Possibly the most well-known 18-bit computer architectures are the
PDP-1,
PDP-4,
PDP-7,
PDP-9 and
PDP-15 minicomputers produced by
Digital Equipment Corporation from 1960 to 1975.
Digital's PDP-10 used
36-bit words but had 18-bit addresses. The
UNIVAC division of
Remington Rand produced several 18-bit computers, including the 1963
UNIVAC 418 and several military systems. The
IBM 7700 Data Acquisition System was announced by
IBM on December 2, 1963. The 1964
CDC 6000 series and successors
CDC 7600 and
CDC Cyber 70 and 170 series used
60-bit words but had 18-bit addresses. The
BCL Molecular 18 was a group of systems designed and manufactured in the UK in the 1970s and 1980s. The
NASA Standard Spacecraft Computer
NSSC-1 was developed as a standard component for the
MultiMission Modular Spacecraft at the
Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) in 1974. The
flying-spot store digital memory in the first experimental
electronic switching systems used nine plates of optical memory that were read and written two bits at a time, producing a word size of 18 bits. ==Character encoding==