There are 38 pinout(s) found
- Amiga video
- Serial (Amiga)
- Amiga Mouse/Joy
- Amiga 1000 Ramex
- Parallel (Amiga)
- Keyboard (5 Amiga)
- Keyboard (6 Amiga)
- Amiga 1200 CPU-port
- Serial (Amiga 1000)
- Amiga to SCART cable
- Parallel (Amiga 1000)
- Amiga Video Expansion
- Keyboard (Amiga CD32) The Amiga CD32 keyboard connector also includes a serialport.
- Amiga 1000 RF monitor
- SCSI cable (Amiga/Mac)
- Amiga 2000 Power Supply
- Amiga 3000 Power Supply
- Amiga 1000 RF Modulator
- Amiga 3000T Power Supply
- Amiga 4 joysticks adapter This adapter will make it possible to connect 2 extra joysticks to the Amiga. This requires that the game is aware of this Multi-Joystick Extender in order to use it. The adapter is connected to the parallelport of the Amiga
- Amiga External Diskdrive
- Amiga Expansion Bus Zorro II These are the connections found at the side of the Amiga computers. This Bus is like most Buses at this time a extension on the CPU Bus.
- Amiga to C1084 monitor cable
- Keyboard and cable (7 Amiga)
- Amiga 500/600/1200 Power Supply
- A1000 to Amiga Parallel adapter
- Amiga Expansion Bus Zorro II/III
- Amiga Expansion Bus A.K.A Zorro I These are the connections found at the side of the Amiga 1000 and Amiga 500 computers. They are electric and mechanical compatible with the single exception of being rotated 180 degrees looking at it from the top of the PCB this can cause trouble connecting a expansion meant for the A1000 into the A500 and vice versa. This Bus is like most Buses at this time a extension on the CPU Bus.
- Amiga Computer to RGB Monitor cable Adapter cable to connect between Amiga Computer and VGA Monitor/VDU: Device 1 end. Cable plug = DB23 FEMALE (Amiga Computer CPU) Device 2 end. Cable plug = DB15 FEMALE (VGA/SVGA RGB VDU)
- SCSI External D-Sub (PC/Amiga/Apple Macintosh)
- Amiga 500 Trapdoor - Memory expansion + Realtime-Clock
- Atari 2600 joystick
- C128 Power Supply Available at the Commodore 128.
- CDTV Diagnostic Slot
- Floppy Diskdrive
- MSX joystick
- ParaLoad cable
- SCSI SCSI stands for Small Computer Systems Interface. It?s a standard for connecting peripherals to your computer via a standard hardware interface, which uses standard SCSI commands