Addressing summary, Chapter summary, Addressing summary chapter summary – Rockwell Automation 1771ACN/B_1771ACNR/B,D17716.5.123 U.MNL CONTROLNET ADAPTER User Manual

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Addressing Modes for Your I/O

3–11

Publication 1771-6.5.123 – May 1996

Use this table as a quick reference for addressing.

Addressing

Mode

Guidelines

2-slot

Two I/O module slots = 1 group

Each physical 2-slot I/O group corresponds to one word (16 bits) in the
input image table and one word (16 bits) in the output image table

When you use 16-point I/O modules, you must install as a pair an input
module and an output module in an I/O group; if you use an input module
in slot 0, you must use an output module in slot 1 (or it must be empty).
This configuration gives you the maximum use of I/O.

You cannot use a nondiscrete module and a 16-point module in the same
I/O group because nondiscrete modules use 8 bits in both the input and
output table. Therefore, 8 bits of the 16-point module would conflict with
the nondiscrete module.

You cannot use 32-point I/O modules.

1-slot

One I/O module slot = 1 group

Each physical slot in the chassis corresponds to one word (16 bits) in the
input image table and one word (16 bits) in the output image table

When you use 32-point I/O modules, you must install as a pair an input
module and an output module in an even/odd pair of adjacent I/O group; if
you use an input module in slot 0, you must use an output module in slot 1
(or it must be empty). This configuration gives you the maximum usage of
I/O.

Use any mix of 8- and 16-point I/O modules, nondiscrete or intelligent
modules in a single I/O chassis. Using 8-point modules results in fewer
total I/O.

1/2-slot

One half of an I/O module slot = 1 group

Each physical slot in the chassis corresponds to two words (32 bits) in the
input image table and two words (32 bits) in the output image table

Use any mix of 8-, 16-, and 32-point I/O or nondiscrete and intelligent
modules. Using 8-point and 16-point I/O modules results in fewer total I/O.

With the processor-resident local rack set for 1/2-slot addressing, you
cannot force the input bits for the upper word of any slot that is empty or
that has an 8-point or 16-point I/O module. For example, if your have an
8-point or a 16-point I/O module in the first slot of your local rack (words 0
and 1 of the I/O image table, 1/2-slot addressing), you cannot force the
input bits for word 1 (I:001) on or off.
However, in a remote chassis using a 1771-ACN or -ACNR adapter, all
points can be forced, including those not physically present. In the
example above, chassis word I:001 can be forced on or off.

In this chapter we discussed how to address your hardware and the
various remote I/O configurations and options you can use in your
remote system.

Addressing Summary

Chapter Summary

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