The Amiga 4000T, also known as A4000T, is a tower version of Commodore's A4000 personal computer. Using the AGA chipset, it was originally released in small quantities in 1994 with a 25 MHz Motorola 68040 CPU, and re-released in greater numbers by Escom in 1995, after Commodore's demise, along with a new variant which featured a 50 MHz Motorola 68060 CPU. Despite the subsequent demise of Escom, production was continued by QuikPak in North America into at least 1998.[1]
The Amiga4000T, also known as A4000T, is a tower version of Commodore's A4000 personal computer. Using the AGA chipset, it was originally released in...
and 4000T. The PowerPC-based AmigaOne computers were later marketed beginning in 2002. Several companies and private persons have also released Amiga clones...
The Amiga 4000, or A4000, from Commodore is the successor of the Amiga 2000 and Amiga 3000 computers. There are two models: the A4000/040 released in...
with NewTek's Video Toaster Flyer. QuikPak were a manufacturer for the Amiga4000T. The A5000 and A6000: These were new models announced by Power Computing...
of the Amiga4000T produced by Amiga Technologies, and available as a third party upgrade for other Amiga models. It is also used in the Amiga clone DraCo...
Amiga 600 to run AGA software titles which would normally only run on the Amiga 1200, Amiga 4000 or Amiga4000T. Contemporaneous reviews of the Amiga...
Zorro II is the general purpose expansion bus used by the Amiga 2000 computer. The bus is mainly a buffered extension of the Motorola 68000 bus, with...
68040 was also used in other personal computers, such as the Amiga 4000 and Amiga4000T, as well as a number of workstations, Alpha Microsystems servers...