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Amiga 2000 with Mac Emulator Hardware!

Huxley

68000
Hi guys,

Today I managed to win an auction for a Commodore Amiga 2000 from a local seller. The seller was great (and may be a source of more vintage gear in the future!), but not particularly knowledgeable about this particular machine. The A2000 I got is a plain-jane model (it didn't leave the factory with any of the special options like a hard disk or RAM expansion), but at some point in its life it underwent some significant upgrades:

First, it received a "Great Valley Products" Impact A4000-HC+8 - essentially a 70 meg SCSI hard drive on an expansion board, along with 8 30-pin SIMM slots for RAM expansion. The slots on my board are empty, but the drive is fully functioning, loaded with software, and boots flawlessly!

Second, it got a Commodore-brand "A25000" RAM board with 2 megs of DRAM chips soldered on.

Finally (and this is the part that makes it relevant to the MLA), this A2000 has an A-MAX Macintosh emulator module. This strange rectangular brick connects (externally) the the rear of the A2000, and when outfitted with genuine ROM chips from a Mac 128k or 512k Mac, allows the Amiga to natively run (early!) Mac software. The 1st-gen A-MAX that I have will boot up to Mac OS 6.0.3, according to some info I found online.

I've gotten the system booted up, but I only have an older Commodore monitor (designed for the C64 and C128), so the Amiga 2000 is displaying a pretty shaky image in greyscale. I'm going to start scrounging online for a monitor more suited to what this machine is capable of! Also, we're experiencing a pretty good lightning storm here in Albuquerque, and the Amiga is clearly unhappy with the currently unstable power, so I'm going to play with it more tomorrow.

The A2000 I got actually came in its original box (in pretty good shape too), with the keyboard, mouse, and original power cord. The A-MAX (along with some other software and games, and a 2-channel hardware audio mixer / input box!) all have their original boxes, manuals and disks.

All-in-all a great find, and a really fun addition to my collection! I'll let you guys know if / when I get that A-MAX emulator running.

Huxley

 
That mac emulator must be pretty interesting. Its a shame the Amiga flopped so quickly, and its assets are left rotting. If only Apple bought what was left of old Commodore.

 
Amiga hardware at that point was played out, we are better off with modular components instead of a few chips that run everything that cannot be changed without something breaking. The Amiga started off a major leap ahead and ended up ancient left behind by everything else.

The mac emulator should be fun to play with, I have a XT bridgeboard in my A2000 thats kind of cool (and you get to use the built in ISA slots for cards in it).

 
The Amiga emulates 68k macs exceptionally well.

The hardware emulator for your A2000 is a great solution, however it is not actually required...

Look at my sig to see my A1200 running os8.1 using a purely software emulator...

 
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