A4000 Motherboard
------------------------------------------------
| ooo || oo | |
| Internal || DF1: | |
| Audio || Enable | |
| Connector || | Power |
| || | Supply |
| :: Mystery || | |
| :: Header || ooo | |
| :: (see below) || ooo | Fan |
| || ooo -------------|
| || Power Supply |
| || Connector |
| || |
| || -------------------|
| || | |
| || | |
| || | |
| || | Drive |
| || | Bays |
| || oo | |
| || SIMM | |
| || Size | |
| || | |
------------------------------------------------
Jumpers
J351: DF1 Enable
Closed: Enable double-density (880K) floppy as DF1.
Open: No DF1 or for high-density (1.76M)
DF1.
J852: Fast RAM SIMM Size (Chip RAM is always 2M.)
256K: 1M SIMMs.
1M : 4M SIMMs.
CN404: Internal Audio Connector
Audio signals attached here will be mixed with the A4000
audio
output. The A4000 audio is somewhat louder than the
normal line
level output from most CD-ROM drives, presumably to
make sound
effects audible over background music. Setting the software-
controlled A4000 audio level lower (to 32 instead of
64) will help
match the levels.
Pin 1: Audio In (Left)
Pin 2: Ground.
Pin 3: Audio In (Right)
"Mystery" Header (courtesy of Dave Haynie)
"There is a 12 pin header (DIL, J975) near the mouse ports. This feeds
the 'extra' shift register in Lisa. Unlike OCS/ECS systems, which simply
multiplex the four quadrature signals from each mouse port with one another,
the AA systems serialize all eight bits of mouse data. While they
were at it, the AA designers added a second 8-bits to the mouse port
registers. These don't hook into mouse logic or anything, but they can
be read by the CPU.
So we used them for configuration. The first two bits (not on that header)
tell the OS about the AA system -- is it 16 or 32 bit, is it single or
double access per cycle. These are hard-wired on the motherboard. The remaining
six bits read high when unjumpered, low when jumpered. I had
recommended using one to say 'VGA only,' but there wasn't enough ROM
space."
Other Jumpers (Not Shown Above)
J100: CLK90 Clock Source
1-2 Closed: Internal (68020/68030)
2-3 Closed: External (68040)
J104: CPU Clock Source
1-2 Closed: Internal
2-3 Closed: External
J151: ROM Speed: 160 or 200 ns ROMs.
1-2 Closed: 200 ns ROMs (default).
2-3 Closed: 160 ns ROMs.
J213: Chip RAM: 2M or 8M
1-2 Closed: 2M Chip RAM (default).
2-3 Closed: 8M Chip RAM. This option was apparently for
use
with the never-released AAA chip set, and
won't
work in a normal A4000.
J500: Sync On Green
1-2 Closed: Sync on green disabled (default?).
2-3 Closed: Sync on green enabled (see the Common Problems
section for the
Green Display Problems
note on this jumper).
J501: Lisa Sync (Wide input on the Lisa chip.)
1-2 Closed: CSync from Agnus Pin 80.
2-3 Closed: +5V (default).
J502: Select DAC Sync
1-2 Closed: DAC syncs on green.
2-3 Closed: DAC uses standard signal (default).
J850: Enable DSACK (Used with 68020)
1-2 Closed: DSACK Enabled for 68020. U860 and U152 also
required.
2-3 Closed: No DSACK.
"Haynie Kludge" Jumper (courtesy of Dave Haynie)
"That jumper enables the "early sizing" mode on the Zorro-3 bus. One
of the complaints about Zorro-3 is that the size of a transfer isn't known
until the data phase of the cycle. So in the Zorro-3 addendum I added an
optional mode that allows data size information to be latched in the address
phase. Just in case any existing boards have a problem with this (if they
go by the spec, they don't, but who really knows what they're doing), it's
shipped disabled. The idea was to test this out in the A4000T, bless it
as standard for future Zorro-3 controllers as long as it did what designers
wanted."