M8 & M16/M23 Circular Connectors: China Sourcing Reference
M8 (IEC 61076-2-104), M16, and M23 circular connector specifications, servo motor and encoder wiring, contact resistance requirements, Chinese manufacturers, and counterfeit detection.
M8, M16, and M23 designate circular connectors by shell thread diameter (8mm, 16mm, 23mm). Each format occupies a distinct application niche: M8 for space-constrained sensors, M16 for general-purpose multi-pin field wiring, and M23 as the accepted standard for servo motor encoder and power connections in European industrial IoT automation. All three are sourced from China at scale, but M23 carries the highest counterfeit risk due to its use in precision motion control systems where contact failure produces motor drive faults that are expensive to diagnose.
Overview
The M8 standard is defined by IEC 61076-2-104. M16 has no single governing IEC standard (manufacturers follow DIN 45323 or proprietary dimensional specifications), while M23 is governed by IEC 61076-2-107. All three share the screw-lock thread convention and circular contact arrangement. IP67 is the baseline sealing requirement for field-deployed variants; IP68 is available from selected manufacturers. Operating temperature for standard-grade units is −25°C to +85°C; industrial grade extends to −40°C.
Key Specifications
M8
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Shell thread | M8 × 1 |
| Pin count | 3, 4 (most common); 6-pin variants exist |
| Maximum current per contact | 4A |
| Maximum voltage | 60V DC |
| IP rating (mated, cable-end) | IP67 |
| Standard | IEC 61076-2-104 |
| Tightening torque | 0.3–0.4 N·m |
| Typical use | Proximity sensors, photoelectric sensors, short-range distance sensors |
M16
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Shell thread | M16 × 1 |
| Pin count | 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 19 |
| Maximum current per contact | Up to 16A (contact-size dependent; standard signal contacts: 4–6A) |
| Maximum voltage | 250V AC (power-rated variants) |
| IP rating (mated) | IP67; IP68 available |
| Standard | DIN 45323 (de facto) |
| Typical use | Machine tools, pendant controls, field junction boxes, general purpose industrial |
M23
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Shell thread | M23 × 1 |
| Pin count | 7, 12, 17 |
| Maximum current (power contacts) | 16A |
| Maximum voltage | 630V AC / 400V DC (power variants) |
| IP rating (mated) | IP67; IP68 available |
| Standard | IEC 61076-2-107 |
| Typical use | Servo motor encoder feedback (7/12-pin), motor power (4-pin power variant), resolver connections |
Main Variants
M8: 3-pin vs. 4-pin
3-pin M8 connectors carry +V, 0V, and signal output — used with 2-wire and 3-wire PNP/NPN proximity sensors. 4-pin adds a second signal pin or alarm output (common on photoelectric sensors). 6-pin M8 exists for combined power + 2-channel output (e.g., dual-output distance sensors) but is less common. The key dimensional constraint is the 8mm shell, which requires 5mm× diameter cable — M8 connectors with M12 cables are a common sourcing error.
M23: Encoder vs. Power
The M23 format covers two mechanically similar but electrically distinct connector types:
Encoder / feedback (7-pin and 12-pin): Used for servo motor encoder cables (sin/cos, incremental, SSI, HIPERFACE, EnDat 2.2). The 12-pin variant accommodates differential signal pairs, shield, and supply. Pin assignment varies by encoder protocol — Siemens, Heidenhain, and Stöber all use M23 12-pin but with different pinouts. Confirm the pinout against the drive manufacturer’s wiring manual, not the generic M23 standard.
Power (4-pin with PE): Carries three-phase motor power (U, V, W) plus protective earth. 16A contact rating limits this to motors up to approximately 4–7.5 kW depending on voltage. Motors above this range require larger shell formats (M40 or proprietary Harting HAN connectors).
17-pin: Less common; used for combined feedback + temperature sensor (PTC/NTC) + brake control in integrated motor-drive cables.
M16: General Purpose
M16 is essentially a larger-bore version of M8, occupying the space between M12 (standardized fieldbus/sensor) and M23 (servo). It is common in European machine builder traditions (Germany, Italy) for pendant cables, machine tool control wiring, and junction boxes. The lack of a single IEC standard means M16 connector pinouts are not interchangeable across manufacturers — a Weipu M16 7-pin and a Hummel M16 7-pin are dimensionally compatible but may differ in pin numbering convention.
Sourcing from China: What to Look For
M23 contact resistance is critical. In a servo drive system, the encoder feedback cable carries low-level differential signals (typically 1V differential amplitude for sin/cos encoders, 5V for TTL incremental). A contact resistance above 5 mΩ per contact introduces a voltage drop that degrades signal quality. More critically, intermittent contact resistance (caused by inadequate contact spring force or poor plating) produces drive position errors that appear as motor hunting or fault trips. Always request contact resistance measurements for M23 encoder connectors: specify ≤ 5 mΩ per contact at rated current in the purchase specification, and request incoming inspection data on delivered batches. A factory audit of your M23 supplier’s contact spring manufacturing process can prevent this class of failure entirely.
M23 contact spring force. The contact spring (the female socket’s spring arms) must exert sufficient normal force on the male pin to maintain low and stable contact resistance. Counterfeit or low-cost M23 sockets frequently use thinner-gauge spring material that relaxes after 10–20 mating cycles, resulting in contact resistance that rises from 3 mΩ to 30–50 mΩ after initial use. Request a cycling test report: 25 mating cycles, contact resistance measured at cycles 1, 5, 10, and 25, with ≤ 5 mΩ limit maintained throughout.
Manufacturer selection. Weipu (威浦, Wenzhou) produces M8, M16, and M23 connectors and is available through legitimate distribution channels including RS Components China and Elfa Distrelec. Amphenol LTW (台湾楼氏, Taiwan parent with China manufacturing) supplies M8 and M12 primarily to Taiwanese and Japanese automation OEMs; their quality documentation is substantially better than generic mainland producers. HUMMEL (German brand, China-sourced manufacturing for Asia market) offers M16 and M23 connectors with CE documentation and full dimensional inspection reports.
Avoiding grey-market M23. Search for M23 connectors on Alibaba and you will find a large volume of unbranded or rebadged units at 30–50% below established brand pricing. The external geometry is correct — they mate with genuine Siemens or Heidenhain cable sockets. The failure mode is not immediate but appears after 50–200 hours of operation as intermittent drive faults. For servo motor applications, do not source M23 connectors without a contact resistance report and a defined incoming inspection procedure.
IP68 depth and duration specification. As with M12, IP68 on M8/M16/M23 requires a manufacturer-stated immersion depth and duration. “IP68” without these parameters is non-compliant with IEC 60529 and is unverifiable. A legitimate IP68 M23 datasheet states, for example, “IP68: 10m depth, 24 hours.” Request the complete IEC 60529 test report, not a certificate scan.
Common Issues
Pinout mismatch on M23 encoder cables. Drive manufacturers (Siemens SINAMICS, Mitsubishi MR-J, Yaskawa Sigma) use M23 12-pin connectors with proprietary pinouts. A cable assembled to the generic IEC 61076-2-107 pinout will not function correctly with these drives. Always obtain the drive-specific wiring diagram and verify the cable assembly drawing pin-for-pin before production.
M8 cable OD mismatch. M8 field-installable connectors accept cable ODs typically in the range of 3.5–5mm. Standard M12 sensor cables (6mm OD) will not seal correctly in an M8 strain relief. Using an oversized cable results in a failed IP seal at the cable entry — a common assembly error when technicians substitute available cable stock.
M16 cross-manufacturer pin numbering. M16 connectors from different manufacturers number pins from different reference points (facing mating face vs. solder cup side). If your cable assembly drawing uses manufacturer A’s numbering and the installed connector is from manufacturer B, the wiring will be transposed. Resolve this by specifying pin position by physical location on the connector drawing rather than relying on embossed pin numbers.
Strain relief failure on M16. M16 connectors use a PG-thread or proprietary strain relief. The strain relief must be torqued to specification to clamp the cable jacket — under-torqued strain reliefs allow the cable to pull or rotate, stressing the solder joints or crimp contacts. In field-assembled M16 cable sets from China, under-torqued strain reliefs are a consistent finding during incoming cable inspection.
Related Resources
- M12 Industrial Connectors — M12 is the sensor/Ethernet sibling standard; comparison of M8 vs M12 for sensor wiring
- Industrial Ethernet Switches — end equipment that M12/M8 sensor networks connect to
- IPC-A-610 — workmanship standard relevant to cable assembly and solder joint inspection
- CE Marking — EMC requirements for drive systems with M23 encoder cables
- Factory Audit Checklist — includes cable assembly and connector inspection verification
- Industrial IoT Hardware Sourcing — broader context for sourcing industrial automation components from China
- Factory Audit & Verification
- Industrial IoT & IIoT Sourcing
- EU Industrial IoT Gateway Case Study