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- Path: menudo.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: excalib!flooby!johnl@UCSD.EDU (John Lindwall)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Commodore Amiga 4000
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Date: 24 Nov 1992 15:09:32 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 442
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1etgjcINN3aj@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: excalib!flooby!johnl@UCSD.EDU (John Lindwall)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: Amiga, computer, hot topic, commercial
-
-
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Commodore Amiga 4000 computer
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- The Amiga 4000 (A4000) is a 68040-based system running at 25 MHz.
- The system comes with a 120 MB hard drive and high-density floppy drive.
- The A4000 includes the new AGA chipset allowing 256 color screens and HAM8
- screens.
-
-
- COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Commodore Business Machines
- Address: 1200 Wilson Drive
- West Chester, PA 19380
- USA
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- $3699 (US). Actual store prices in my area are closer to $3000 (US).
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- The Amiga 4000 (A4000) was introduced at the World Of Commodore Amiga
- Show (WOCA) in mid-September of 1992. I got my first look at the machine at
- WOCA and was impressed enough to purchase one.
-
- I am very happy with the machine; it is much nicer then the A1000 it
- replaced. :-) This review was written after using the A4000 for 2 weeks.
-
-
- HARDWARE
-
- Benchmarks! Thats all you people care about! :-) Many people have
- already posted A4000 benchmark results to the net so I'll quickly summarize
- some results from my machine. Sysinfo 3.01 claims: 17910 DhryStones, 18.69
- MIPS, 4.73 MFLOPS. AIBB 5.0 includes performance figures from the A4000. My
- machine matched the expected results listed by AIBB 5.0; using 68020+ or
- 68040-specific math routines resulted in an up to 10x speed up over the
- listed speeds.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: Steve Koren's review of the A4000 appeared
- previously in comp.sys.amiga.reviews and contains tables of benchmark
- information. This review is available on our ftp site and by
- request as usual. - Dan]
-
- The appearance of the A4000 is not stylish like the A3000 -- it
- looks a lot like a PC clone. All in all, it looks better then I recalled it
- (from seeing it WOCA). I do like the ivory color if box, keyboard, & mouse.
-
- Poor aesthetics is a price I happily pay, however, since the box has
- plenty of room inside for expansion unlike the A3000. The A4000 can hold:
-
- Front bay: 1 half-height 5.25" device.
- 1 half-height 3.5" device OR 2 low profile 3.5" devices.
- Rear bay: 1 half-height 3.5" device or 2 low profile 3.5" devices.
-
- From gossip on the nets and from briefly examining my system, it appears
- that the supplied floppy drive is half-height, and therefore too tall to
- allow space underneath for a second floppy drive. Apparently, two 25mm-high
- floppy drives can be stacked in the front bays. The hard-drive appears to
- be low-profile (taking up one of the two rear 3.5" slots).
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: From discussion with the reviewer, it seems he
- is not 100% sure whether the floppy drive is too tall or not. I
- would appreciate it if someone from Commodore could clear up this
- question, since I do NOT want to start any rumors. My dealer told
- me that you CAN fit a second floppy drive underneath. When I get an
- official answer, I will update this review. - Dan]
-
- The hard drive supplied with my A4000 is a Seagate ST3144A, a 3.5"
- IDE drive. I can't say I have much joy over getting a Seagate drive; I'm not
- impressed with their track record. Hopefully, this model of drive will be
- problem-free. Only time will tell. The drive came preformatted, with an 8
- Meg Workbench: partition, and a 116 Meg Work: partition.
-
- | Hard Disk performance (as reported by DiskSpeed 4.2) is summarized below:
- |
- | MKSoft DiskSpeed 4.2 Copyright 1989-92 MKSoft Development
- | ------------------------------------------------------------
- | CPU: 68040 AmigaOS Version: 39.106 Normal Video DMA
- | Device: hd1: Buffers: 330
- |
- | CPU Speed Rating: 3107
- |
- | Testing directory manipulation speed.
- | File Create: 250 files/sec | CPU Available: 12%
- | File Open: 324 files/sec | CPU Available: 8%
- | Directory Scan: 1696 files/sec | CPU Available: 15%
- | Seek/Read: 1381 seeks/sec | CPU Available: 16%
- |
- | [Performance peaked with the following parameters:]
- | Testing with a 262144 byte, MEMF_FAST, LONG-aligned buffer.
- | Create file: 264110 bytes/sec | CPU Available: 80%
- | Write to file: 459955 bytes/sec | CPU Available: 72%
- | Read from file: 774809 bytes/sec | CPU Available: 45%
- |
- | [CPU usage summary was as follows:]
- |
- | Average CPU Available: 72% | CPU Availability index: 2237
-
- The A4000 comes with 6MB of RAM; 2 MB Chip RAM and 4MB Fast RAM.
- There are 5 SIMM Slots in the A4000. One slot is intended for a 2MB Chip
- RAM SIMM, which is of course included with the computer. The other four
- slots are for Fast RAM expansion, and each slot can hold either a 1MB SIMM
- or a 4MB SIMM. All fast RAM SIMMS must be of the same type. Fortunately,
- Commodore used a 4MB SIMM to supply the A4000's 4MB Fast RAM instead of
- using 4 1MB SIMMS. This means I can upgrade to 8, 12, or 16 MB of Fast RAM
- just by adding additional 4MB SIMMS in the remaining three empty slots. The
- use of SIMMS (instead of ZIPS as in the A3000) is a good thing, as SIMMS are
- used in PC's and hence are widely available and inexpensive.
-
- The high-density floppy supplied with the A4000 works great.
-
- One thing that caused me a moment of confusion was trying to use a
- high-density floppy in df0: that had been formatted (under 1.3) as an 880K
- Amiga floppy. The high-density drive recognizes the disk as a high-density
- disk, so it claimed that the disk was not a DOS floppy. Moral: either
- don't format high-density floppies to 880K, or (if you must) put tape over
- the floppy's high-density notch.
-
- The mouse/joystick connectors are inconveniently located on the left
- side of the unit. This would be OK if the supplied mouse had a long cable.
- Unfortunately, the mouse cable is woefully short IMHO; I worked around this
- problem by setting my A4000 on a stand and feeding the mouse cable from
- underneath the unit. A mouse-extender cable would also do the trick.
- Left-handed people won't have this problem.
-
- The mouse is one I've not seen before from C=. It resembles a
- MicroSoft ("Dove bar") mouse and is shaped nicely. The button click is very
- nice as well. A nice improvement.
-
- The keyboard is adequate. The feel of the keys is OK. I wish that
- the backspace key were double width, like on my A1000 and the PClones at
- work.
-
- The A4000 front panel has a power LED, hard drive access LED, floppy
- drive, power switch, and a key lock with 2 identical keys. When the system
- is locked using the key, the system will not accept input from the mouse or
- keyboard. Mouse _buttons_ are still recognized however, so the manual
- cautions you not to leave the mouse pointer resting on a gadget or icon!
-
- The rear of the A4000 has: stereo sound output (2 RCA jacks),
- external floppy port, video port, parallel port, serial port, keyboard plug,
- and power cable plug. There is also a plug for your monitor's power cable,
- so that when you turn on the A4000 the monitor comes on as well. This is a
- nice touch. I'll need to get a adapter plug for my monitor cable so I can
- use this feature.
-
- The fan in the A4000 is reasonably quiet. It is quieter then the
- Compaq DeskPro 50M at work; but (of course) much noisier then the almost
- silent A1000 fan. I can live with it.
-
- The A4000 case is very easy to open; remove two screws on the back
- and pop open the cover. Much easier then many PC's I've used. One of these
- screws is covered by a warranty sticker; removing the sticker apparently can
- void your warranty.
-
- My 5 year-old A1010 drive works just fine connected to the external
- floppy port (It is df2: instead of df1: of course).
-
- I have not tried any Zorro II or Zorro III boards in my A4000.
-
-
- GRAPHICS
-
- By now, you're all familiar with the graphics capability of the AGA
- chips so I won't repeat the specs here. Suffice to say that the new modes
- really shine! I haven't collected a lot of 256 color/HAM8 pictures yet but
- the ones I have are beautiful.
-
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- The A4000 includes AmigaDOS 3.0 pre-installed on the hard drive.
- 3.0 is a tremendous advance from 1.3. Compared to 2.04 it is "merely" a
- significant improvement.
-
- The WorkBench looks the same as the 2.04 WorkBench, except that menus
- are now displayed as black text on a white background instead of vice versa.
-
- The Shell seems the same a in 2.04. I use WShell 2.0 myself, which
- has many improvements of the standard Shell. WShell works just great under
- 3.0.
-
- I won't bother to list the improvements of 3.0 over 1.3. In
- comparison with 2.04, 3.0 includes many new features:
-
- o CrossDOS is included with the system and supports the high density
- floppies allowing access to 720K and 1.44 MB MS-DOS floppies. A
- Commodity program is included to customize the behavior of
- CrossDOS. It has worked flawlessly for me.
-
- o Support for AGA graphic modes.
-
- o Localization using the Locale preferences editor. This is fun to
- play with. You can select a country and language from the editor,
- and localized programs will display their menus, gadgets, and text
- in the selected language. Not all of the programs in the OS are
- localized, but many are. The timezone selector in the Locale editor
- is neat.
-
- o DataTypes are part of the OS. This new facility allows programs to
- access data in an unlimited number of formats, as long as you
- install a datatype that understands the format. An image viewer
- (for example) could be written that displays ANY graphics format
- (assuming you have a datatype for each format). The great thing is
- that programmers can write new datatypes, thus extending the number
- of file formats supported. This facility is very powerful. All you
- software authors out there get busy writing datatypes!
-
- o MultiView is included. This program is used to display any data-file
- that can be understood by an installed datatype. When invoked,
- MultiView displays an ASL file requester. Pick a file, and if you
- have an appropriate datatype installed, the file will be displayed.
-
- o Interleaved bitmaps are now supported allowing faster screen updates.
-
- o The layers system has been speeded-up making window refresh faster.
-
- o Filesystems can be formatted with either OFS, FFS, or DCFS. DCFS is
- a new Directory-Caching FileSystem that GREATLY speeds up directory
- reads from the floppy. Very nice! The Workbench Format program has
- check-boxes to allow you to pick the desired filesystem. Format
- also has a nice status bar indicating the progress of the format.
-
- o The Palette preferences is brand new, and uses a "color wheel" for
- selecting colors. It also allows selection of a variety of "pen"
- colors, used for various elements in the WorkBench. It has an area
- at the bottom where you can see the various Workbench elements
- (gadgets, menus, window borders, etc) which allows you to see the
- effects of your color choices as you make them. Nice!
-
- o You can use an IFF picture as a Workbench backdrop.
-
- o PostScript printer driver. I don't have a PostScript printer so I
- haven't tried this driver yet.
-
- I'm sure that there are many other 3.0 software features that I've
- neglected to mention.
-
- Software compatibility seems good; all of my 'productivity' programs
- work 100% (TurboText, SAS/C V6.0, VLT, WShell 2.0). Some games do not run,
- though there are tricks to make some of them work. Most older games require
- that you disable the CPU caches via the BootMenu. Others have reported
- additional successes by using utilities to copy the KickStart ROM to RAM.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- The A4000 comes with 5 user guides: "A4000", "ARexx", "AmigaDOS",
- "Workbench 3.0", and "Amiga Hard Drives". All of the manuals have a table
- of contents and an index. I'm pleased with the quality of the
- documentation: they seem well organized, complete, and make good use of
- screen shots. The manuals were produced on a "variety of Commodore systems."
-
- The A4000 guide covers setting up the system, opening the case,
- installing additional RAM, installing cards, installing internal drives, and
- troubleshooting problems. It is very well done. It is interesting to note
- that in the section on upgrading the processor module, they mention have
- instructions on upgrading a 68EC040 processor to the 68040. Perhaps
- Commodore had/has plans for selling a 68EC040 version of the A4000?
-
- The ARexx manual is a reference manual to the language. It has
- short sections at the start on setting up ARexx and explanations for a
- handful of simple macros. It documents ARexx instructions, functions, and
- rexxsupport.library functions.
-
- The AmigaDOS manual is the largest of the lot. It includes an intro
- to AmigaDOS, a tutorial, a section on using the Shell, documentation of
- AmigaDOS commands. Appendices cover error messages, descriptions of various
- system directories (EG DEVS:), and using AmigaDOS on a single floppy system.
-
- The Workbench 3.0 manual is fairly large and very complete.
- Chapters include: Before you Start, Basic Operations, Fundamentals of the
- Workbench, Workbench, Preferences, Localization, CrossDOS, Fonts, Printers,
- Other Workbench Programs, and the ED editor. Appendices include: Trouble
- Shooting, Screen Display Modes, and Special Boot Options.
-
- The Amiga Hard Drives manual contains instructions for using a hard
- drive, installing software, using HDToolBox, using HDBackup, as well as a
- trouble shooting section.
-
- In addition to the manuals, you get a packet for registering your
- A4000 for the 12 month warranty, a separate form to register for Commodore
- Gold Service, a (non postage paid) Gold Service pre-addressed envelope, and
- a brochure describing the optional 12-24 month extended Gold Service. The
- standard 12 month warranty card is postage paid.
-
- The final piece of documentation supplied was a Seagate booklet with
- information on the drive... a nice touch.
-
-
- A4000 AND MONITORS (NEC-3D)
-
- I decided to buy a NEC-3D monitor to use with my A4000. I wasn't
- overly impressed with the 1960 monitors I saw at the WOCA show. The colors
- on the 1960 didn't seem bright, and the A4000 screens didn't seem to fill
- the whole monitor.
-
- The NEC-3D is a 14" monitor (actual screen space is about 13"
- diagonal -- I hate how monitor companies try to fool people). It can handle
- all of the scan rates generated by the A4000. It has controls on the front
- panel for adjusting the vertical and horizontal position of the picture, the
- vertical/horizontal size of the picture, and a "memory location" for storing
- a predetermined combination of size/position. It comes with a swivel base.
- When purchased new, it has a 2 year warranty.
-
- I was able to find a mail-order place in the Computer Shopper that
- sells new NEC-3D monitors for $459. The company is called USA-Flex and
- their phone number in the USA is (800) 872-3539. They allow returns on
- merchandise for 15 days from receipt of the item, and they apply a 20%
- restocking fee in these cases. They sell a wide variety of new and
- refurbished monitors including the Sony 1302 which handles all of the A4000
- modes and which I'm told works quite nicely.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: The NEC 3D has been discontinued by NEC, so it
- may be quite hard to find one. So, I have included John's
- information about USA Flex since it may help some people.
- Neither the reviewer nor I are associated with USA Flex. - Dan]
-
- I do recommend getting a monitor that can handle all video modes of
- the A4000. The difficulty comes in locating a monitor that syncs down to
- 15Khz horizontal -- PCs don't require this frequency so it is rare to find
- new monitors that can handle this frequency. Older model monitors typically
- can handle 15Khz as well as higher frequencies. Of course, the 1960 can
- handle all video modes of the A4000. The NEC 3D was introduced several
- years ago, so unlike the newer NECS (3FGx, 4FG, 5FG) it can handle 15Khz
- output. The NEC 3D price is also about $180 less then the prices I've seen
- on the (newer) NEC 3FGx.
-
- When I first got my A4000 I tried hooking it up to a NEC 5FG, a
- monitor which cannot sync down to 15KHz, as an experiment to see what would
- happen. Not surprisingly, the video image was blurred, distorted, and
- impossible to read, but I could recognize that the computer was displaying
- the "Please insert a bootable disk" animation. On another try, I could see
- that the Amiga was displaying a guru meditation. After hooking the Amiga to
- my NEC 3D, a monitor capable of synching at 15KHz, it booted just fine. I
- then went into ScreenMode preferences, selected a 31Khz mode as my default
- WorkBench screen, hooked the Amiga back up to the NEC 5FG, and it booted
- just fine. The lesson to learn is that out of the box, the A4000 expects to
- be connected to a monitor that can handle 15Khz video. Once you get the
- screenmode set up correctly you _can_ then use a 31Khz+ monitor. I still
- don't recommend it though, as the A4000 BootMenu is reported to require
- 15Khz output as well.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: If you buy an A4000 and your monitor
- cannot handle 15KHz video, I suggest that you boot up the Amiga at
- your dealer's and set the ScreenMode preferences to a 31KHz mode
- before you take the Amiga home. - Dan]
-
- I'm generally pleased with my NEC 3D. The colors are bright and the
- crispness is very good. My only complaint was that (like the 1960 monitors
- I saw at WOCA) the video image did not fill the screen. Note that this
- problem is fixable (See below).
-
- When I first got my A4000, I had played with all of the possible
- display modes and had chosen to use a 640x400 non-flicker screen as my
- default Workbench screen. Even if I used the overscan editor to enlarge my
- screen to its maximum dimensions (676x467) the screen image did not fill the
- monitor screen. If I used the monitor controls to expand the image to its
- maximum size I ended up with about 11" diagonal of usable screen space (7.5"
- by 7.5"). I got the image to fill the screen vertically (though its a bit
- squished) but not horizontally. I had about a 1.5" margin of wasted space
- on the left side of the image, and 1" on the right. This was upsetting to
- me, but the solution proved simple. Copy the VGAOnly monitor file from
- SYS:Storage/Monitors to DEVS:Monitors and reboot. This greatly reduces the
- amount of 'dead' space on the sides of the video image and produces a much
- more proportioned screen. After resetting my overscan to full size and
- adjusting my monitor controls, I was very pleased. Spencer Shanson of
- Commodore suggested this fix on Usenet with the following explanation:
-
- >In order to smoothly move a display horizontally in the AA
- >productivity-type modes, such as multiscan, DblNTSC etc, requires
- >making each scan line slightly longer, and enabling the display
- >later in the line. This pushes the display to the right, whilst
- >also squashing the line to fit a longer line in the same amount of
- >physical space"
-
- >If you can live without wider autoscrolling productivity type
- >screens, or you can live with the scrolling problem, then simply
- >copy the VGAOnly monitor from sys:storage/monitors to devs:monitors
- >and reboot. The VGAOnly monitor is not really a monitor in the same
- >way that Super72, DblNTSC etc are, but is a flag to tell the system
- >what to do with the monitor sizes and positions when the monitors
- >are installed."
- >...
- >[Disclaimer]
- >All opinions expressed above are my own, and do not (necessarily)
- >represent those of Commodore.
-
- I believe that the 3000 allows a lot more overscan space. I'd love
- to expand my A4000 screen with more overscan but the limits seem strict.
-
- The A4000 comes with an adapter to allow standard 15 pin (multi-scan,
- VGA) monitors to connect to the video port. This adapter is pretty long
- (maybe 2 inches) so you'll need some space behind the unit.
-
- Due to the flexibility of the Amiga video circuitry you can open
- screens with wildly varying scan-rate requirements. For example I could
- have a 31Khz 640x400 screen open over a 15Khz NTSC screen. When flipping
- between screens of differing frequencies (EG using the screen depth gadget)
- you will notice that the monitor screen goes black for a second or so before
- displaying the new screen. This is a normal artifact of multi-scan
- monitors; they need a little time to re-sync to the new display frequency.
- This happens on my PC at work as well and is just something to be aware of.
-
-
- SUGGESTIONS FOR COMMODORE
-
- I would like it if Commodore would supply some picture files.
- Workbench allows you to put a picture as a backdrop, but no pictures are
- supplied. I realize its an easy matter for most of us to locate some
- picture files, but novice users might like to have some to play with out of
- the box.
-
- Some sound samples should also be supplied. Using the new Sound
- preferences editor you can choose whether to have your Amiga screen flash,
- beep, or play a sample. Novice users would be very pleased to get some
- simple sound samples to play with.
-
- My last wish is that Commodore would supply an online tutorial to
- using the Amiga. OS/2, Windows, and the Mac all supply a tutorial and I
- think Commodore should as well. Users hate to read manuals but often enjoy
- interactive tutorials.
-
- John Lindwall
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Send reviews to: amiga-reviews-submissions@math.uh.edu
- Request information: amiga-reviews-requests@math.uh.edu
- General discussion: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu
-