Back to A500 Case Badges
Amiga 500 Case Badge – PiStorm Tick
£4.16 Ex. VAT
Amiga 500 Case Badge – PiStorm Tick brand new, perfect replacement for any A500 or A500 Plus case. These are high quality prints finished off in a 3D gel, long lasting and look very smart! Smarten up your Amiga 500 case!
OUT OF STOCK
Related products
Amiga 500 Plus Mainboard Remake RAEMIXX500 PART BUILT
Amiga 500 Plus mainboard remake AKA Raemixx500 is a motherboard clone of the classic A500 Plus REV 8.1A made by SukkoPera and not to be confused with the A500 ++ (A500 Plus Plus). The Raemixx500 is a good alternative to replace your existing broken A500 Plus board using your custom chips or one that is plug and play and soaked tested with all the custom chips included.
The Raemixx500 board has had a few improvements added compared to the original A500 Plus board:
- Kickstart Switches - You can burn your Eproms and have 2 different kickstarts and use the jumpers or add switches to switch between kickstarts
- DF0 Switch - Again becoming a must for Amiga owners to have both a internal Gotek and external drive or vice-versa, best of both worlds!This is a fully built A500 Plus Raemixx500 board with all the custom chips and is plug and play, simply add your own kickstart rom or add one of the options below.
- Raemixx500 fully populated motherboard, NO Custom chips or ROM.
- PCB colour is PURPLE.
-
-
- Both bottom and top shield
- Kickstart Rom
- Screws/Hex Screws
- Custom Chips
-
PiStorm600 Adaptor for Amiga A600
PiStorm600 for the Amiga A600 is an adaptor in which you plug in either a Raspberry Pi Model 3A+ or *Raspberry Pi Zero Model 2 (both not included) this provides a budget CPU accelerator for the Amiga 600. Also included is a file-based SCSI device, RTG graphics and several other optional enhancements.
Only the Pi 3-series is compatible with the current firmware version and only the Pi Model 3A+ and Raspberry Pi Zero Model 2 will physically fit in the A600 without modification and you can optionally support the PiStorm600 using M2.5 standoffs to help physically support it which are available as an option below.
Key Features
- Emulate 68010,68020,68030,68040,68060 Processors with or without FPU
- 128Mb Fastram.
- File-based SCSI device.
- RTG graphics from the Pi itself.
Notes:
Powering the A600/PiStorm It is possible if you have a weak PSU or the Amiga 600 has not been recapped you may see instability issues as with any accelerator, you have a few options all of which are available below, If your using a Pi Zero2 then it is unlikely you will need to apply additional power. A Pi 3A+ can consume more power, but this is not often an issue until you start connecting USB devices, you have a few options below:- You can add extra power via a floppy power connector splitter (available below) which is a new cable which splits the floppy power to power both your internal floppy drive and the PiStorm via its built in Molex connector (DO NOT ADD POWER OTHER THAN FROM THE AMIGA ITSELF OR TRY AND USE IT TO POWER OTHER DEVICES).
- Make sure your Amiga has been recapped, we offer 2 options Standard and Premium.
- Purchase a new Amiga PSU of which we also offer 2 versions, A600 Standard PSU or A600 Boost PSU which also as a 5VDC line adjustment to give a perfect 5 Volts to the Amiga 600.
*Using the Raspberry Pi Zero Model 2 is possible as mentioned but you do lose a little in performance.
[space_40]
Amiga 600 Case Badge – Vampire
Amiga 600 Case Badge - Vampire brand new, perfect replacement for any A600 case. These are high quality prints finished off in a 3D gel, long lasting and look very smart! Smarten up your Amiga 600 case!
Amiga PicoPSU Adaptor – A500, A600, A1200
PRODUCT DISCONTINUED
Amiga PicoPSU Adaptor suitable for the A500/A600/A1200. The right angled connector provides a lower profile. You can operate the unit using a toggle or push to make switch.
A 90W PicoPSU power supply, with a 60W mains adaptor, has been sufficient to operate an Amiga 600 and Amiga 1200 with a 040 and CD-ROM.
PCB dimensions, 51x51mm
Does not include any PicoPSU.
Designed and built by Ian Stedman
