Efficiency / standby: low no-load consumption (important for always-on panels) and model-dependent efficiency.
  • Warranty: 5-Year Warranty (risk reduction for integrators and end users).
  • Typical applications: building automation control, alarm & safety, LED lighting, environmental control systems, industrial automation equipment.

Need deeper context on how compliance choices affect selection in US projects (and how to avoid documentation gaps at handoff)? Start with: US compliance-oriented power supply selection.

Model map: 10W / 30W / 60W / 100W (12V vs 24V)

Below is a practical model map based on the GP series ordering structure. The key “gotcha” to watch: the frame name (e.g., “100W series”) doesn’t always mean every voltage variant delivers the same wattage. In many compact DIN rail families, the 12V variant can be current-limited to a lower wattage than the 24V variant—so always match by rated output power and current, not label alone.

Model Output (Adjustable) Rated Current Rated Power Efficiency (typ.) Typical use
TPS010-GP12V 12–15V 0.85A 10W 80% small control loads, sensors, relays
TPS010-GP24V 24–28V 0.42A 10W 80% 24V signaling, compact I/O islands
TPS030-GP12V 12–15V 2.5A 30W 84% higher 12V demand, small actuators
TPS030-GP24V 24–28V 1.25A 30W 85% standard 24V cabinet power (small)
TPS060-GP12V 12–15V 4.5A 54W 87% distributed 12V loads, field devices
TPS060-GP24V 24–28V 2.5A 60W 87% mid-size 24V automation cabinets
TPS100-GP12V 12–15V 6A 72W 87% heavier 12V rails, cabinet distribution
TPS100-GP24V 24–28V 4.2A 100W 89% PLC/I-O panels, 24V distribution backbone

You can browse these variants (and add the likely candidates to your quote list) here: TPS DIN-Rail Power Supply collection.

Selection steps that prevent cabinet rework

Step 1: Lock the output class (12–15V vs 24–28V adjustable)

For most industrial control ecosystems, 24VDC is the default distribution rail (PLC, sensors, safety relays, valves), while 12VDC shows up in networking, certain embedded controllers, and accessory rails. The GP series supports adjustable setpoints in both classes—use that adjustability to compensate for wiring drops and load requirements, but keep your setpoint inside the defined adjustment window.

If you’re converting from facility power to 24V cabinet distribution and want a practical checklist, this companion guide can help: 24V DIN rail power supply guide (120VAC → 24VDC).

Step 2: Add headroom for heat, peaks, and growth

“Nameplate watts” rarely survives contact with the cabinet. In a real enclosure, you’ll see higher ambient, clustered heat sources, cable congestion, and load steps. Build in headroom for: (1) temperature derating in hot cabinets, (2) short peak loads or inrush for connected devices, and (3) future expansion (the change order you’d like to avoid).

A practical rule: size your supply so that your typical steady-state load lands in a comfortable mid-band, not at the edge. That improves thermal margin, helps stability under transient events, and reduces nuisance trips on overload protection.

Step 3: Match protection behavior to your load profile

The series includes built-in protection (Overload Protection, OVP, OTP) with auto-recovery behavior. That’s a win in field cabinets where a wiring fault or temporary thermal event shouldn’t require a truck roll just to reset power. For loads like motors/solenoids, LED drivers, or high-capacitance DC rails, the “shape” of current demand matters—so tell TPS what your load looks like in the RFQ.

If your project is larger (200W+ distribution or 24–48V bus sizing), you may also want: switching DC power supply selection (24–48V, 200W–1000W).

Integration in control cabinets (wiring, thermal, mounting)

DIN rail mounting basics (standardized rail fit)

DIN rail power supplies live or die by mechanical fit and serviceability. The GP series is designed for TS35-style rails (common in US panels), and standardized rail dimensions are governed by IEC 60715. If your customer references “DIN rail compliance,” this is the authoritative baseline: IEC 60715: standardized mounting on rails.

Wiring & terminations (make it serviceable)

In cabinet builds, most power problems are installation problems: loose terminations, under-sized conductors, poor grounding paths, and routing that injects noise into sensitive control lines. Best practices:

  • Use ferrules where appropriate for stranded conductors; label both ends for commissioning.
  • Separate noisy power runs from signal I/O; keep return paths intentional.
  • Document the as-built wiring in your panel pack so troubleshooting doesn’t become reverse engineering.

If you’re building harnesses for repeatable assembly and fewer field errors: custom cable assemblies & wire harness services.

Thermal reality: convection cooling needs breathing room

Fanless Convection Cooled supplies reduce maintenance, but they require airflow paths. Don’t stack them hard against heat sources or block natural vertical airflow with wiring bundles. Plan layout early, and—if your cabinet requires custom enclosures—optimize geometry and finishes for heat and corrosion resistance: custom sheet metal enclosures and powder coating for electrical enclosures.

Diagram showing convection cooling airflow around a DIN rail power supply with recommended clearance above and below, plus clean wiring routes in a control cabinet
Convection-cooled PSUs need vertical airflow paths; layout decisions can reduce derating and nuisance thermal trips.

Compliance & documentation: what to ask for in an RFQ

For US panel projects, “CE / RoHS” language often shows up in global programs, exported equipment, or internal corporate standards—even when the final installation is in North America. The GP series is positioned with CE and ROHS alignment, and the right way to manage this is simple: request the documentation set you need before you place the order.

What “CE” typically ties to (and how to reference it)

CE marking for power supplies commonly aligns with EU directives such as: Low Voltage Directive 2014/35/EU and EMC Directive 2014/30/EU. If your customer asks “show me the directive references,” these are the canonical sources.

RoHS reference for procurement

For hazardous substance restrictions, the standard reference is the EU RoHS directive: Directive 2011/65/EU (RoHS). In an RFQ, ask for the supplier’s declaration and traceability approach (especially if your end customer requires it as part of the PPAP-like document pack).

Important US-market note (avoid last-minute surprises)

US end customers may require UL/cULus (or another NRTL) depending on the application, panel standard, and inspection authority. If that applies, call it out explicitly in the RFQ so TPS can confirm the correct compliance path and paperwork for the exact model/variant. The fastest way to align expectations is to send: the model(s), quantity, use case, enclosure environment, and your required compliance list in one message.

If you need help aligning compliance with test strategy (EMC/safety) in a system context, you can also reference: power selection for US compliance.

RFQ checklist (copy/paste)

Copy the checklist below into your RFQ so engineering + procurement + panel shop stay aligned. This is the quickest path to a clean quote and fewer follow-up cycles.

RFQ template for TPS010–100W GP Series

  • Target model(s): TPS010/030/060/100 + GP12V or GP24V (or shortlist 2–3 options)
  • Quantity: (include forecast if you have it)
  • Input source: 120VAC / 240VAC / 277VAC / DC bus? (and any expected variation)
  • Output setpoint: (within 12–15V or 24–28V) + steady-state load current
  • Load profile: steady vs pulsed, inductive loads, high-capacitance DC rails, LED loads, etc.
  • Ambient & enclosure: cabinet max ambient, ventilation, spacing constraints, duty cycle
  • Mounting: TS35 rail type, vertical orientation, any vibration notes
  • Compliance documents required: CE/EMC references, RoHS declaration, any UL/NRTL needs
  • Logistics: ship-to location, target delivery date, packaging requirements

Start your DIN-Rail Power Supply RFQ here

Procurement and panel builder reviewing a DIN rail power supply RFQ checklist with drawings, BOM, and compliance documents
A good RFQ includes the load profile and compliance needs—those two items prevent most selection errors.

FAQ

Which GP model should I start with for a typical 24V control cabinet?

Start by estimating steady-state 24V load current and adding margin for peaks, temperature, and future expansion. For small panels, 30W can be enough; for PLC/I-O distribution and heavier cabinets, 60W or 100W is more typical. If you’re unsure, shortlist two adjacent wattage options and request a quote—include your ambient temperature and load profile.

Does the series support both AC and DC input?

Yes—this family is designed around wide input operation that supports common AC mains and DC bus conditions. For RFQ accuracy, specify your real input source (nominal voltage and expected range) and the environment (cabinet max ambient).

What protections are built in?

The GP series includes built-in protection behavior commonly needed in industrial panels: Overload Protection, OVP, and OTP, with auto-recovery behavior intended to reduce downtime after transient events. Always describe your load type in the RFQ if you have inductive loads, large capacitive loads, or frequent power cycling.

How should I think about IP20 and “Double Insulation” in a cabinet design?

IP20 is a typical rating for in-cabinet components where the enclosure provides the environmental barrier. “Double insulation” is a safety design approach; your final panel’s safety and compliance still depends on the complete system design, grounding, wiring, spacing, and verification testing.

What do you need from me to quote quickly?

Model shortlist, quantity, input type, output setpoint, load current and load profile, cabinet max ambient, and any compliance documentation requirements. Use the copy/paste checklist above, then submit it through the DIN-Rail Power Supply collection page.


Next step

If you want the fastest path to a clean selection and a clean quote, do this: shortlist the likely GP models (12V or 24V, 10–100W frame), then send your load profile + cabinet ambient + compliance needs in one RFQ.

Browse TPS DIN-Rail Power Supply models and request an RFQ

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