Eighteen bits was a common word size for smaller computers in the 1960s, when large computers often using 36 bit words and 6-bit character sets, sometimes implemented as extensions of BCD, were the norm. There were also 18-bit teletypes experimented with in the 1940s.
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
Eighteen-bit machines use a variety of character encodings.
The DEC Radix-50, called Radix 508 format, packs three characters plus two bits in each 18-bit word.[1]
The Teletype packs three characters in each 18-bit word; each character a 5-bit Baudot code and an upper-case bit.[2]
The DEC SIXBIT format packs three characters in each 18-bit word,[2] each 6-bit character obtained by stripping the high bits from the 7-bit ASCII code, which folds lowercase to uppercase letters.