A4000UserGuide.pdf

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The Complete Amiga 4000 User Guide
by Peter Hutchison © 2007
Revised: 21/08/2007
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Contents
Introduction
Page 3
Setting up the Amiga for First Time
Page 4
Guide to Workbench 3.0
Page 6
e n u s
a g e 6
o u s e
a g e 8
Programs
Page 9
Preferences
Page 13
Beyond Workbench 3.0
Page 19
Adding more Memory to the A4000
Page 19
Upgrading the Processor
Page 20
Upgrading Expansion on the A4000
Page 22
Upgrading the Kickstart and Workbench
Page 23
The Motherboard in detail
Page 25
Jumpers
Page 25
Backward Compatibility
Page 27
Adding a Hard Disk to A4000
Page 28
Installing Workbench onto a Hard Disk
Page 30
Installing a CDROM device
Page 31
2
Introduction
Welcome to the Commodore Amiga A4000, one of the top Amiga models of its time.
It was affordable and easy to use. It had a wide range of software, in particular,
games which Jay Minor, the creator of the Amiga, had designed it for.
The Amiga A4000 is based on either the Motorola 68030 25MHz , 68040 25MHz or
the top end 68060 50MHz Processor with 2Mb RAM, a single 880K floppy drive with
support for three more floppy drives, Zorro cards and a Custom Chipset that provides
the Sound and Graphics.
The Amiga runs the Operating System called Amiga OS which consists of the
Kickstart ROM which contains some essential libraries and devices needed to load
Workbench which is the desktop:
Figure 1
You can a while menu bar at the top and all the disks mounted on the right hand of
the screen. The Ram Disk is a special one which is a disk in memory basically. More
on Workbench will be explained later.
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Setting up the Amiga for First Time
Before setting up the Amiga make sure you have the following items ready:
Amiga A4000
Monitor or TV Set
Mouse
Power Supply
Joystick (optional)
Speakers (optional)
External Disk drives (optional)
Withe Amiga facing you, first plug the square end of the Power Supply cable to the
Power socket at the back of the Amiga. Plug the other end into a power socket but
DO NOT switch on yet.
If you have a monitor, plug the monitor cable into the Video socket, and also plug the
power cable into a power socket.
Next plug the Mouse into Port 1 of the D shaped sockets on the right-hand side. Plug
any Joystick onto Port 2 next to it.
The stereo speakers can be plugged into the Left and Right speaker sockets in Audio
sockets at the back. The speakers can be either stand-alone ones or part of the
monitor so if necessary, plug the other ends into the Left/Right sockets on the
monitor. Plug in to power supply as necessary.
Finally if you have any external floppy disk drives plug them in to the External Flopy
drive socket on the back of the Amiga. Further drives can be added to other drives.
The A4000 usually comes with an IDE Hard disk to run Workbench and your
applications.
Now switch on the power and press the power switch located at the front of the
Amiga and switch on the monitor.
If you do not have disks inserted or Workbench is not installed on your hard disk, you
will see the Insert Disk screen below:
Figure 2
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You can then insert either a Workbench disk or any other bootable disk such as a
game into the floppy drive on the right-hand side of the Amiga (called DF0: - Disk
Floppy Zero).
Insert your Original Workbench disk and wait for the workbench screen to appear.
Before continuing, I recommend that you make one or more copies of your original
Workbench disks to use rather than the Original as that can become damaged over
time and you may need to make other copies later.
To make a copy, get hold of a blank 880K double-density disk ready, then move the
white arrow (called a pointer) with the mouse over the Workbench 3.0 disk and click
the left mouse button once (this will select the disk), then move the pointer to the top
left of the screen and click and HOLD the right-hand mouse button and a menu
appear, make sure the Icons menu is selected, move the mouse down the menu and
select Copy
Figure 3
It will say ‘Put the SOURCE disk (FROM disk) in drive DF0:’, remove the disk from
the floppy drive, and make sure it is your original Workbench disk, at the top there is
a hole, make sure it is covered with the black tab to protect the disk during this
operation. Reinsert the disk, and with the left mouse button click once on Continue.
Once the read operation is complete, it will ask you to insert the DESTINATION (TO
disk) in drive DF0:. Press the eject button to remove your original Workbench disk,
and insert your Blank disk. Click on Continue to write the information to your new
disk.
You may need to repeat the disk swap a couple of times more until the operation is
completed. Now you will have a disk called ‘copy of Workbench’, you can rename this
by selecting the disk, then select Rename from the Workbench menu and change it
to just ‘Workbench’. You should put your original disk somewhere safe and then use
your copy of Workbench from now on. Reboot with your new Workbench disk in DF0.
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