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Offline Sean Cunningham

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Re: Amiga 4000 problems
« on: July 02, 2014, 05:21:23 PM »
This is so reminiscent of our trying to keep our A4000-based PAR stations functional.  In the end we had to cannibalize so many corpses and pieces to try to keep the last couple A4000s functional.  They're a really unfortunate design.
 

Offline Sean Cunningham

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Re: Amiga 4000 problems
« Reply #1 on: July 02, 2014, 08:19:11 PM »
Yeah, it's rare that you find any selling second hand.  Overheating is a big problem, whether you expand or not.  We had to drill out the cases and put three and four extra fans because the PAR and TBC-IV would make the cases so hot you couldn't touch them.  If I remember right, the 4000T wasn't as readily available and drove the per-station cost up more than we wanted, plus it couldn't fit on the monitor carts we had stationed around the studio.  

Me and three other Amigans put the proposal together to build these things to take the strain off the bottleneck to our single Accom DDR.  I think we built six or eight of them for the price of one Accom with about a minute or two of 601 playback for shooting animation, comp and render tests to.  By comparison, I think each PAR had some 45min of footage on a 45Gb disk.   I wrote the CSH shooter script that folks used on the IRIX side and another fellow wrote the ARexx script that my program talked to to handle conversion and clip management.  It was great, until Commodore went tits up.  Then it was like, almost on queue, boom, boom, boom we started getting failures.

The last couple that were still operational ended up being commandeered by the guys on our motion-control stages because once they found out one of our PAR stations could replace the 3/4" video setup they used to preview miniature moves they wouldn't give them back.  Amiga4000 + PAR pretty much revolutionized the way miniature photography was done for a while, on True Lies, Apollo 13, Interview With the Vampire.  By the time we got to The Fifth Element and Titanic I think the last of the Amiga PAR stations had died and had been replaced by an NT box with what replaced the PAR, the Perception Video Recorder.

Mine died after about a year of casual use, after the warrantee was up and not long after Commodore filed too.  I think I was still paying for it a year or two longer on a, get this, Apple Credit Card (bought at Creative Computing in LA).
« Last Edit: July 02, 2014, 08:27:50 PM by Sean Cunningham »
 

Offline Sean Cunningham

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Re: Amiga 4000 problems
« Reply #2 on: July 02, 2014, 09:42:40 PM »
Yeah, I was really bummed when my A4000 died.  It was my favorite Amiga that I'd ever owned (A500, two A3000s, and an A1000).  I didn't even own a computer for about a year after that.  Macs were still just way too expensive and didn't run the software I wanted anyway.  I was still against owning anything Intel for "religious" reasons so it wasn't until the first affordable DEC Alpha workstations became affordable that I took the plunge again, since a lot of other professional Amigans were going that way too for a few years.

I missed that A4000 though, and DPaintIV and Brilliance.