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What your Amiga is telling you?

Ever wondered what your Amiga is doing when all those lights flicker on and off in a scary fashion. The Amiga may look like its doing nothing when you switch on your machine then you will probably be right. No, damn. I mean that it's doing loads of selftest things to see if the system is well. The list below shows the normal checks that a standard 68000 A500 performs:

SelfTest Output

Whilst the selftest is being carried out information is being displayed. This is shown through the screen changes that are mentioned in points 3, 7, 11, and 13. If all of the tests have been passed, you will see the following colour sequence.

If there is something wrong with your system you may see the following colours.

These problems could be caused by a number of things such as a loose chip or board. The red screen may be caused by a loose Kickstart chip that can be fixed by pressing down on the ROM to check it is fitted correctly. Another cause could be a connection problems between the chip and socket that can be solved by straightening an bent pins. Alternatively, the green screen could be caused by a loose memory board, SIMM, or a loose RAM chip on the memory board. If reattaching these chips do not solve the problem, try them on another Amiga.

Keyboard

The keyboard also has its own processor, RAM, and ROM. It also has a selftest that performed on power up in the following sequence.


READ THIS (please). Don't panic if your keyboard flashes once when you switch on. THIS IS PERFECTLY NORMAL. Every Amiga in the entire universe does this.