So,
I picked up a pristine Amiga 1000 a few years ago and have played with it pretty lightly until recently -- running slideshows, Dpaint, a few demos and games. Recently, however, I've gotten serious about using and enjoying it (based largely on @neko_no_ko's A1000 project of late).
The system is an NTSC Amiga 1000 with a Microbotics Starboard 2 (2MB FAST) w/ StarDrive SCSI module controlling a 40MB Quantum HD. It has one external 1010 floppy drive.
To get the system more fully fleshed out, I have installed JRComm and established a serial link between my iMac and the A1000 to move files over...
https://vine.co/v/hW0lgu9UTQmhttps://vine.co/v/h7Mt2hMzMllI moved a number of ADFs and other files over fine until, one day, as I detailed in a different thread, the Amiga Guru'ed during a transfer in JRComm, as the disk was being written to, rendering it unable to be validated by AmigaDOS' disk validator. (I can still boot the drive, proceeding after the error message that appears, but cannot write to the volume.)
In order to get recovery tools moved over, I've used JRComm to download to RAM: and write tools out to floppy. In doing this, I still experience the occasional Guru in JRComm...
So I ran across this forum post made by an A1000 user that was under the impression that his Gurus under JRComm were due to the apparent PAL chip problem on A1000's. Some feel that all Amiga 1000's should have the PAL chips wired together, and to the bus, to correct signal issues. It's mentioned here:
http://www.amigahistory.co.uk/a1000faq.htmlalso
http://www.amiga.org/forums/showthread.php?t=40974I have not opened this A1000 to determine if it uses a daughterboard. It does support EHB mode. I'd rather not perform this mod if it is not needed, but is this something I should do to avoid these Gurus? I do not see pattern Gurus elsewhere, in using the machine, so far.
Thoughts? Thanks.
Here she is, by the way:
Amiga 1000 by
blakespot, on Flickr
bp