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AMIGA 4000 D.I.Y. TOWER
KOSTAS THEODOROPOULOS
e-mail: kostastheodo@yahoo.com
GREECE
CONTENTS
Preface
Dangers & Important Notes
What You Need
Do It Yourself
Disassembling
Assembling
Power Supply
The Other Face
Making Bridges
Final Touches
Photos & Schematics
Troubleshooting
Tower Logo
Notes and Thanks
PREFACE
I bought my A4000/030 back in 1993 instead of an A1200, because I wanted to
be able to put Zorro boards and various peripherals easily. After some years
my setup had increased so much that the poor desktop had no space! Here are
the specs:
68030 25MHz, 68882 33Mhz, 2MB Chip, 16MB Fast 60nsec RAM, kickstart v39.109,
PicassoIV gfx board, Philips 107B 17" multisync monitor, Quantum 2.1GB IDE HD,
Conner 540MB IDE HD, Hitachi 36x Atapi CDROM drive, Internal ZIP 100MB Atapi
drive, USR 56K external Faxmodem, HP DeskJet 695C. Also, I am waiting the new
AmigaOS v3.5 with 3.1 ROMs and I want to buy a G4
accelerator board, a CD Writer maybe etc...
After I bought my ZIP drive, I had no empty bays in the desktop and
Commodore had placed a full height floppy drive, not the standard half height
that PCs have, so in order to place the ZIP, I had to cut the lower part of the
plastic desktop face. Also, my desk was crowded, with the
printer on the desktop. So, the need for a tower was raising. Tower has many
advantages, such as smaller footprint, bigger power supply, more internal -
external bays and other. But the price of an amiga specific tower is very high
(£180), the price of a CD burner here in Greece! The
price of a PC tower is significantly lower, about £30! Taking these facts in
consideration, I decided to buy a PC tower and adjust my Amiga. The main
problem to solve was that the amiga Zorro boards are parallel to the
motherboard (daughterboards holds them and connects them with
motherboard), but on PCs, the AGP - PCI - ISA expantion boards are connected
straight to motherboard, so they are vertical to it. But all problems have
solutions. This project was performed during July 1999, but it wasn't possible
to write it down earlier.
The tower is working for over 6 months now, without any serious problems. My
office is reformed, having more space for myself at last. Also, summer in
Greece sometimes is getting very hot. Some noons, with temperatures near 40C,
the case near fast ram SIMMs was boiling as
PicassoIV card was directly above, and air getting out from the crowded
desktop's PSU was a little bit warm... Now, I worked for hours my new tower in
summer and everything was cool!
DANGERS & IMPORTANT NOTES
Please do read carefully the following notes and indications:
1) I do not have any responsibility for any damages that you may have to your
equipment (amiga, peripherals, tools etc.) or to yourself.
2) If you are not sure that you understood the project, that you are capable or
experienced, that your knowledge on electronics is inefficient, then go buy a
ready amiga tower.
3) Be sure you have the right equipment and tools for the job. It will make
your life a lot easier and your amiga safer.
4) If you have any questions, ask an experienced person in electronics and
amiga. Do not hesitate to contact me in my e-mail address:
kostastheodo@yahoo.com
5) DO NOT throw to the trashcan anything from the amiga you just dismantled or
from the new bought tower! You never know if something is wanted in future.
Also, 2-3 parts of desktop are needed to build the tower.
6) Have all the materials in order, be gentle with the equipment, before you
touch anything sensitive in static electricity, such as motherboard, ground
yourself (touching a heating body for example) and remember the order you
dismantled your amiga, so if anything goes wrong, put it back to its desktop
case safe and sound.
7) Look at the Hardware Book site: www.serres.hol.gr/computers/hwb/hwb.html to
find more about the PSU connectors and various schematics.
WHAT YOU NEED
1) PC tower with an AT power supply (be careful NOT with ATX PSU). The
difference between them is that ATX PSUs are controlled from the motherboard,
so PCs can switch off or go to energy preserve modes with software commands
(amiga can't support them). Also, they do not have a
special +5V supply named PG (Power Good) needed for the amiga fast ram. Take
care of the tower's size. Do not choose mini or small towers, because
motherboard won't fit and they have few interior and exterior bays. Choose
medium or large towers, which have the advantage of bigger
PSUs and more bays. Most towers are divided inside in two vertical parts.
Usually, upper part has the PSU and the exterior 5.25" bays - 3 (medium towers)
to 5 (large ones). The lower has room for the motherboard - some have railways
and a mount plate to place on the motherboard (prefer these,
because is easier to fit the motherboard and you can drag it in and out the
tower), some have prefixed arms for mounting motherboard screw holes - and 3.5"
exterior (2 or 3) and interior (none to 3) bays. So, before you buy any tower,
measure amiga motherboard and make sure that it fits in the lower department.
Also, when you place motherboard on, it must have room on its lower edge to fit
the extention cables for mouse and joystick port to the rear face of the tower
For those who live in Greece, the medium or large AT (NOT ATX) TurboX tower
from PLAISIO Computers is just right...
2) Philips screwdriver, small metal cutter, wire cutter, soldering iron, cable
joining clips (6 male - 6 female small and medium size), scissor, 2 male - 2
female 9pin DB9 connectors (for mouse and joystick), 50cm -9 wire inside-
covered wire, electric isolation tape, 20-30 screws for metal and
mounting clips for them (just like those which have car speakers).
The following items are not absolutely needed, but are very useful to have:
1) 9pin DB extention for mouse (it has short cable and while desktop was on the
table, had enough length, but tower is on floor, so extention is needed - you
can D.I.Y. if you want, just buy extra 1 male and 1 female 9pin DB connectors
and some extra 9wire covered wire).
2) The same as above for joystick if its wire length is small.
3) Voltage meter (to make absolutely sure which PSU cable for the motherboard
outputs the correct voltage). Here in Greece, electronic polymeters that count
DC and AC voltage, amber, resistance and
transistors, are very cheap, about £10.
4) Extra metal screws in various lengths, spirals and types.
5) Lots, lots, lots of coffee and patience...
DO IT YOURSELF
Now, if you feel ready and have got all the needed materials, you can start
the building of your amiga tower. But to build, you have first to break
apart...
Disassembling
First, open your new tower and observe it carefully. Watch what is included
with (screws, metal faces for the rear to fit in different PCs motherboards,
bases to hold the tower on the floor, plastic grid to hold the extention boards
in place, cables for power and for front LEDs etc.). Remove the metal sides of
the tower and unscrew the PSU from the rear face. Amiga's desktop PSU is 135W.
Most towers have 200W (medium) or 250W (large) PSUs, so know you can fit any
peripherals ever wanted without worry for room or power! Usually, the
motherboard in most towers is fitted
on the right side (the directions are always while front face of tower or amiga
is towards you).
Then, you have to dismantle the desktop. Unplug all the cables (such as for
monitor, printer, mouse etc.). Remove the cover (it has 2 screws in the upper
rear corners). The interior of your amiga is lying in front of you. Remove
your Zorro cards. Unplug all the PSU's cables towards
peripherals or the motherboard (PSU is the large metal brick on the rear left).
Remove all the peripherals such as CDROM drivers, ZIP drivers, floppy drives
and hard disks. The hard disks bay is on the left of the PSU. It is formed by
two metal corners. Left one is hold in place by 2
screws on a metal railway. The later connects the front face of the desktop
metal case with the rear and has 2 screws, 1 on each edge (remove them and then
the metal railway). The right corner is hold in place with another 2 screws
mounted on the PSU. Between left corner and
daughterboard (the later is a board that has the slots for Zorro boards and
connects them to motherboard), there is a plastic corner to prevent
short-circuits. Remove the HDs, unscrew and then remove PSU (2 screws in rear
face).
The front plastic face is hold in place with 8 plastic arrows in 6 metal
slots (2 left - 2 middle - 2 right). Press the arrows, one at a row, while you
pull the plastic face in order to get the arrows out of the metal front and
finally and the plastic face. From the front, 3 wires with connectors go to
motherboard, for power - HD led and for keyboard lock. Remove them. Unscrew
the exterior bay (it has place for a 5.25" and for two 3.5" drives. Remove the
daughterboard (take care, it could be
very hard if it is done for the first time). Remove the metal panel in the
rear and left to the daughterboard which accepts the exterior outputs/inputs of
the Zorro boards. It has a screw to its left face. Remove all the screws that
hold the motherboard. Also, do not forget to unscrew the 2 sockets (one on the
left and one right) of the serial port, where the screws of the serial cable
mount on, else motherboard won't move. Now, you can remove motherboard from
desktop - much dust on, isn't it! Underneath motherboard is a plastic sheet
that prevents lower surface of motherboard to short-circuit with the desktop
case. Well done, your amiga is now... apart for well!
Assembling
Let's start building the tower! The descriptions and directions for the
tower are given looking the left side of the tower. Front face is on our right
and rear on left in order to look the mounted motherboard, which in most PCs
towers is placed on the right side of the tower. Our first
aim is to mount steadily motherboard in the tower. My tower had a metal
surface with slots for PC's motherboard's screws. Some screws were in right
place, some not. Use a drill with thin edge to make new holes, marked to match
with amiga motherboard ones. Use screws for metal
(aluminium) with thin edge, not flat to screw the motherboard on. DO NOT
forget to place between motherboard and metal surface the plastic sheet you
removed from desktop earlier. Also, do not place overpowered force to the
screws, just to hold the motherboard well, not bending it from
excessive force. My tower had on the rear face of the front a plastic grid
like brick to hold the extra cards. Remove it. Place the metal surface with
motherboard on the railway and slide it in, watching if contacts anywhere.
Place the daughterboard with a full Zorro board (like PicassoIV) in motherboard
(just touching each other, its does not needed to fit them in) and measure the
distance between the right edge of the Zorro card and the rear surface of the
tower's front face. Cut the
plastic grid's height as above. PCs extention slots have same distance between
them as amiga ones, so the plastic grid is suitable for holding your amiga
Zorro boards parallel between them. It doesn't matter if you can't mount the
grid on tower anymore, if your motherboard is on a railway like mine, screwing
the railway will press and hold in place and the grid.
Do not place motherboard in tower yet. My tower has 3 exterior 3.5" bays.
One of them is useless, because amiga's floppy drive is not a half height one,
but full height. So, I mounted desktop's HDs bay in the tower, making an
interior 3.5" bay for 2 half height hard disks! In my
tower, the front of exterior bays is covered with metal pre-catted in such way,
so if you want to place a drive in the bay, just waggle the cover back and
forth to remove it. Bending this parallelogram piece of 5.25" near to one of
its end, we have a corner. Drill a hole in the middle of
the desktop's HD bay corner and screw the two corners together. Mount the
upper side of the T shaped bay to the unused upper exterior bay of tower using
screws and metal clips like ones that car speakers have. The same with other
side. So, now you have an interior hard disk bay hanging from
the tower's exterior bays. My A4000 has 68030 and its CPU daughterboard is
very slim. If you have an accelerator board, its increased height may be
preventing to place the extra interior bay. Also, keep the lower plastic face
of the desktop, which is shorter than a half height one and
place it over the amiga's floppy drive on the tower's exterior bay (full height
and this shorter plastic face equals with two half height) in order to fully
close tower's front face.
Power Supply
Now, its time to adjust the PSU supply to amiga's motherboard. Cut the edge
of desktop's PSU with some wire (10cm) left on. If you find the male connector
of PSU, you can override this step, but whatever electronics shop I searched I
couldn't find the right one. 6 pin male connectors with 2 rows and 3 columns
exists, but are not exactly same with amiga's one and you can't plug them to
motherboard's female slot. Desktop's PSU cable colors are the following:
Image (1)
Orange: +12V (3)
Red: -12V (2)
Brown: +5V (PG) (1)
Yellow: +5V (4)
Blue: Ground (5 and 6)
In the same directory, there is a drawstudio project of the schematic in the
right: "Amiga2towerPSU.dsdr". Yellow cable is fatter than others, because
transfers more power to motherboard. Cut the edge of tower's PSU (it's not
needed to leave any cable on the connector). AT PSU cable colors equals with
the following:
Orange: +5V (PG)
Red: +5V (there are 4 red cables)
Black: Ground (there are 4 black cables)
Blue: -12V
White: -5V (not needed - cover it - not short-circuit anywhere)
Yellow: +12V
It is recommended to use a voltage meter to verify the above voltage of the
AT tower PSU and of amiga's desktop one. Just connect them to AV socket, turn
them on and meter voltages using as ground the case of PSU. Watch out, DO NOT
TOUCH any naked cables!!! Join the amiga's desktop PSU connector's cables with
AT tower PSU's ones using cable joining clips. Use the following guide
(assuming that your desktop and tower cables match in color with mine):
Desktop Connector <----- AT PSU
Orange (+12V) Yellow
Red (-12V) Blue
Brown (+5V PG) Orange
Yellow (+5V) Red (all 4 together using wider clip)
Blue (GRD) Black (2 black on each blue using wider clips
Double check the above connections. Any mistake and kiss your amiga
good-bye for ever!!! Peripherals do not have any problem with power supply,
just connect tower PSU's connectors instead, they are the same as desktop's
ones. Also, make two 9pin DB extentions, about 20cm long for mouse and joystick
ports (male 9pin DB connector to female 9pin DB connector with 20cm 9wire cable
between them, using soldering iron, watch out not to cross wires ex. pin 1 of
male goes to 1 of female, 2 to 2, 3 to 3 etc.). Now, you can screw PSU back in
tower.
The Other Face
Its time to make the rear face of tower. When you bought the tower, with it
was provided a number of different rear metal faces in order to fit with the
great variety of rear connectors of PC's motherboards. Find which of them fits
more to amiga's motherboard. It is not needed to exact
match. Cut what prevents the bigger part to fit and adjust from other rear
faces catted parts to cover the whole rear face. Use some sticking tape for
small parts, the main aim is to prevent dust going in tower. The rear of my
desktop was in two parts, one bigger forming outer perimeter of
rear face, having place for extention boards connectors and one smaller forming
the center and having place for motherboard's connectors. PC's have their
extention boards vertical towards their motherboard, so the slots in the rear
face are vertical too. Amiga ones are parallel, so you
have to cut the above slots in rear face (not in their full extention, but
measuring the desktop's rear metal face for extention boards and fitting it to
the catted opening - it isn't needed to screw it on the rear face, it can be
mounted on the motherboard - daughterboard - Zorro board complex as it was in
desktop too). Do not forget to mount the mouse and joystick ports extentions
you made earlier to the proper rear face sockets using screws. Also, plug the
2 screws you removed from serial interface, in order to unmount motherboard
from desktop, back.
Making Bridges
An important issue is to stabilize daughterboard in tower. Place and screw
the metal surface with motherboard on, with daughterboard fitted in tower. Do
not forget to place on the inner side of the front face the plastic grid that
holds Zorro boards parallel to motherboard and between
them. Mount on tower the rear face of it you previously made. Use the same
metal railway that stabilized daughter board in desktop. Screw the two edges
of railway in inner surfaces of rear and front tower face, using, if needed,
metal corners made as for the interior hard disks bay.
Make sure that the whole construction is stable enough and that no
short-circuits are possible or no one screw left free in tower or no one metal
part is going to fall easily. Do not forget to connect mouse and joystick
ports extentions from rear face to motherboard.
Final Touches
We are almost there! Some cables for tower's LEDs exit from the inner side
of front face. We need only two of them, marked with HD and PWR letters on
their connector edge (for hard disk and power led obviously). Connect them to
the previously motherboard's front, to connectors marked on motherboard with HD
and PWR. Each connector has 3 pins, use upper (right) 2 and make sure cable's
connector marking letters are to the right, looking the front face of tower.
The keyboard and mouse lock is not used anymore, I think it is not great
protection, anyone who can opens the desktop's or tower's case can override it.
Place all the drives (CDROMs, ZIPs, HDs, floppies) in tower's bays and mount
your Zorro cards in. If the construction you made is not as stable as
desktop's one (the most probable), be careful with the force you put on
daughterboard! Connect all the power cables from PSU to motherboard and
peripherals, all the data cables from motherboard to peripherals and whatever
other cables as you had and in the desktop. The inner of your new amiga tower
is ready! Screw the right metal side of
tower, but leave the left side open for any case some tunnings are needed.
DOUBLE CHECK ALL YOUR STEPS AND MOVEMENTS!!! Before power is on, make sure
your amiga won't blow off. Check again and again for any minor problems, such
as screws left free in tower, possible short-circuits, wrong power connector
construction, even it is stupid or the possibility
is very small or is just in your mind. Plug all the exterior peripherals
(monitor, modem, printer, mouse, keyboard etc.) and power cable. If you are
sure, switch your new amiga tower on and check everything is working right.
Congratulations, your new A4000 is born!!! If any problem
occurs, check Troubleshooting section. Also, a mouse cable extention is
possibly needed, because desktop was closer than tower which stands on floor.
You can make one or buy a ready made from almost any computer shop.
PHOTOS & SCHEMATICS
The following images are from the tower I made with my good old A4000
desktop. There are from various views and stages of constructions, from
interior and exterior. Also, there are photos of materials and tools needed to
make this tower a reality. Next to image number is the image's filename in the
directory. Also, they were designed for gfx card users in mind (large
resolutions, true color etc.). For AGA users, the 2MB chip memory limit may
prevent them. My advise: go buy a gfx card if you do not have one yet!
Image (1) - "Amiga2towerPSU.iff"
It is a schematic of amiga's motherboard power supply connector, looking it
from above, with its pins numbered.
Image (2) - "AT_FrontOpen.jpeg"
The tower's front face with its exterior bays cover down ready to roll.
Image (3) - "AT_HDcaseReady2fit.jpeg"
The D.I.Y. internal HD case ready to fit under the 3,5" exterior bays.
Image (4) - "AT_LeftSideOpen.jpeg" + "AT_LeftSideOpenZoom.jpeg"
They are images from left side of finished tower (distant and zoomed).
Image (5) - "AT_MBReady2fit.jpeg"
Motherboard mounted on its plate, ready to roll on the railway.
Image (6) - "AT_MessyRoom.jpeg"
Well, be prepared to mess up your space to warp speed 10!
Image (7) - "AT_Rear.jpeg"
Finished tower's rear face.
Image (8) - "AT_RightSideOpen.jpeg"
The right face of finished tower.
Image (9) - "AT_ToolsGood2Have.jpeg"
Small details that will make your life easier...
Image (10) - "AT_ToolsNeeded.jpeg"
The absolutely minimum of tools for this project.
TROUBLESHOOTING
In this section there are problems you may have and solutions I have found
to them, with possible causes. Before reading the following, make sure you
constructed tower well, did not forget anything important and double checked
the whole procedure.
1) Problem:
I have more than 4MB fast ram in 4MB SIMMs on motherboard and workbench
shows that exist only 4MB of them. Or I have more than 1MB fast ram in 1MB
SIMMs on motherboard and workbench shows only 1MB of them.
Reason:
Your PSU does not have +5V PG (Power Good) supply or you made wrong and
used simple +5V supply to pin 1 of motherboard power connector.
Solution:
Check you made the right connections from AT PSU to motherboard. If you
aren't sure that your PSU has +5V PG, remove PSU from tower and open its case.
On the PSU's motherboard, next to each cable is written its voltage and PG
has... what else, +5V PG written next to it. Also, if you
have 4MB SIMMs make sure that the jumper which selects the capacity of SIMMs is
in right position (consult A4000 User's Guide if you don't know).
2) Problem:
Caps Lock led is blinking after power up and keyboard doesn't work.
Reason:
Keyboard connector doesn't make right contact with socket. Desktop was
positioned 90 degrees differently from tower. After 3-4 years, gravity had
effect on cable's shape and slot shape. Caps Lock led blinks once during power
up, for about half second and then doesn't blink anymore. If it blinks once
for 2-3 seconds and then starts to blink continuously, it means there is a
keyboard (connection) problem.
Solution:
Switch amiga off. Bend the edge of keyboard's cable back and forth and try
to plug it better in tower, maybe pressing it little up, down, left or right
and then switch on. You will find a place that contact is good and keyboard
powers up without problem. After 1-2 months, gravity
will have effect and this problem want appear.
3) Problem:
You switch the tower on, but hard disk led doesn't light, monitor goes to
power saving mode (its led from green to orange), screen is black, hard disk
doesn't boot up and pressing the two mouse buttons during power up has no
result.
Reason:
CPU daughterboard doesn't make good connection to motherboard. You forgot
to place your CPU board to motherboard. Your CPU board is damaged. So, amiga
acts like as when it has not CPU, simply does nothing! I have disassembled my
amiga many times and as result the CPU
slot has been loose, making right contact difficult. Also, gravity may had
effect as previous problem.
Solution:
Check if you have placed CPU board. If yes, check if you placed it right
and tight. Press CPU board to the end of the motherboard's slot or to one or
other side in order to make better contact. Make sure it doesn't short-circuit
with anything else. After some tries, you will find the right place.
4) Problem:
As above, but not even the power led is on.
Reason:
You forgot to connect PSU's supply to motherboard or you didn't even connect
the tower to AV supply. Worse, you made the connections totally wrong and blew
motherboard apart...
Solution:
Connect the above. Check motherboard's power supply.
5) Problem:
Amiga boots up right, but power led and/or hard disk led are off.
Reason:
You forgot to connect the LEDs to motherboard or you connected them wrong.
Solution:
Some cables for tower's LEDs exit from the inner side of front face. We
need only two of them, marked with HD and PWR letters on their connector edge
(for hard disk and power led obviously). Connect them to the previously
motherboard's front, to connectors marked on motherboard with HD and PWR. Each
connector has 3 pins, use upper (right) 2 and make sure cable's connector
marking letters are to the right, looking the front face of tower. Also, read
again the Final Touches part of Do It Yourself chapter.
6) Problem:
Mouse or joystick are not working at all or don't work properly.
Reason:
You forgot to connect mouse and joystick port extentions to motherboard or
the cable you made is wrong, meaning that some of its pins short-circuit or you
connected wrong pins together.
Solution:
Check if you have connected the extentions and if the construction is
right. Also, read again the Power Supply part of Do It Yourself chapter.
7) Problem:
Some Zorro cards do not work properly or do not work at all. For example
PicassoIV card in P96 native modes work properly, but when flicker fixer is
trying to show amiga native modes, screen blurs with pixels going from left to
right.
Reason:
Daughterboard is not fitted tight in motherboard or Zorro cards are not
fitted tight in daughterboard. You forgot to place some of the above. Zorro
cards are touching each other making short-circuits or they are too close and
overheating.
Solution:
Make sure you have placed right daughterboard and Zorro cards, tight and
all the way in, that you have placed the plastic grid on front edge and the
metal one from desktop to the rear edge in order to secure right distances
between the Zorro cards and between them and the motherboard.
TOWER LOGO
Most tower cases have a small square area in front to place the sign of
company that made the tower. So, if you have a printer, you can easily make
your own. Measure the area's dimensions, draw your Amiga sign, print it, cut
the paper to form the area in right dimensions and using paper glue, stick it
on the tower. Your PCs owning friends will have the biggest surprise of their
life!
My tower has a square area with dimensions 26mm x 26mm. Thefollowing image
is an example of the logo I made. In the directory there are variations, where
the background (the Boing Ball) remains same and changes the font of AMIGA
word, in 300dpi and 600dpi. Print them as they
are. Their dimentions are 30mm x 26mm (I left some white border around in
order to cut it more easily). Also, in the same directory there is a
Drawstudio project of the following Amiga Tower Logo: "AmigaLogo.dsdr".
NOTES & THANKS
The processing of all those files was made with my A4000, using Ed for text
and guide documents, FinalWriter Lite (from AF) and Wordworth 5. Most images
were scanned from photos taken with an old Panasonic camera (no zoom
capability, this is the reason why some photos are blurred). I used my
brother's PC (what a nightmare...) with its Agfa scanner to pass them as TIFF
files to my ZIP drive and then to my Amiga and processed with ImageFX v2.1.
The rest images were made from me using Drawstudio v1.1.
I would like to thank my wife Katerina, because she had the patience to see
her house in a wild condition and mess during the construction of this tower
and for providing me endless cups of coffee...
Also, thank God that this project worked and did not blew my amiga apart
during my various experiments...