Orders & Worldwide
Orders & Worldwide
When a KUKA robot suddenly stops motion and displays KSS15003, the issue is usually not a simple software alarm.
In most KRC4 systems, this error indicates that communication between the controller and the KSP servo drive system has become unstable or interrupted.
Typical real-world symptoms include:
In production environments, KSS15003 is most commonly related to:
If ignored, the problem often becomes progressively worse until the robot can no longer initialize drives reliably.
If your KUKA robot suddenly stops with KSS15003:
If the error disappears temporarily but returns later, intermittent communication degradation is highly likely.
KUKA KSS15003 indicates a servo drive communication fault between the KRC4 controller and KSP drive modules.
In KUKA KRC4 architecture:
When KSS15003 is triggered:
👉 In short: the controller cannot reliably communicate with the servo drive system, so the robot stops all motion.
KSS15003 is most commonly a communication-related fault, not an immediate catastrophic drive failure.
Although defective KSP modules can trigger the error, most field cases are caused by unstable communication conditions between the controller and the drive system.
Common examples include:
This is why experienced KUKA engineers usually inspect cables and communication integrity before replacing expensive KSP drive modules.
Unlike hard drive failures, KSS15003 often begins as an intermittent communication problem inside the KRC4 drive architecture.
The robot may operate normally for hours before suddenly stopping during acceleration, deceleration, or heavy axis load changes.
This usually happens because:
This is why many engineers initially misdiagnose KSS15003 as a random software issue, even though the root cause is usually hardware-layer instability.
KSS15003 often appears during robot movement because servo communication load increases significantly during acceleration and deceleration.
During motion, the KRC4 controller and KSP drives must exchange high-speed real-time synchronization data continuously.
If communication quality is already unstable, motion load changes can expose problems such as:
This is why some robots only trigger KSS15003 under production load, while remaining stable in idle condition.
👉 Common in older KRC4 systems with long operating hours.
👉 One of the most frequent real-world causes.
Yes.
In many KRC4 systems, damaged or aging KSP communication cables are one of the most common causes of KSS15003 errors.
Typical cable-related failure conditions include:
Because communication quality may degrade gradually, the robot can often continue operating temporarily before the error becomes persistent.
👉 In real industrial environments, KSP communication cable degradation is statistically more common than complete drive module failure.
👉 Communication faults often appear during acceleration or high load cycles.
Yes.
Unstable 24V control power is a common indirect cause of KSS15003 communication faults on KRC4 systems.
The KSP drive system relies on stable low-voltage control power to maintain synchronized communication with the controller.
If 24V power drops during motion or system startup, the controller may temporarily lose reliable communication with one or more drive modules.
Typical symptoms include:
In some factories, unstable cabinet power distribution is the actual root cause behind recurring KSS15003 alarms.
👉 If only one axis is affected repeatedly, the drive module is a strong suspect.
👉 Feedback instability can be misinterpreted as communication loss.
A KRC4 robot in an automotive welding line repeatedly triggered KSS15003 only during high-speed axis acceleration.
After replacing the KSP module, the fault still returned intermittently.
The actual root cause was later identified as shielding degradation inside the communication cable near the cabinet bending section.
After cable replacement, the robot operated normally without further communication faults.
👉 This is why communication cables should always be inspected before replacing expensive drive hardware.
| Component | Recommended Replacement Trigger | Diagnostic Condition | Engineering Notes |
| KUKA KSP 600-3x20 Servo Drive Module | Replace when communication instability persists on a single axis | - KSS15003 repeats on same axis - Axis-specific drive fault - No improvement after cable swap | Indicates possible internal drive stage degradation or axis-level power instability |
| High-Flex Shielded Drive Communication Cable | Required when intermittent faults appear under motion load | - Fault appears only during movement - Error disappears in idle state - Strong EMI environment suspected |
Most common failure point in field; check bending radius and shielding continuity |
| Encoder / Resolver Cable Assembly | Replace when signal noise correlates with communication loss | - Position feedback jumps - Encoder signal mismatch - Random axis drift before fault | Often confused with drive failure; verify continuity + shielding before replacement |
| KRC4 Power Supply / DC Bus Module | Required when multi-axis faults occur simultaneously | - Multiple axes drop at same time - System reboot or undervoltage warnings - DC bus fluctuation detected | Indicates upstream power instability rather than isolated axis issue |
| Check Item | Why It Matters |
| KSP version matching | Prevents drive-controller mismatch faults |
| KRC4 controller revision | Firmware-level compatibility affects bus communication |
| Axis configuration mapping | Wrong mapping often mimics hardware failure symptoms |
| Firmware compatibility level | Outdated firmware may trigger false drive faults |
Experienced engineers do not treat KSS15003 as a single-point failure.
Go to:
SmartHMI → Diagnostics → Drive → KSP Monitoring
Check:
👉 Key diagnostic logic:
👉 In real factory environments, KSS15003 is most often caused by:
To permanently resolve the issue:
👉 In most real cases, the final fix is: Communication cable replacement or KSP module replacement
In real industrial maintenance environments, engineers usually inspect or replace components in this order:
👉 Communication cable fatigue is statistically the most common field failure behind intermittent KSS15003 alarms.
KSS15003 often returns because the underlying communication instability was never fully eliminated.
In many KRC4 systems, the robot may reboot successfully and resume operation temporarily, but unstable drive communication conditions still exist internally.
The most common recurring causes include:
In real production environments, intermittent communication faults usually become more frequent over time before complete drive failure occurs.
⚠️ Technical Note: Following errors often result from upstream drive communication or feedback instability:
It indicates a communication failure between the KRC4 controller and KSP servo drive modules.
The affected axis or system is immediately disabled for safety protection. .
In real industrial environments:
Yes. Unstable 24V or DC bus voltage can interrupt communication between the controller and drive modules.
Then proceed with component replacement if fault persists.
Yes. On KUKA KRC4 systems, unstable encoder feedback may interrupt synchronization between the controller and KSP drive modules. In some cases, the controller interprets severe feedback instability as a communication fault.
If KSS15003 disappears after restart but returns later, the most common causes are:
This usually indicates intermittent degradation instead of a complete hardware failure.
Yes.
Because the controller loses reliable communication with the servo drive system, axis motion is immediately disabled to prevent uncontrolled movement.
KSS15003 is most commonly seen on:
Explore the Full Guide: Industrial Robot Fault Codes Library → KUKA Error Codes
Explore the complete guide for troubleshooting, repair strategies, and component replacement across industrial robot systems.
Key components commonly involved in kuka error troubleshooting issues and replacements.
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