Commodore International (or Commodore International Limited) was a North American home computer and electronics manufacturer. Commodore International (CI) along with its subsidiary Commodore Business Machines (CBM) participated in the development of the home–personal computer industry in the 1970s and 1980s.
The company developed and marketed one of the world's best-selling desktop computers, the Commodore 64 (1982) and released its Amiga computer line in 1984. |
All the computers that are linked are those who we currently own at the Museum. And if you click them you will see pictures and more information about each computer.
Calculators
774D
R23 C108 C110 F4146R F4902 MM3 Minuteman 6 |
P50
PR100 SR1800 SR4120D SR4120R SR4148D SR4148R SR4190R |
SR4212
SR4912 SR4921RPN SR5120D SR5120R SR5148D SR5148R SR5190R |
SR59
SR7919 SR7949 SR9150R SR9190R US*3 M55 (The Mathematician) N60 (The Navigator) S61 (The Statistician) |
Computers
- Commodore KIM-1 - single board computer (1976)
- Commodore PET/CBM range (1977)
- Commodore VIC-20 - a.k.a. VC-20 and VIC-1001 (1981 [VIC-1001] / 1984)
- Commodore CBM-II range - a.k.a. B-range a.k.a. 600/700 range (1982 / 1984)
- Commodore MAX Machine - Predecessor to C64 (1982)
- Commodore 64- including C64C (1982 / 1994)
- Commodore Educator 64 - 64 in a PET 40xx case (1983)
- Commodore SX-64- all-in-one portable C64 including screen and disk drive (1984 / 1986)
- Commodore 16 - including C116, incompatible with C64 (1984)
- Commodore Plus/4 - compatible with C16 (1984 / 1985)
- Commodore LCD - LCD-equipped laptop (never released)
- Commodore 128
- Commodore 128D
- Commodore 65 - C64 successor (never released)
- Commodore 900 workstation (never released)
Commodore Amiga range:
- Amiga 1000 (1985 / 1987)
- Amiga 500 - incl Amiga 500 Plus|A500+ (1987/ 1991)
- Amiga 2000 - incl A2000HD (1987 / 1991)
- Amiga 2500 (1987 / 1991)
- Amiga 1500 (1987 / 1991)
- Commodore CDTV (1990)
- Amiga 3000 - incl A3000UX|Amiga 3000UX & A3000T|Amiga 3000T (1990/ 1991)
- Amiga 4000 - incl A4000T (1992 / 1994)
- Amiga 600 '(1992 / 1993)
- Amiga 4000 - incl A4000T(1992 / 1994)
- Amiga 1200 (1992 / 1994) Commodore - (1994 / 1996) Escom
Commodore PC compatible systems
- PC-I (a.k.a. PC1): A small-form-factor low-end non-expandable system. It has a 4.77 MHz 8088 processor, combined Hercules/CGA graphics, one 5.25-inch floppy disk drive. It came standard with 512 kB RAM.
- PC-5: A full-size PC/XT-clone, with a standard monochrome text card and 512k of memory on the motherboard. It is expandable with up to five 8-bit ISA cards.
- PC-10: A full AT-sized model with 8088, combined Hercules/CGA/Plantronics Colorplus graphics provided by an ATI Graphics Solution card. Two variations were produced: the PC10-1, with one floppy drive and 512 kB RAM; and the PC10-2 with two floppy drives and the full complement of 640 kB RAM. The systems can be upgraded with the 8087 FPU.
- PC-20: A PC-10 with a 20 MB hard disk
- Colt: A rebranded PC10-III
- PC-30: A PC-AT compatible with a 12 MHz 80286 CPU and a 20MB hard disk.
- PC-40: 10 MHz PC-AT system. 1 MB RAM, Hercules/CGA video card, and hard disk options from 20–80 MB.
- PC-50: Based on the 386SX running at 16 MHz. 40MB to 100MB hard disk.
- PC-60: 25 MHz 386 system with FPU. Came in a tower case with 60 MB to 200 MB hard disk.
Games consoles
- Commodore TV Game 2000K/3000H (~1976)
- Commodore 64 Games System (1990)
- Amiga CD32 (1993)
Monitors
1000, 1024, 1070, 1080, 1081, 1083S, 1084, 1084S, 1084ST, 1085S, 1201, 1402, 1403, 1404, 1405, 1407, 1428, 1428x, 1432D, 1432V, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1801, 1802, 1803, 1900M/DM602, 1901/75BM13/M1, 1902, 1902A, 1930, 1930-II, 1930-III, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1936ALR, 1940, 1942, 1950, 1960, 1962, 2002, A2024, 2080, 76M13, CM-141, DM-14, DM602