Access

Closeup of unit Front. (662 x 446)
Closeup of unit Rear (788 x 472)
Image of Motherboard (832 x 414)
Image of Motherboard with Floppy Drive (730 x 588)
Image of Motherboard Reverse side (718 x 352)
Closeup of Motherboard (1024 x 768)

Standard Specifications

Case Type: Mini Tower
Processor: EC020@14Mhz (Optional EC030@28Mhz)
MMU: None
FPU: None
Chipset: AGA
Kickstarts: Probably A1200 KS 3.1 (includes a 256Kb FlashROM for hardware logic and system software)
Expansion Slots: 1 x Active 8bit ISA slot
Standard CHIP RAM: 2MB (Surface Mounted)
RAM sockets: None
Hard Drive Controllers: 1 x 3.5" IDE Controller
Drive Bays: 2 x 5.25" Drive Bays
Expansion Ports: 1 x Amiga Mouse Port
1 x Amiga Joystick Port (IDC header only)
1 x 25pin Serial
1 x 25pin Parallel (IDC header only)
1 x Phono Composite (NTSC/PAL switchable)
1 x 15pin VGA (15Khz ONLY)
1 x PS/2 style Amiga Keyboard Connector
2 x 3.5mm Jack (Both Stereo Out, one on front, one on back)
1 x 3.5mm Jack (Stereo Audio In, on front)
Floppy Drive: 1 x Internal 1.44MB PC Floppy Drive (Can read Amiga disks)
Motherboard Revisions: Rev 1.3
Battery Backed Up Clock: Yes (Uses Barrel shaped battery)

The Access is a rather unique machine, it is 100% Amiga compatible and the whole motherboard can be entirely mounted within a 5.25" Drive Bay, including the floppy drive. This allowed the motherboard unit to be mounted in practically any tower, even with an existing motherboard or to have multiple machines mounted in a single tower. Unfortunately it seems that the Access was never released to the public, although an unknown number of machines have been found in the wild. The Access was designed as a low cost multimedia platform for use in kiosks, advertising displays, lottery machines etc. The unit was supplied with 2MB of Chip and 2MB or 8MB of Fast memory. The manufacturer claims the access is capable of 2.3 times the performance of a stock A1200. It is not know what version of Kickstart the machine used, but was probably Kickstart 3.1, but it also included a 256K FlashROM which held some of the hardware logic as well as system software. The machine included built-in support for the CD-ROM which was probably stored in the FlashROM. There was also 1K of NVRAM on the motherboard to hold configuration settings, as well as a CD-ROM audio input connector. An 8bit ISA expansion slot was also on the motherboard, which was only really intended to add things such as low cost modems and other I/O cards. Apparently an MPEG and Genlock expansion was in development for this unit. The unit is fully compatible with Amiga keyboards and mice, although the standard keyboard connector is the PS/2 style as used on the A4000.

Thanks to Gunnar Bernhardt and Lemmink