![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() It was also likely a nod to the fact that by 1999 the use of personal computers for programming automation devices had become commonplace in manufacturing.Īs with the MicroLogix 1000, the MicroLogix 1500's DC Inputs supported either sinking or sourcing input devices. This was likely done to allow for additional features not supported by the handheld. The 1500 programed with the same Windows based RSLogix 500 programming software (version 3.01 or greater) that the SLC-500 and MicroLogix 1000 used, but it could not be programmed with the MicroLogix 1000's Hand Held Programming Terminal. ![]() The MicroLogix 1500 was substantially different from the MicroLogix 1000 in many ways, the most obvious being the fact that it's Processor was removable from the I/O base.Īlso unlike the MicroLogix 1000, the MicroLogix 1500 supported expansion I/O by way of 1769 Compact I/O modules. These expansion I/O modules made up a rackless I/O system, sliding together using tongue-and-groove slots, and connecting via a retractable bus connector. In 1999, five years after the launch of the MicroLogix 1000, the first entry in Rockwell's second generation of MicroLogix family was released. UPDATE: Rockwell discontinued the MicroLogix 1500 in May of 2017. ![]()
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