Part Number: A16B-2200-0956
Manufacturer: FANUC Corporation (Japan)
Product Type: Machine I/O PCB — Sink Type
The A16B-2200-0956 is the machine I/O board for the FANUC Series 16-A CNC — the board that connects the PMC's ladder program to the machine's physical devices. Every limit switch, proximity sensor, and pushbutton signal that the PMC reads arrives through this board's 104 inputs. Every relay coil, solenoid valve, indicator lamp, and auxiliary motor contactor command the PMC sends goes out through its 72 outputs. The 104/72 point count handles a substantial machine with complex automation.
The output transistors are sink type: when the PMC commands an output ON, the transistor connects the output terminal to ground (0V), completing the current path through the load from the positive supply. When commanded OFF, the transistor opens and breaks the path. Transistor switching is fast, silent, and wear-free — it handles thousands of operations per minute without contact degradation.
Each of the 104 input channels uses optical isolation. The field signal drives an LED inside an opto-coupler; the photodetector on the controller side reads the state with no electrical connection to the field wiring. This isolation blocks the electrical noise that is inevitable alongside motor power cables and solenoid supply lines in a machine tool cabinet, preventing false input triggering without any physical event in the machine.
The A16B-2200 series includes several I/O board configurations for Series 16-A. The -0956 is the sink type without high-speed skip. The high-speed skip function (present in -0950 and -0952 variants) is needed only for precision probing and tool measurement cycles where the CNC must latch axis position at the exact moment a probe triggers. If the machine does not use high-speed skip cycles, the -0956 provides identical 104/72 I/O capacity without the additional circuitry.
The companion source-type variant (-0986) provides the same 104/72 point count with PNP (sourcing) output drivers. Sink and source types are not interchangeable — the machine's field wiring is built for one output polarity. Fitting the wrong type reverses all output logic. Confirm the original board's output type from its label before sourcing a replacement.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Part Number | A16B-2200-0956 |
| DI | 104 (opto-isolated) |
| DO | 72 (NPN sink transistor) |
| Field Voltage | 24V DC |
| High-Speed Skip | Not included |
| CNC | FANUC Series 16-A (FS 16-MA) |
| Origin | Japan |
Q1: After a power surge, many inputs read active even with field devices confirmed off. Is the board damaged?
A surge that overloads opto-couplers can permanently latch photodetectors in the conducting state, making inputs appear active regardless of field device state. Multiple simultaneous incorrect input states following a surge event is consistent with opto-coupler damage — board replacement is the appropriate path.
Q2: A few specific output channels stopped working. Other outputs on the same board are normal. What should be checked first?
Check the fuse or overcurrent protection for the affected output group — some output groups share a common fuse, and a blown fuse stops all outputs in that group while others remain active. If fuses are intact and the PMC confirms the addresses are commanded ON, the output transistors have failed open and the board needs repair or replacement.
Q3: After replacing the A16B-2200-0956, some inputs that were working now read incorrectly.
Incorrect readings after board replacement are usually a connector seating issue — a partially inserted connector leaves some input channels disconnected. Verify all connectors are fully and firmly seated. Also confirm any I/O address configuration dip switches or parameters on the replacement board match the original installation.
Q4: Is the A16B-2200-0956 interchangeable with the A16B-2200-0986?
No. Both have 104/72 I/O without high-speed skip, but -0956 is sink type and -0986 is source type. Machine field wiring is built for one output polarity — fitting the wrong type reverses all output logic. Always match the original board's type exactly.
Q5: The machine produces intermittent PMC I/O link alarms that clear on power cycling. The board has been in service for many years.
Intermittent I/O link alarms that clear on restart, without visible hardware damage, are typically caused by aging electrolytic capacitors on the board's power supply section. Degraded capacitors allow supply ripple that produces occasional communication errors. The fault is intermittent because the capacitors are marginal, not fully failed. Preventive capacitor replacement restores reliable operation without full board replacement.
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