PRODUCT DETAILS
1769-L18ER-BB1B — 1769 Series Controller, 512 KB Memory, Onboard I/O, EtherNet/IP
The 1769-L18ER-BB1B is a compact 1769-series controller combining a processor, 512 KB of user memory, built-in EtherNet/IP, and onboard digital I/O in a single module. The "BB1B" I/O configuration provides a mix of inputs and outputs directly on the controller body — covering small machine applications without requiring any expansion modules for basic operation. The 1769 Compact I/O expansion bus is still available on the right side for growth beyond the onboard points.
Specifications
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Part Number | 1769-L18ER-BB1B |
| Series | 1769 |
| User Memory | 512 KB (program + data combined) |
| Embedded Communication | EtherNet/IP (10/100 Mbps, RJ-45) |
| Onboard Digital Inputs | 12 × 24V DC (sinking/sourcing) |
| Onboard Outputs | 6 × relay (Form A) + 4 × 24V DC transistor (sourcing) |
| Local I/O Expansion | Up to 16 × 1769 Compact I/O modules |
| Serial Port | 1 × RS-232 (DF1, ASCII, Modbus RTU) |
| Programming Languages | Ladder, Function Block, Structured Text, SFC |
| Power Supply | External 24V DC (user-supplied) |
| Operating Temperature | 0°C to 60°C |
| Standards | UL 508, CE, cUL, IEC 61131-3 |
Onboard I/O at the L18 Tier — What It Covers Without Expansion
The combination of 12 onboard inputs and 10 onboard outputs (split between relay and transistor types) handles a complete small machine without a single expansion module: sensor inputs for part detection and position confirmation, relay outputs for AC solenoids and contactor coils, and transistor outputs for high-cycle 24V DC loads like indicator lamps and small DC solenoids. For OEM machine builders specifying controllers in volume, this onboard density reduces the panel bill of materials and assembly time for machines whose I/O count fits within these onboard limits.
The 512 KB memory pool is ample for the typical logic complexity that accompanies this I/O count — sequencing, interlocking, basic PID, and HMI communication tags fit comfortably without approaching the memory ceiling. Memory pressure would only become relevant with large data arrays, extensive recipe storage, or heavy string handling — uncommon in machines sized for the L18's onboard I/O scope.
Network and Expansion Path
The built-in EtherNet/IP port handles both local I/O scanning of remote nodes (FLEX I/O, POINT I/O) and peer-to-peer communication with other controllers or an HMI, without requiring a separate communication module. For machines that outgrow the onboard I/O — adding a second axis, more sensors, or analog measurement — up to 16 Compact I/O modules attach to the right-side expansion bus, covering digital, analog, and specialty I/O types as the application demands.
The RS-232 serial port runs independently from the Ethernet connection, supporting legacy serial HMIs over DF1, third-party drives and instruments over Modbus RTU, or ASCII peripherals like barcode scanners and label printers. Having both network paths active simultaneously means a machine can be both EtherNet/IP-connected to the plant network and serially connected to a legacy device without conflict.
FAQ
Q: Can the relay outputs and transistor outputs be mixed for the same circuit?
They operate independently and shouldn't be mixed in the same circuit — relay outputs switch their own assigned loads at whatever voltage is wired to them; transistor outputs source 24V DC to their loads. Assign each load to the output type appropriate for its voltage and cycle requirements.
Q: Does this controller support CIP Motion for servo axis control?
No. The 1769-L18ER-BB1B is not a motion controller. For CIP Motion servo control over EtherNet/IP, a higher-tier controller with motion module support is required.
Q: How many EtherNet/IP connections does this controller support?
Connection capacity at this tier is more limited than larger controllers — typically in the range of 32–64 total connections depending on firmware revision. Verify the exact limit against the controller's current specifications before designing a system with many remote I/O nodes or peer connections.
Q: Can the onboard outputs be used for safety-related functions?
No. The onboard I/O on this controller is standard (non-safety) I/O. For safety-rated functions, a dedicated safety relay, safety PLC, or safety-rated drive input (such as STO) should be used — standard controller outputs do not provide the certified diagnostic monitoring required for safety functions.



