Commodore exhibition to show off rare Amiga prototypes

Amiga Prototype (Credit Chris Colins)
Credit: Chris Collins

An event celebrating the Amiga's 30th birthday is gearing up to show off rare prototype versions of Commodore's iconic computer over the weekend.

Hosted at Silicon Valley's Computer History Museum, the "Amiga is 30" exhibition will feature the Ranger - Commodore West's follow-on to the A1000 - alongside Amiga Lorraine Prototype wirewrap boards.

Amiga Prototype

'The Ranger': an early Amiga prototype (credit: Chris Collins)

TR: What Amiga systems will you have on show at the event?

BB: We have some prototype Amiga systems at the show, which is being made possible through Dale Luck. Dale is a tremendous guy who was brought into Amiga to work on the graphics subsystem software in the beginning of the Amiga. He has a real passion for technology and the history of technology.

Dale has two hobbies: one is the Amiga side and collecting Amiga stuff, and the other is that he's a major force in the arcade space. This weekend they had an event called California Extreme, featuring maybe 20 or 30 of his fully-sized, fully-functional pinball machines out of the 180 machines there.

Dale's always trying to find the super rare things that need to be restored. For the Amiga he has become to keeper of the artifacts. For the event he pulled out the prototype of the Ranger, which was Commodore West's follow-on to the A1000. They were working on that before Commodore decided to go with the Amiga 2000 design out of Commodore Germany.

Amiga designer Dave Needle was telling us stories about lighting incense to watch the flow of air through the Ranger's chassis to determine whether or not it would have the right thermal properties. The Ranger prototype we have is a thermal mock-ups with a clear case and stuck some cards in there to generate heat so that they could understand what that would look like.

He also has the Ranger keyboard and front panel mock-up. We noticed that the keyboard had volume knob on the back. Thinking about the process of pushing those controls onto the keyboard in 1987 – those things didn't start showing up until much later in the PC world.

He also has the Wire Wrap systems, the War and Peace, and what is called Lorraine, a set of boards that they showed at CES. Dale even has the original boxes used to ship those machines with Joe Pillow. He has a ton of these systems and we are planning on having them at the event. Joe will be there too.

Kane Fulton
Kane has been fascinated by the endless possibilities of computers since first getting his hands on an Amiga 500+ back in 1991. These days he mostly lives in realm of VR, where he's working his way into the world Paddleball rankings in Rec Room.