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- Classic Product Review: A570 CD-ROM Drive
- Manufacturer: Commodore Business Machines (R.I.P)
- Price: No longer sold, if you buy second hand expect £30-50 for one.
- Amiga(s): A500/500+
- Reviewer: Dan Wood
-
- My, my, this takes me back. I remember reviewing this back in the
- summer of 1992 when this unit first appeared, and I rushed (well asked
- mummy :) to buy me one.
-
- A lot of people still use the A500+ (and some still use a 500!) and
- they are still good machines for people who are on a budget, and if
- you want to use CD-ROMs or the classic CDTV titles on your machine,
- then the easiest way to do it is to use the official A500 CD drive,
- saves messing about with SCSI interfaces etc. Just plug this unit
- in and turn on, that's it!
-
- When this product was just a rumour, before it was released it was reffered
- to as an "A690" for months, this leads me to believe that the original
- A600 prototype used the same edge connector as the 500 did, but changed
- their mind and gave it that useless PCMCIA thing, and made it the A570.
-
- To use this device you need an A500 equipt with 1 meg of CHIP RAM ok?
- None of this silly 512K FAST 512K CHIP, CDTV titles don't like that.
- To get the device running is easy as taking a leak (you often go vegetable
- picking? - Nick) you just unpack it, plug the powerpack (which is a standard
- Amiga power supply, you can use it on an A500/600/1200 with out problems),
- and then slot the A570 into the left side of the A500, and then turn the
- computer on and the drives power supply on, and then you'll get that
- classic CDTV logo on your screen, exactly the same logo that you see
- on a CDTV, in fact everything is like a CDTV now, but you can still use
- Workbench 2/3 if your Amiga 500 is fitted with it (or you have a Plus).
-
- There's the same CD-ROM drive as you find in the CDTV (with a white eject
- button and a white caddy though), you slot the caddy in the front and it
- drops down giving a nice loud "Clunk!". There are two lights on the front,
- an orange "CD" light, and a green "Power" light. As well as a headphone
- jack, and a twisting volume knob, which doubles up as an disable switch,
- so you can turn the drive off to avoid any software conflictions (usually
- games) with out having to unplug the drive, of which there are some.
-
- The headphone jack is pretty crap though, I have two A570s and the headphone
- output is pretty quiet, and when it's up to full volume it's quite distorted,
- but the drive has phono outputs and inputs, so just use them to connect
- to a decent sound system or your monitor and that's cool.
-
- Of course the A570 can play audio CDs just fine, it has the built in CDTV
- player software, and you get a disc called "A570 Utilities" which has the
- CD-Play program that you can use in the back ground on Workbench. The
- difference between the CDTV and the A570 is that the CDTV has the audio
- functions on the front of the CDTV which you can use any time, just press
- the buttons. The A570 relies on software, so some titles such as "Music
- Maker" that ask you to "Insert an audio CD and press play" is impossible,
- you don't have a play button. But if you know your way around the shell
- then you can set up some assigns, boot from Workbench, and run music maker,
- press left Amiga and M to flip back to Workbench while Music Maker is
- running, and load the CD-Play program from your hard disk, insert the
- audio CD and play it that way, and flip back to Music Maker and continue
- as normal. A bit of a pain in the ass, but a minor irritation.
-
- I did mention hard disks there, but how can you plug a hard disk in if the
- A590 takes up the same port as the A570?! How indeed? Well the A570
- has an expansion on the back of it where you can plug in a genlock or an
- SCSI interface, then an SCSI hard disk, which is much more costly than an
- IDE drive, but since these products are old, if you get them second hand
- or refurbished then they are bound to be a lot cheaper. An A570 version
- of the SCSI interface never surfaced, but I use a CDTV version, which
- is black and sticks out a bit, and the hard disk has to sit on the desk
- behind the Amiga!! But it works fine.
-
- The CD-ROM drive is a single speed unit, so it's quite slow by modern
- standards, but it's alright for an A500. You can use CD-ROMs like the
- Aminet series with out any problems, and use the CU-Amiga and Amiga Format
- CDs with a few limitations (you can't boot). Over all if you have a 500
- and want CDs then it's the best option. If you can find one, then give
- it a try.
-
- Rating: 8
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