T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1385.1 | A vs B | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Apr 28 1988 00:39 | 43 |
| The B2000 designation refers to the motherboard design. The B2000
was designed in Westchester by Dave Haynie, whose name appears on
the etch.
The 'A'2000 motherboard was the first model designed in West Germany.
Only a few machines made it here; mostly dealer demo models.
I believe that the main difference is in the physical location of the
top 512K of ram. On the 'B'2000, it's on the motherboard, and will
be accessible as CHIP ram for Fat Agnus. The early machines (A)
will suffer the same 512K CHIP ram fate as the A1000, since Agnus can't
get to it.
Here's something interesting... when I went to pick up my A2000
('A' as in Amiga, not motherboard rev) I insisted on getting the
latest revision motherboard, which I understood to be 4.3. I also
wanted to install my 68010 chip. Moe agreed to open the 2000 so
that I could make the swap.
The first machine that I opened had 'rev 4.1' etched on the
motherboard, but had a small sticker that said 'rev 4.2' pasted
onto the board.
"Oh, no!" I said, "I want a rev 4.3 machine." We opened a few more
boxes, but they all had 4.1 etched on the board.
The shipping invoice that was pasted to the boxes declared that
the machines had left Westchester QC only a few weeks earlier, so
I assumed that they were the latest models. My machine has no label,
only '4.1' etched on the board.
So, I wonder if I have an older machine that sat on a boat for a
few months? Does your machine have 4.3 etched onto the board or
just a sticker?
Anyone know what changes/fixes were made between revs? The machine
is pretty robust, and seems 100% compatible with my 1000.
Ed.
|
1385.2 | | DICKNS::MACDONALD | WA1OMM Listening 52.525 | Thu Apr 28 1988 10:43 | 9 |
| By board has 4.3 etched next to the name of Haynie.
I am still curious as to what those two connectors are adjacent
to the power supply on the far right side of the mother board.
BTW, did you notice the quotes from various songs printed on the
circuit diagrams in the back of the User's Guide?
Paul
|
1385.3 | time and quotations | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Apr 28 1988 11:48 | 21 |
| re: .0
My A2000's clock also gains a few seconds a day, but I don't think
Commodore has fixed the clock problem. The watch on my wrist is
accurate to within about 1 second a day, I don't see why the computer
can't do as well. I find myself resetting the Amiga's clock based
on my watch every few days.
(I set my watch to WWV, so I know it's accurate.)
re: .2
There is a tradition among hackers of including more-or-less relavent
quotations in literary works. I first encountered this in computer
programs in the early 70s, but it's been done in books for a long
time. I'm not surprised to see it starting to turn up in circuit
diagrams.
In Don Knuth's recent errata list for Computers & Typesetting volume
E, the only new correction was to one of the quotations.
John Sauter
|
1385.4 | | DICKNS::MACDONALD | WA1OMM Listening 52.525 | Thu Apr 28 1988 11:53 | 2 |
| There is a simple fix .. just adjust the potentiometer on the mother
board ...
|
1385.5 | Confuscious Say... | MEMORY::SOVIE | SSDD | Thu Apr 28 1988 12:37 | 5 |
|
A man with a watch always knows what time it is.
A man with two watches is never sure. ;')
|
1385.6 | ex | OZZAIB::GERMAIN | Down to the Sea in Ships | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:10 | 16 |
| One of the problems I have with the 2000 is the extra hardware which
I have no interest in - yet which I must pay for.
I'm talking about the PC bus. Does the hardware for this raise the
price of the 2000 significantly (I mean without buying the
bridgeboard).
What I want is an Amiga with the internal expansion that allows
me to increase memory to the max, add peripherals such as MIDI,
genlock, and framegrabber, and perhaps a few more.
I take it that the 500 requires a costly expansion box to do this.
Gregg
|
1385.7 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:24 | 13 |
| and some of the newer ibmpc clones have a cheap digital clock built
into the front panel. So you can have 3 clocks (the computer, clock,
and your watch).
the two connectors next to the power supply are the video expansion
slots. The "A2000" has one slot, the "B2000" has an additional
one that the redesign folks thought was needed to bring out additional
stuff needed for the US video market.
My 2000 has a 4.2 sticker. The clock is adjusted by a yellow pot
near the 68000.
-dave
|
1385.8 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:49 | 14 |
| re: .6
the response from CBM was that, no, adding the pc bus didn't really
increase the cost of the 2000. It's just sockets, layout and etch.
It isn't connected to anything until you buy a Bridgeboard.
Price a 2000, price a 500, then use the difference to see if you
can buy an expansion box for the 500 with all the expansion features
built into the 2000. Check for CPU slot, video slot, 200 watt power
supply, internal mounting for a 3.5" and 5.25". Then imagine what
would happen if the power is on when a small child tries to separate
the 500 from it's expansion box.
-dave
|
1385.9 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Apr 28 1988 16:14 | 11 |
| I look at it this way...
In October '85 I paid $1295 for a 256K machine with no slots, and
a 75 watt power supply.
Today, you get a 1 meg machine with slots, a PC buss, a video slot,
a coprocessor slot, a 200 watt supply, and a VT-like keyboard for
$1600. That's really not so bad.
Ed.
|
1385.10 | A1000 =ed Good Buy, B2000 = Superb Buy! | GIDDAY::BAKER | | Thu Apr 28 1988 20:17 | 37 |
| Yeah,
I paid top dollar for my A1000 a long time ago BUT it was
great value even then. Now lucky people can get machines that are
flexible, growable & more versatile for about the same price. The
machines are maturing consistently & are price competitive even
up here on the top of the world with high transport costs & a dollar
equal .75 of yours.
You may not want any sort of Blechh-compatability but its there
for almost zilch dollars. I've seen a few cards such as an 8Mips
Novix Forth Card that would be kind of fun to have. Pity I'd have
to buy a bridgecard just to use this card. It will allow those with
less money access to less-efficient but cheaper peripherals ect.
and there are heaps of applications where dedicated hardware would
just not appear for the machine without a Blechh-PC slug-buss, the volumes
wouldnt be worth it.
Great I say, this is how technology should be. I wish Commodud
had tried to keep the busses somewhat compatible but that's life.
This machine has a few of the features that made the Blechh-PC and
the Apple-II so successful:1. An open box with LOTS OF SLOTS, 2.
An open box with LOTS OF SLOTS & 3. An open box with LOTS OF SLOTS
(With none of the drawbacks i.e rediculous OS imposed memory
limitations & maps, slug peripherals (UNLESS YOU CHOOSE THEM))
Let the user decide how best to configure their machine, 80286, 68020
SCSI, ST506 ....... Its all possible with a graphics, sound engine
thrown in if you want to take the viewpoint the other way. No one
complains that we still accomodate UNIBUS devices on current VAXEN
so think of this as Commodud supporting Slug-bus to ease customers
into changing to better technology.
See Ya,
John
|
1385.11 | PC hard disks? | CSOA1::WILDER | | Thu Apr 28 1988 22:12 | 8 |
| Has anyone tried using a PC hard disk on a 2000? Would this be
accessible from the 68000 side assuming a bridgecard is installed?
If so, what would the performance be like? I would guess from
discussions elsewhere that due to little, if any, shared memory,
the performance would not be good. However, you can get PC hardcards
pretty cheap.
dan
|
1385.12 | Clock, A2000 v B2000, Motherboards | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Fri Apr 29 1988 04:22 | 68 |
| Re: Battery Backed Up Clock
The problem with the battery backed up clock wasn't due to any hardware
problem. The clock has an adjustable tick rate controlled by a little
trimmer capacitor next to the processor slot.
As a matter of fact, last Sunday I wrote a little program to allow me
to calibrate the battery backed up clock against the 60 hertz CIA chip
timer in the Amiga. Before adjustment, my clock gained 2 minutes a day.
After calibration, it has lost 6 seconds in 4 days.
If anyone expresses interest, I'll try and write up some documentation
and upload the program.
Re: Video Connector
The B2000's additional video connector was added when the Commodore folks
suddenly thought, "Gee, if we provide a second video slot that brings
all 12 bits of digital RGB out, someone might be able to make a deinterlacer
that provides support for all 4096 colors." So, the B2000 has two video
slots. One slot is there to accept a genlock card, and was also in the
A2000. The other new slot is the slot that the FlickerFixer fits in.
As it turns out, the FlickerFixer was designed and prototyped for an
Amiga 1000. However, since all the digital RGB information wasn't
available, it imposed a limitation on the displayable colors. I talked
to the FlickerFixer's developer, and he had plans to do a version
for the 500/1000 that would not be able to handle as many colors as
the 2000 version, but would be far cheaper. (The 500/1000 version
required far less memory for its internal video buffers, hence the
lower cost.)
Re: A2000 versus B2000
The B2000 has the following features not found in the A2000:
Second video slot for deinterlacers
Monochrome video output jack
Improved processor slot--You do not need to pull the 68000
from its socket when you install a 68020 accelerator board.
One megabyte on the motherboard.
The Fat Agnus chip.
One the other hand, the A2000:
Had only 512K on the motherboard, but came standard with a
memory card plugged into the processor slot. This memory
card came standard with 512K installed, so the base machine
did come with one meg of memory. The memory card had empty
sockets for either another .5 or 1.5 meg of memory. This
allowed anyone a cheap memory upgrade by plugging in more
chips and setting a jumper.
Had the original "skinny" Agnus chip used in the Amiga 1000.
The Byte preview of the Amiga 2000 last spring was based on the A2000.
Re: Motherboard Revisions
I think I saw a posting of the difference between the 4.3 and 4.2
motherboards. It was pretty ho hum. I remember the difference between
a 4.1 and 4.2 board was that the 4.1 had a small daughter board to
fix a problem with the Buster support chip. The 4.2 boards where
produced after Buster was fixed, and thus the daughter board was
unnecessary.
|
1385.13 | 4.3 Explained | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Fri Apr 29 1988 04:29 | 30 |
| The following is a comp.sys.amiga message on the difference between the
4.2 and 4.3 motherboards. Summary: 4.3 fixes a problem that occurs if
you have the 4.3 version of Gary and a Commodore 68020 card. Ho hum.
------------------------------------------------------------
> Which brings up a point that I've been wondering about ... just what are
> the changes from the rev 4.2 to the rev 4.3 boards?
The main difference is that the Rev 4.3 board has a 470 Ohm pullup on the /VPA
in, whereas the Rev 4.2 only have a 4.7K pullup on the /VPA line. This is
only an issue if you have the MOS version of the Gary chip (started some time
after R4.3 went into production) AND you're using a 68020 accelerator board
like the A2620 (hint: you're not using an A2620 yet).
> Any chance of posting a "revision history" list? (Dave ?)
If get a chance I can look and see if there are any other changes to write
about, but most of them are similar little tweaks.
People get so panicky over little things like ".2" vs. ".3" that they're not
supposed to even know about. Now I know why I never used this numbering
scheme before. Next time we go back to coding it, like most other vendors
do.
> /kim
--
Dave Haynie "The B2000 Guy" Commodore-Amiga "The Crew That Never Rests"
{ihnp4|uunet|rutgers}!cbmvax!daveh PLINK: D-DAVE H BIX: hazy
"I can't relax, 'cause I'm a Boinger!"
|
1385.14 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Apr 29 1988 08:30 | 10 |
| re: .11--I haven't tried it, but the BridgeBoard documentation
describes making a PC disk available to AmigaDOS. If I remember
correctly you need to partition the disk: one part for MS-DOS and
the other for AmigaDOS.
re: .12--Yes, please upload your calibration program. I recently
ordered a screwdriver small enough to tweak that pot, and I was
afraid that I would have to adjust it by trial and error.
You might also consider contributing the program to Fred Fish.
John Sauter
|
1385.15 | YES to clock calibrator | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Fri Apr 29 1988 18:45 | 7 |
| re: .12
yes please! my clock hasn't been bad enough to do anything with yet, but is bad
enough to annoy. I, like Mr. Sauter, was not thrilled with the thought of
adjusting the clock by trial and error.
Paul
|