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C > COMMODORE  > Amiga 500   


Commodore
Amiga 500

Commodore's Amiga 500 was the low-end version of the Amiga 2000 and the main competitor of Atari's 520/1040 ST range. The A500 was superior in almost every area, apart from its MIDI capabilities and the disk drive, which was not only slow but very noisy as well and a bitter feud quickly developed between owners of these rival machines.

Hardware wise, the A500 is very similar to the Amiga 1000, the main internal differences being an increase in memory fom 256 KB to 512 KB and the addition of another custom chip named "Gary" (the only Amiga chip with a male name). This is a new I/O chip that controls the disk drive and also performs address decoding. This chip is also used in the high-end A2000.

The A500 was easier to upgrade than both the ST and big box Amigas, thanks to an expansion port located in the bottom of the case. Owners could simply insert a small board which contained an extra 512 KB of Ram and a battery-backed clock. The popularity of this upgrade meant that more 1 MB software (both 1 MB versions of 512 KB software and 1 MB only software) was released for the Amiga than the ST, which had to be taken apart to expand the memory.

Over the course of the A500s lifespan several different packages were available, the most basic of which included only the computer, TV modulator and Workbench disks. A number of bundles were also sold, such as the best selling "Batman Pack" which was released in 1989 and included 3 games and Deluxe Paint 2.

The A500 was discontinued in 1991 and replaced by the short lived Amiga 500 Plus.

Pandy comments:
The Amiga 500 is a "cleaned" A1000, "cleaned" means plenty of TTL glue logic was replaced by custom IC which was named Gary. A500+ it is a new generation of custom IC's so called ECS (A500 have OCS). A500+, A3000, A600 have new graphics modes (1280 dots in line without overscan and 31Khz scanning similar to VGA - limited to 640 pixels in line with 4 colors).

Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system to Old-Computers.com or one of our partners from anywhere in the world (Europe, America, Asia, etc.).


 

I still have my a500 with memory upgrade extra drive printer and over 200 games and it all still works. I still use it and think that says something to the old tech still out there.

          
Saturday 14th January 2023
Darran  (United Kingdom )

To be slightly pedantic, should point out that if I remember correctly, the Amiga actually had superior MIDI capabilities but the Atari ST applied common sense and actually built in the MIDI ports, which was a winner over needing a separate dongle for the Amiga.

          
Friday 28th August 2020
Dom

My 2nd computer which lasted me for many and took me through my Computing Science Uni from 1988. Living next to the German border I had access to the active German after market for Amiga equipment. Had a kickstart 2.04 chip upgrade, 2MB RAM upgrade, an external (non-Commodore) 20MB Seagate harddrive... great machine it was.

          
Monday 4th April 2016
Niels Roskam (Australia)

 

NAME  Amiga 500
MANUFACTURER  Commodore
TYPE  Home Computer
ORIGIN  U.S.A.
YEAR  April 1987
END OF PRODUCTION  1991
KEYBOARD  Built-in keyboard, 95 keys
CPU  Motorola MC68000
SPEED  7.09379 MHz (PAL)
7.15909 MHz (NTSC)
CO-PROCESSOR  OCS based chipset: 8370/8372 Fat Agnus (memory controller and blitter), 8362R5/8362R6/8362R8 Denise (video control chip), 8364 Paula (sound & I/O), 5719R2 Gary (I/O)
RAM  512 KB Chip RAM (expandable to 9MB : 512 KB Chip RAM + 512 KB Slow RAM + 8 MB Fast RAM)
ROM  Kickstart 1.2: 256 KB (Early models)
Kickstart 1.3: 256 KB (Later models)
GRAPHIC MODES  320x256, 320x512, 640x256, 640x512
COLORS  Palette: 4096
On screen: 16 in 640 modes, 32 in 320 modes, 64 in EHB, 4096 in HAM
SOUND  4 channel 8 bit PCM, stereo output
SIZE / WEIGHT  Unknown
I/O PORTS  RS-232 serial port, Centronics parallel port, external disk interface, 2x RCA audio, cartridge interface, expansion interface, 2x Atari joystick/mouse ports
BUILT IN MEDIA  3.5'' floppy disk drive
OS  Workbench 1.2 (Early models)
Workbench 1.3 (Later models)
POWER SUPPLY  External PSU
PRICE  £599 (UK, 1987), $595 (U.S.A., 1987), £369 (UK, 1990)




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