Developer version of the CD32, given to registered developers
CD32 CDROM mechanism
CD32 CDROM mechanism
Hi Res Version of CD32 (1104 x 1066)
Hi Res Version of CD32 Box (1214 x 956)
Picture of Rev 2 Motherboard, Image 1 (814 x 546)
Picture of Rev 2 Motherboard, Image 2 (763 x 666)
Picture of Rev 3 Motherboard (2228 x 1312)
Picture of Rev 4 Motherboard (1975 x 1141)
Hi Res Version of CDROM mechanism Image 1 (1218 x 712)
Hi Res Version of CDROM mechanism Image 1 (1120 x 788)
Download the CD32 Manual
Download the CD32 Consumer Manual
Standard Specifications
Case Type: | Custom Console |
Processor: | 020@14.7Mhz |
MMU: | None |
FPU: | None |
Chipset: | AGA (with additional Akiko chip) |
Kickstarts: | V3.1 |
Expansion Slots: | 1 x 182pin Expansion Slot. |
Standard CHIP RAM: | 2MB |
RAM sockets: | None |
Hard Drive Controllers: | None, however the system does have a custom CDROM controller. |
Drive Bays: | None |
Expansion Ports: | 1 x S-Video 1 x RF 1 x Composite 2 x 9pin Joypad/Mouse 2 x RCA Audio (Left/Right) 1 x 3.5mm Headphone Socket 1 x AUX (Serial) |
Floppy Drive: | None |
Motherboard Revisions: | Rev 1 (Developer Board) Rev 2 (Developer Board) Rev 3 (First Public Release) Rev 4 |
Battery Backed Up Clock: | None |
The CD32 was Commodore's attempt at entering the console market. The CD32 is fully Amiga compatible and with the addition of other hardware such as a floppy drive or hard disk can also play games intended for more conventional machines such as the A1200. It does however have a chip called Akiko, which as well as handling some functions of the CD-ROM (twin speed) is also responsible for handling chunky to planar conversion. Many CD32 games are also compatible with other Amigas, providing they don't rely on Akiko (although there are Akiko emulators available). The CD-32 has a rather unique kickstart screen. Unlike most other Amiga models which show a simple hand holding a disk (Kickstart 1.3 and earlier) or an animated disk being inserted into a floppy drive (Kickstart 2 to Kickstart 3.1) the CD-32 has a fully animated intro with a spinning CD, glorious colours and an intro sound. It also has built-in software for playing audio CDs. The CD-32 can also boot from CD-ROMs unlike more conventional Amigas. At the time of release, the CD-32 was probably the only console in the world with a 32bit pre-emptive multitasking operating system. There are several expansions for the CD32 which can effectively turn it into a fully expanded Amiga with hard drives, extra RAM and faster processors. The CD-32 was supplied with either one or two joypads which are also compatible with all other conventional Amigas.
During the development phase of the CD32, Commodore provided registered Amiga developers with the development versions of the CD32. These versions usually contained a Rev 1 or 2 motherboard. The first public release of the CD32 used a rev 3 motherboard. Apparently the developer versions may also have been supplied with a "debug" card which gave the CD32 much of the standard ports that the A1200 had. This was intended to help the developers port software to the CD32.
Thanks to Ian Stedman, Marius Lauritzen, Bo Zimmerman, Ola Jensen, NicDouille, Michael Gleim, Orjan Lindgren, NicDouille