At 10:40 AM 11/15/2007, you wrote:
As part of the process of getting a second C128 system
set up and
running, I recently ordered another Commodore 1084 monitor from an
eBay seller. The one I have is nice and bright and lets me switch
quickly between the composite (40-column) and RGBI (80-column) outputs
of the 128, so I was happy to stumble across another one for a
reasonable price.
It arrived last night, and it's a great little monitor, in even better
shape than the one I already had. To my surprise, though, it's also
completely different. The case is different, the form factor and
positioning of the controls are different -- and, most relevantly,
even the connectors are different. My older one (made in 1989) has a
DB-9 input for RGBI input. The new arrival (made in 1988, if I recall
correctly) has an 8-pin DIN input for RGBI input.
Thankfully, I already had a DB-9 to DIN-8 cable in the Big Box of CBM
Scraps, so I didn't have to order any cable-making parts from Mouser,
but it does bring up a question: how many potentially problematic
variations on the same model number did Commodore make? I know that
they did a lot of this sort of thing, given the ever-changing
appearance of the C2N and 1541, but is there a quick and easy question
I can ask a seller to find out exactly what ports to expect on the
back of a 1084 (or similar monitor)? "DB-9" and "8-pin DIN" are
already way too difficult to explain to somebody just trying to clean
out their attack, but if there's a guide out there with a breakdown by
manufacturing date or serial number for some of this Commodore
equipment, that would be lovely...
I also have two 1084S Monitors, 1989 with Din, and 1991 with
the DB connector. Both came with Amigas.
Charlie Fox
Charles E. Fox Video Productions
793 Argyle Rd. Windsor, Ontario
519-254-4991 N8Y 3J8
www.chasfoxvideo.com