Amiga ATX PSU Adaptor – A1000, A2000, A3000
PRODUCT DISCONTINUED
Amiga ATX PSU Adaptor which can be used in an ATX tower case or inside an A1000, A1500, A2000, A3000 (Big Box) Amiga, this adapter provides the -5V and ‘Tick’ signal. For the A3000, the FAIL signal is available to use.
This is the highest rated power adapter available, it can safely handle the following power levels:
+5V @ 15A
+12V @ 8A
This yields a system power of 175W.
One DIP switch sets the power switch type, momentary (as used on ATX cases) or latching (as used on original power cases. The other DIP switch sets the ‘Tick’ frequency.
PCB dimensions, 68x41mm
Does not include any ATX PSU.
Designed and built by Ian Stedman
Related products

Greaseweazle V4.1 USB Floppy Adapter Flux Reader Writer
Greaseweazle v4.1 allows versatile floppy drive control over USB. By extracting the raw flux transitions from a drive, any disk format can be captured and analysed - PC, Amiga, Amstrad, PDP-11, musical instruments, industrial equipment, and more. The Greaseweazle also supports writing to floppy disks, from a range of image file formats including those commonly used for online preservation (ADF, IPF, DSK, IMG, HFE)
Greaseweazle V4.1 is the latest version, updated for mass production and with the following features:
- Reads and writes 3", 3.5", 5.25", 8" disks (with suitable drive and cable)
- Buffered outputs, for communicating with older 5.25" and 8" disk drives
- Integrated power connector for directly powering most 3.5" disk drives
- Write-enable jumper can be removed for safer preservation of precious vintage disks
- Supports flippy-modded 5.25" drives
- Supports Disk-Change detection as used by Rob Smith's integration into the WinUAE Amiga emulator
- 3 user-definable outputs (eg. 8" interface REDWC signal)
- 100% factory tested, and tested again by me before shipping
More information and documentation on the wiki page here:
This listing is for the Greaseweazle V4.1 device only. And does not include which you will require:
- A disk drive (for example a PC 3.5" or 5.25" drive)
- A floppy ribbon cable (typically you want a standard PC cable with 'twist' on pins 10-16, to communicate with a PC floppy drive)
- Floppy drive power cable, or power supply

AmiKIT for PiStorm and Pistorm32 (RPi 3A+, CM4 & RPi4 B)
- AmigaOS 3.2 ADF Files (Licenced AmigaOS 3.2 is available here)
- AmigaOS 3.2.2 update (available free from Hyperion's website once you register AmigaOS 3.2)
- AmigaOS 3.2.2.1 hotfix (again available free from Hyperon)
- Picasso96 drivers from Aminet
- Internet connection from your Amiga (to register AmiKit on AmiKit Servers) using a PCMCIA WiFi or LAN card, Plipbox etc. There is a 15min demo of Roadshow TCP/IP stack included.
-
Full HD 1920x1080 monitor (or at least HD 1360x768) for RTG desktop plus a second Amiga monitor for 15kHz native modes like PAL/NTSC (or just one monitor with multiple inputs or a suitable video upscaler like the Indivision AGA MK3 for the A1200 allowing 15kHz modes on modern monitors)
- 64GB MicroSD Card preloaded with AmiKit for PiStorm.
- Metal case for for 2 SD and 4 microSD cards.
- MicroSD to SD card adapter.
- Licence key to register with AmiKit
Recommended Specs:
Amiga 1200 with PiStorm32-lite & Raspberry Pi 4B (1GB+ RAM) or CM4 or at least RPi3; with heatsinks + ideally a cooling fan
Minimum Specs:
Amiga 500/600/2000 with PiStorm & Raspberry Pi 3A+ or 3B+ or Zero2W; with heatsinks + ideally a cooling fan

Amiga 2000 Gotek Drive, Printed Mount, OLED Display and FlashFloppy
What are ADF files?
ADF files is the standard Amiga Disk Format for floppy disk images. no different to Sega or Nintendo roms, ADF's are images of Amiga floppy disk games. Not only could you have access to a huge back catalogue of retro Amiga games, but there are still brand new games being released today, for example: Raid over Moscow or Bridge Strike these are all available as ADF files. But you not limited to games or programs, but you have access to tons of Amiga demos (if your into that scene).What are gotek drives in detail? Read here What is FlashFloppy check out this link Want to know even more about them, checkout retro32.com's review of them here Also checkout one of our favorite youtube streamers TheGebs24 and her views on the Gotek drive!
