blanning wrote:
The bomac tower worked by plugging the whole 2000 case (without the cover) into the larger bomac case. There was a large opening in the back the size of the original 2000 case. It had another power supply in it to augment the 2000 power supply. There's a picture of one here on a.org somewhere.
I like that idea since I don't have to anchor the motherboard and deal with the weird amiga port configuration. I thought I'd just cut the back out of an atx case and drop in the 2000 case. I'm worried about all sorts of things like the 2000 case being too tall for the atx case, or the back of the atx case just being too problematic to allow a big rectangular hole without falling apart or something.
I was hoping someone had done it already. :-)
If I were willing to hack my 2000 case, I'm sure I could fit a few more drives in there over the zorro slots. Maybe that's a better way to go.
brian
The Bomac case is a monster.
IMHO it is an unelegant solution to have half of the original case in a tower but I can clearly see why because the A2000 PSU contains some special signals (that you can hack around or skip I think).
To do it right, hack an A2000 motherboard inside a bigtower is going to take skills, sweat and dedication. And a case you are ready to hack with a hacksaw.
I think a better idea is to mount the motherboard directly in the case and skip the bottom of the chassi. A2000 is a huge computer and you are not making it smaller by hacking half of the original case into a tower :-)
The problem areas of the A2000 is the video slot and the area under where the floppydrives are positioned in the original case, you risk loosing some 5.25"/3.5" slots from an ATX tower here because most PC-motherboards are not 42 cm tall ;-) . Other than that I think the A2000 is an excellent choice for a tower conversion, they are not rare so you are not doing anything criminal by hacking one and its got five Zorro slots ready for action that you can line up with the openings in a case.