Amiga 4000D in perfektem technischen Zustand
absoluter Klassiker, ein Muss fuer jede Sammlung
Am Ende des Textes sind noch viele Detailbilder zu finden.
Hier biete ich einen absoluten Klassiker an, der Commodore (CBM) Amiga 4000D.
Dieser Amiga 4000 ist eine Legende an sich. Er wurde von Commodore als Flaggschiff der Amiga-Flotte konzipiert und mit allem ausgestattet, was Stand der Technik ist (IDE, AGA, HD-Floppy, etc.).
Einige Features, die ihn von den anderen Modellen absetzen:
IDE-Controller onboard
AGA
Zorro III (zusammen mit dem A3000D, A4000T, A3000T und A3000UX), damit laufen in dem 4000er alle Zorro III-Karten (Cybervision 64, DKB 3128, Fastlane Z3, Picasso IV, etc.) und darueber hinaus auch noch alle Zorro II-Karten.
Der 4000er kann mit Turbokarten bis hin zum 68060 und PPC (PowerPC) aufgeruestet werden, z.B. der CyberstormPPC (und ist damit OS 4.0 ready), der Cyberstorm mit 68060, den Apollo oder GVP Turbokarten, etc..
Commodore hat den 4000er als Flagschiff der Amiga-Serie gebaut, um im professionellen Umfeld eingesetzt werden zu koennen. So wurde der Amiga 4000 in vielen Film-/Fernseh-/Grafik- und Broadcastingstudios eingesetzt, wo er sich neben Hardware durchsetzte, die fuenf- und mehrstellige Betraege kosten. Unter anderem ausgestattet mit dem sogenannten Toaster und Genlocks, war es aus den Studios nicht wegzudenken.
Fuer viele Liebhaber ist der 4000er der fortschrittlichste der Amiga-Familie. Ich gebe ihn nur ab, da ich neben zwei 4000ern nun auch einen A4000T habe und daher einer meiner 4000er vakant ist.
Hier ist er zu haben und dazu noch in technisch absolutem Topzustand und auch optisch ist er gut erhalten. Der 4000er wurde kontinuierlich aufgeruestet und kommt in aktueller Ausstattung daher. Der Uhrenakku, der ansonsten gerne auslaeuft und das komplette Mainboard zerstoert wurde fruehzeitig ausgebaut (der 4000er hat seine Uhrzeit immer ueber das Netzwerk aktuell gehalten). Der 4000er hat keinerlei Batterieschaden.
Ausstattung des Systems:
2 MB ChipRam
16 MB FastRam
Kickstart 3.0 (ideal fuer OS 3.1)
eingebautes HD-Diskettenlaufwerke (Chinon FZ-357A)
eingebaute Festplatte mit 1 GB, Maxtor 7270AV (CF-Karte optional)
eingebautes CD-Laufwerk (48x)
Buster Rev. 11 (letzte und beste Version)
Motorola 68030 mit 25 MHz (auf original Commodore A3630)
technischer Bestzustand (kein Akkuschaden, sehr gepflegt), siehe Fotos
Eine solche Gelegenheit solltet ihr euch nicht entgehen lassen. Ein System in dem Zustand gibt es evt. niemals wieder. Wer jetzt nicht zugreift, ist selber schuld.
For international bidders:
You are bidding on a Amiga 4000D without damage from battery-leakage.
The system comes with CD-drive, HD-floppy-drive, Buster 11, 2MB Chip- and 16 MB FastRam.
I do ship worldwide, please ask for shipping expenses to your country. Also I can send detail-pictures on request.
Ein Auszug aus der Amiga-Hardware-Database:
Variants
A4000/040
A4000/030
In 1992 September Commodore released the successor of the A3000 based around the AGA chip set. The first models were equipped with 040 processors only, later - to fill the gap between the A1200 and the A4000/040 - with 030 processors too. Apart from the used processor cards the two models are identical.
Processor
68030 @ 25-50 MHz
68040 @ 25-40 MHz
68060 @ 50 MHz
PowerPC 604e @ 150-233 MHz
Most desktop A4000s' processor is located on a removable processor card. The A4000/040 originally shipped with the A3640 featuring a 68040 or 68LC040 @ 25 MHz, and the A4000/030 with the A3630 featuring a 68EC030 @ 25 MHz and a socket for an optional 68881 or 68882 floating point unit. Some late A4000/030 has its processor soldered to the motherboard leaving the CPU slot empty.
Memory
up to 2 MB Chip RAM
up to 16 MB Fast RAM on motherboard
up to 128 MB Fast RAM on processor cards
up to 1 GB Fast RAM on Zorro III expansion cards
Most A4000s have five 72 pin SIMM sockets on their motherboard - one for Chip RAM, the other four for Fast RAM. The sockets accept industry standard 32 or 36 bit page mode SIMMs. The four parity bits of the 36 bit modules are ignored and they function as simple 32 bit ones. EDO RAM is not supported by the motherboard RAM controller, Ramsey, but some processor cards accept it and some even use its benefits.
The Chip RAM socket has to be filled with either a 1 or 2 MB SIMM. The four Fast RAM sockets accept 1, 4 or 8 MB modules up to a total of 16 MB Fast RAM. The SIMMs cannot be mixed and the 8 MB ones have to be placed in every second socket.
Late models have the four Fast RAM sockets only. The fifth socket is missing, it is replaced by 2 MB 70 ns Chip RAM soldered to the motherboard.
The access speed of the Fast RAM on the motherboard can be controlled by software, either 80 or 60 ns.
Custom chips
Alice - AGA display controller
Lisa - AGA display encoder
Paula - audio and I/O controller
Fat Gary - system address decoder
Super Buster - DMA arbitrary controller
Ramsey - RAM controller
Bridgette - complex buffer
Supported screen modes
PAL
NTSC
Euro36
A2024 320×256 - 1280×512
320×200 - 1280×400
320×200 - 1280×400
1024×1024 50 Hz, 15.60 kHz
60 Hz, 15.72 kHz
73 Hz, 15.76 kHz
15 Hz, 15.72 kHz
DblPAL
DblNTSC
Multiscan
Euro72
Super72 320×512 - 640×1024
320×400 - 640×800
640×480 - 640×960
640×400 - 640×800
400×300 - 800×600 50 Hz, 29.45 kHz
59 Hz, 29.20 kHz
60 Hz, 31.44 kHz
70 Hz, 31.43 kHz
72 Hz, 24.62 kHz
Supported palettes
256 from 16 million, 262144 (HAM8)
Unlike the A3000 the A4000 has no separate flicker fixer, the 30 kHz modes are generated by the Lisa itself. Other screen modes require a Zorro graphics card.
All A4000s shipped with Kickstart 3.0 ROM which can be replaced with a 3.1 one. The access speed of the ROM is selectable by a jumper, either 160 or 200 ns.
Most A4000s have Super Buster revision 9 chips which turned out to be having problems with Zorro III cards using DMA. It can be replaced with revision 11, although early models have their Buster soldered to the motherboard. Late models shipped with revision 11 ones.
Expansion slots
1× processor card slot
4× Zorro III slots
1× extended video slot
3× inactive ISA slots
The Zorro, ISA and video slots are all placed on a daughterboard which is mounted vertically on the motherboard. All the ISA and video slots are in line with a Zorro III slot.
The video slot is extended with 18 pins not found in previous Amiga models in order to support the AGA chip set's 24 bit colour palette.
The three ISA slots have their power and ground pins activated only. In order to access the slots by the A4000 a BridgeBoard has to be installed. With an installed BridgeBoard two ISA AT compatible cards can be used in the remaining slots. Inactive slots can be used for non intelligent cards like TBCs or fan cards.
The processor card slot is physically the same 200 pin one which can be found in the A3000(T). However the processor cards designed specially for the A3000 do not fit into the A4000 because of their size - the A4000's daughterboard stands in their way.
The A4000 has a vast array of upgrade options, including processor cards, SCSI controllers, retargetable graphics cards, video digitizers, ethernet cards and many other types of expansion.
Drive bays
2× 3.5" front bays
1× 5.25" front bay
2× 3.5" rear bays
One of the 3.5" front bays is occupied with a 1.76 MB high density floppy disk drive, and one of the internal bays with an - originally IDE - hard disk drive. The 5.25" drive bay's depth is limited by the power supply thus longer devices, such as CD writers and some CD-ROM drives do not fit into it.
Interfaces
1× serial DB25 male, RS232
1× parallel DB25 female, Centronics
1× video DB23 male, analog RGB
2× mouse/game DB9 male
2× stereo audio RCA jack
1× keyboard 6 pin female mini-DIN
1× external floppy DB23 female
1× internal floppy 34 pin header
1× internal AT IDE 40 pin header
1× internal audio input 3 pin header
The built in IDE controller supports two IDE devices connected simultaneously. Unlike the A1200 the A4000 has a buffered IDE port. Only mode PIO 0 is supported. The floppy drive controller supports up to four devices - two attached to the internal floppy header and two connected to the external floppy port. Both double and high density disk drives are supported. The internal audio connector enables an audio expansion device mounted internally (e.g. CD-ROM, sound card) to mix its output into the standard Amiga audio output.
Motherboard revisions
rev 1
SIMM socket for Chip RAM
Alice and Lisa are socketed
Fat Buster 7 and Ramsey 4
rechargeable NiCad battery
rev 2
A4000/030 with 68EC030 on A3630
A4000/040 with 68040 on A3640 v3.0
Super Buster 9 and Ramsey 7
rev B
Alice and Lisa are soldered to the motherboard
Super Buster 9, soldered to the board
rev C
rev D
rev D cost reduced
A4000/030
* 68EC030 soldered to motherboard
* PLCC socket for a 68881 or 68882 on the motherboard
* two oscillators: 28 Mhz and 50 MHz, the socket for the FPU oscillator is not installed
A4000/040 with 68LC040 on A3640 v3.1
* the place of the 68030 and FPU is left empty
* only the 28 Mhz oscillator is installed, the 50 MHz signal is taken from the A3640
* no socket is provided for the 50 MHz oscillator which is required when installing an asynchronous processor board in place of the A3640
Chip RAM is soldered to the motherboard
socketed Super Buster 11
non-rechargeable lithium battery
connector for replacement battery
Power supply
150 W power output
monitor power connector
4× standard 4 pin power connectors
2× mini 4 pin floppy drive power connectors
Ein Auszug aus dem Big Book of Amiga Hardware:
Standard Specifications
Case Type: Desktop
Processor: EC030@25Mhz (on motherboard for A4000-CR models)
EC030@25Mhz via a Commodore A3630
040@25Mhz via Commodore A3640
MMU: None (030 versions)
Internal (040 version)
FPU: Optional, but not standard (030 versions)
Internal (040 version)
Chipset: AGA
Kickstarts: V3.0 (2 ROMs)
Bus Controller: Buster Rev 7 (Prototype A4000 only)
Super Buster Rev 9
Super Buster Rev 11
Expansion Slots: 4 x 100pin Zorro III slots
1 x AGA Video slot (inline with Zorro)
3 x inactive 16bit ISA slots (inline with Zorro)
1 x 200pin CPU Fast slot.
Standard CHIP RAM: 2MB
RAM sockets: 4 x 72pin SIMM slots (A4000-CR only, 2MB Chip is surface mounted)
5 x 72pin SIMM slots (one slot is reserved for Chip RAM)
Hard Drive Controllers: 1 x 3.5" Buffered IDE Controller
Drive Bays: 1 x 5.25" (with faceplate, None for Black A4000)
4 x 3.5" (2 with faceplates)
Note: Some machines were supplied with 1.5 times height floppy drives, in this case the second externally accessible 3.5" bay is fairly useless as it's only half height.
Expansion Ports: 1 x 25pin Serial
1 x 25pin Parallel
1 x 23pin RGB Video
1 x 23pin External Floppy
2 x 9pin Joystick/Mouse
2 x RCA Audio (Left/Right)
1 x PS/2 style Keyboard Connector
Floppy Drive: 1 x Internal 1.76MB Floppy Drive
Note: Some machines were shipped with single height drives, others had 1.5 times height drives.
Motherboard Revisions: Rev 1 (Early prototype, with black case)
Rev B (Most Common)
Rev C (Rare)
Rev D (A4000-CR)
Battery Backed Up Clock: Yes, uses "Barrel" shaped batteries, except Rev D which uses "Coin" shaped batteries.
The A4000 is often seen as the big brother of the A1200 but was targetted more at productivity users, rather than gamers. The A4000 was seen as a disappointment to many after the reception that the A3000 received. Although it uses a newer ROM and Chipset, the onboard SCSI-II had been replaced with a significantly slower IDE Controller (PIO Mode 0) and it did not contain the scandoubling hardware for attaching PC VGA type monitors which the A3000 did. Significant improvements were however, made to the Zorro III bus design particularly with regards to DMA and bus mastering that fixed many problems which plagued the A3000, providing you had a Rev 11 buster. Unlike most other big box Amigas the A4000 uses a PS/2 style keyboard connector, however the signals and keyboard clock that the A4000 uses are not the same as the PC so you cannot use PC PS/2 keyboards. Like most big box Amigas the A4000 also has a keylock which effectively works by removing power from the keyboard and mouse rendering the machine fairly useless.
Some A4000's may have been released which contained 020 CPU's, as the A3630 that was supplied with the A4000 can also be fitted with an 020 and there is one claim that Commodore donated an 020 based A4000 as a prize at The Gathering '92. A4000's with a Rev D motherboard differ slightly from the other versions and are dubbed "A4000-CR" which stands for "Cost Reduced". It was an attempt to reduce the cost of manufacturing the A4000. Most A4000's were shipped with a separate processor card connected to the CPU fast slot however the A4000-CR had an 030 soldered directly to the motherboard therefore a processor card was not required. It still contained the CPU fast slot however for attaching accelerators. In addition to this Commodore also removed the fifth SIMM slot which is reserved for CHIP ram and soldered the CHIP directly to the motherboard. As all A4000s were supplied with 2MB CHIP by default, the fifth SIMM slot was rather useless because the AGA chipset could not address more than 2MB of CHIP. Commodore had planned to give the A4000 the ability to address up to 8MB of CHIP and indeed a jumper can be found on the motherboard which would have been used for this purpose, but the jumper actually does nothing.
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