Most of my Hardware is pictured in my album, My Amiga Stuff
Most of my Hardware is pictured in my album, My Amiga Stuff
I checked with U.S. Postal Service. It would cost around $95, icluding $300 insurance to send the Amiga 1000 in its box to Germany. Of course, I would wrap it in a sturdy outer box to avoid damage to the original graphics on the box. I would guess it would cost slightly more to send the A-3000's as they are somewhat hevier, all steel construction.
All American machines are NTSC, not PAL. I don't know if this only affects the monitors, or the computer output itself. I have fired up both 1000's and they work well. I am also happy to report that all 3 of my extra 3000's work well, although one is missing the extention bar on the top of the case that contacts the power switch. They all have the 50 mb Quantum hard drive, though one is not yet connected.
All units were connected to a Commodore 1960 multi-scan monitor, the 1000's via the Commodore 390682-01 conversion plug, which converts the 15 pin connection on the monitor to the 23 pin connection on the A-1000.
The original Amiga monitor was the 23 pin 1080. I probably have an extra 1080 as well as a 1084 2 speaker unit in California, plus an extra 1960 monitor here in Montana. I hope this information is helpful. All units are just the basic unit, with keyboard, mouse, and no added memory or graphics boards.