The A3000, also known as the Commodore Amiga 3000, was a much more serious proposition to build a professional multimedia computer than the previous A2000 effort.
The Amiga 3000 came in a desktop box with a separate keyboard. It featured:
- a Motorola 68030 processor at either 16Mhz or 25Mhz (The 16Mhz models were discontinued soon after).
- 2Mb of memory (configured as 1Mb chip ram and 1Mb 32bit Fast ram), expandable to a total of 18Mb onboard.
- a 68881 or 68882 FPU coprocessor
- the ECS chipset.
- a SCSI interface and a Quantum 40Mb or 100Mb 3.5" Hard Drive.
- a built-in 'flicker fixer' which enabled the use of a VGA monitor.
One could increase the amount of Fast RAM by adding ZIP (Zig-Zag Inline Package) DRAM chips, these were notoriously difficult to fit - and were available in two varieties, Page Mode or Static Column .
Other models included the A3000UX bundled with UNIX System V Release 4, and the A3000T tower computer. An enhanced version with the AGA chipset and an AT&T DSP chip was produced to prototype stage but never launched, instead Commodore replaced the A3000 with the A4000.
The A3000 designation was also used on an Acorn Archimedes model.
Last updated: 08-17-2005 16:13:05