home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- {bold}The Question{nobold}
- {p} {p}
- {p} {p}
- Dear Sir's,
- {p} {p}
- I wish to resurrect my standard A1200, could u point me into the right
- direction for, ie hard drive, I'm led to believe a laptop HD 2.5" will fit
- into a A1200 with no modification, also required would be a CD-ROM drive,
- memory and accelerator.
- {p} {p}
- Could you please help as it seems such a waste it being stored in my loft.
- {p} {p}
- Regards
- {p} {p}
- PHIL
- {p} {p}
- {p} {p}
- {bold}The Answer{nobold}
- {p} {p}
- {p} {p}
- Phillip,
- Resurrecting your basic A1200 system from scratch is obviously going
- to involve purchasing a CPU expansion board, a HDD, and some RAM.
- {p} {p}
- To decide what you really need, you have to know what you want to do
- with your A1200. For surfing the net, playing MP3s, and playing newer
- games, you really need an 040 processor. If you are considering using
- the 1200 seriously, then an 040 is really a minimum requirement. You
- can still surf the net and play a lot of games with an 030, but keep
- in mind a similarly clocked 040 is more than 4 times faster, and the
- 030 will be a bit sluggish playing games like Doom or decoding jpeg
- pictures on a web site.
- {p} {p}
- Some popular CPU boards include:
- {p} {p}
- Blizzard{p}
- Apollo{p}
- Viper
- {p} {p}
- You can buy these new, but sometimes you can pick up a bargain in
- your local Trading post/classifieds, or auctioning sites such as ebay
- or sold.com.au.
- {p} {p}
- You should be able to pick these up second hand for a few hundred
- dollars AUD. Now, if you don't feel like putting your A1200 into a PC
- tower, and you want a CDROM, then the cheapest option is buy a CPU
- board with a SCSI2 interface on it, or purchase a Squirrel SCSI unit.
- The Squirrel plugs into the PCMCIA port, and is apparently very easy
- to use, but does not autoboot SCSI HDs, so you will still need a 2.5"
- boot drive. SCSI will simplify things *greatly*. SCSI HDDs are
- cheaper ($60 AUD / ~$35 USD for 1GB), and CDROMs are around $20 AUD /
- $12 USD for a quad speed. Your only other option is to use a 2.5" HD,
- which are quite a lot more expensive ($100 AUD / ~$60 USD for 200MB),
- and for the CDROM, you will need a custom PCMCIA interface. As far as
- I know, these are expensive, hard to get hold of, and problematic. A
- bonus feature of SCSI CD ROMs is that from AmigaOS 3.1, scsi CD ROM
- support is built in, whereas an IDE ATAPI drive will require
- commercial software (unless you want to put up with shareware demos
- on aminet).
- {p} {p}
- As far as memory is concerned, you need at least 8MB, but seeing FP
- memory is relatively cheap these days, there is no excuse to have any
- less than 16MB. 16MB will allow you to surf the net, IRC, and ICQ
- all at the same time. When you do buy simms, make sure you get FP
- memory, if possible, because EDO can cause troubles (apparently, but
- not in my experience) and is no faster in Amiga machines than FP.
- {p} {p}
- If you just want to get your Amiga up and running with internet, a
- few games and a word processor, then a 200MB HDD should be fine. 1GB
- or more would be ideal.
- {p} {p}
- For new hardware/software, look in the dealers list on www.amiga.com
- for a local dealer, or try an online shop such as www.vesalia.de.
- {p} {p}
- Having external SCSI devices is still going to require a mini tower
- case, to power your HDD and CD ROM, as well as house them. Make sure
- you get an AT case, because ATX supplies require modifications to
- work without a motherboard present. Another bonus with an AT case is
- that you can tap your A1200's power from the AT supply, so you don't
- need that wimpy little brick you are probably using at the moment.
- {p} {p}
- The next thing you need to worry about is the operating system. The
- latest OS is AmigaOS 3.9, released only a few days ago. This release
- requires v40.68 ROMs (3.1), so if you have only OS 3.0 installed, you
- will have to upgrade the ROMs. OS 3.9 costs around $80 AUD (~$45
- USD), and 40.68 ROMs are about $80 AUD also.
- {p} {p}
- For really showing off an Amiga, you need a graphics card. Sadly, the
- cheapest options for a A1200 start at $500 AUD, with a Zorro IV kit
- and a Zorro 3 graphics card, or the Pixel64 board. This involves
- putting the whole thing into a PC tower, and at this stage you might
- be considering either a PPC CPU board with a Blizzard Vision PPC
- video card, or a big box A3000/A4000.
- {p} {p}
- Most software you will need is available as shareware on aminet
- (de.aminet.net, us.aminet.net, uk.aminet.net). There is a lot of
- documentation out there to get you started - aminet is a goldmine,
- but there is also the Amiga Link Directory (you can find a link to it
- on www.amiga- news.de/indexe.shtml), and search.amiga.org.
- {p} {p}
- For general info about the A1200 and it's expansion options:
- {p} {p}
- {link ftp://ftp.uni-paderborn.de/aminet/dirs/aminet/hard/misc/A1200Hardware.lha}Aminet:hard/misc/A1200Hardware.lha{end}{p}
- {link ftp://ftp.uni-paderborn.de/aminet/dirs/aminet/hard/misc/a1200hardfaq.lha}Aminet:hard/misc/a1200hardfaq.lha{end}
- {p} {p}
- Well, hopefully that will point you in the right direction. As there
- isn't a lot of detail here, you will have to do a lot of research
- yourself. Perhaps a 'getting started with Amigas guide' is needed in
- a future issue of AIO?
- {p} {p}
- - Paul
- {p} {p}
-