I have ordered a LOCI from eBay, somebody I've ordered from before for a few SD solutions for other machines, so looking forwards to giving the Atmos a proper try, I hear there is a great Blakes 7 game for it.raspberrypioneer wrote: 14 Jul 2025 22:53
Me too! The videos are really well done. Looks like a great location too!
I'd definitely recommend the LOCI, even more so for Oric-1 users with the Atmos ROM 'upgrade'. I didn't realise that the Atari has a large following in Poland, funny how some machines get linked to countries.
I was already collecting long before covid as it goes, and didn't really accelerate very much as we actually moved house during covid, so had limited stuff with me as we were renting temporarily for 3 months and most stuff was in storage.raspberrypioneer wrote: 14 Jul 2025 22:53 It stepped up a gear or two for me over Covid too, and I've been hooked ever since (possibly excessively :lol: ). Sadly, my kids humour me with just a feigned interest. I think they feel more sorry for our generation considering the modern stuff they have.
Well done restoring the A5000! I've only seen the battery corrosion problem on videos and it looks scary, beyond what I'd consider doing, especially with all those fine connections and surface mounted components. Brilliant to see them brought back to life (bit like the RMC trash to treasure series!), though somewhat annoying about the battery corrosion in the first place.
Once we got into the house I did get going again though :) I've nabbed quite a lot since we've been here though :)
As for the A5000, it was kind of the project I didn't know I needed :) It went from a restore (Battery damage is VERY common with Archimedes machine), to installing a hard drive, customising the OS and then getting it on the web.
Wasn't cheap but it was fun :) Well, until it died again, but I did manage to bring it back to life yet again!!! They are quite fragile machines IMHO.
I'm mostly fiddling around with 5.25" drives because of my C1PMF (OSI 600D + 610 memory/floppy expansion board) as I'm trying to convert disk images to physical disks. I'd say for fun, but it's quite the trial!!! Problem is my 600D has decided it no longer wants to boot and just chucks garbage up on the screen, it's like the CPU isn't running, which is annoying as it was fine one night then next day it wasn't...raspberrypioneer wrote: 14 Jul 2025 22:53 The 5.25" disks seem like a very long time ago for me now. Had lots of 3.5" disks at one stage but not any more - wish I'd kept them now. The early Commodore drives were sluggish and cost as much as a C64 so were not a realistic possibility for us as kids. I tinker around with that kind of stuff a bit, using an Arduino to load C64/Vic20 programs (D64, PRG, T64 files). I've got a browser front-end going with that so it looks nice and you can see the box art images - another nostalgia hit (although the artwork was more than a bit misleading!) :lol: C64 fast-loaders are essential - not sure I've come across them on other platforms.
We used to have 2 Commodore C2N tape drives for the Vic20 and C64, and got hold of this 'backup' device which connected up, you could play (load) on one tape drive and record on the other. Highly necessary for preserving the collection, and keeping off-site backups of your mates collection too ofc :o
I do have a 1541 and some disk software for the C64, but mostly I use the Kung Fu Flash cart these days, and the Penultimate 2 for my Vic20.
There may have been a similar device to 2 Atari cassette players, but I did ditch them fairly early on as I had a decent job and the 1050 drive was actually a great price too, far cheaper than for the 1541.
The other issue was that Atari cassettes are difficult to copy, they are stereo and can play music from one track whilst you load from the other. It was a neat trick, but given the slow speed of the device, which was dumb given the capabilities of SIO, it never really worked brilliantly, as you couldn't hear the cassette load fail!!!
Also, I didn't know anybody else with an Atari that I could copy from!!!
