The 8372AB is the 8372B, it's just the circuitry of the 8372B inside the packaging of the 8372A, so they separately suffixed a standalone "B" to signify it's a 8372B.
However, it's impossible to encounter such an Agnus in a production A2000. The 8372(A)B Agnus offers a single RAS line while the RAM design of the A2000 requires 2 RAS lines from the Agnus.
On the A3000, they solve this by recreating the separate RAS lines by combining the information from the RAS line and the two highest order address bits. But such circuitry doesn't exist in the A2000.
(scratches head, checks pin outs from link).
Correct. However, it is STILL worth checking to see what actual Agnus is fitted already, and whether or not there are any board modifications, and also what revision of motherboard is actually in use.
If this isn't accurate, then please tell me why there are 2 different versions of the megachip, PAL and NTSC. Just default timing settings?
Yes! No Agnus has the capability to auto-detect the master oscillator frequency! So designing a "plug and play" universal megachip isn't possible.
OK. So this particular Amiga will ALWAYS default to PAL and start up in that video mode. Unless madgrizzle wants to fit a switch that lets them start up in either PAL or NTSC.
...
The above instruction set for example correctly produces the NTSC interlaced field pattern:...
Bottom line is, after modifcation with the listed Megachip version (PAL) this particular A2000 might not work correctly with external expansions that demand a correctly timed interlaced NTSC signal. IE, external video expansions. OR graphics slot expansions, because essentially the graphics slot on an Amiga is the external set of connector pins with a few extra control pin signals.
Whether or not madgrizzle gets a working HDMI signal that they can use with their monitor... Will depend on the HDMI adaptors connection and operation.
I don't fancy your chances madgrizzle, but you've taken the plunge already, and it might just work fine.
Or it might not. Whether or not you need to change your display is pretty much in the hands of chance right now. You might need to fit a switch to get the Megachip 2000 to choose NTSC or PAL at startup, that doesn't seem like too much of a big deal to me.
It's just a LOT of people have had issues trying to get decent HDMI output from an Amiga, and adding a chip RAM expansion which defaults to the "opposite" video mode of the built in crystal is just asking for extra trouble. In my opinion.