If you’ve spent any time in Amiga preservation circles, you’ve seen the filename. It sits quietly in TOSEC sets, often overlooked next to the famous kick31.rom of the A1200/A4000. But amiga-os-310-a600.rom is a fascinating fossil: a bridge between Commodore’s dying days and the unofficial future of the platform.
The amiga-os-310-a600.rom file is a — commonly attributed to Amiga legend Doobrey (of WHDLoad and WinUAE fame). It replaces 68020 code snippets with 68000-safe routines, while keeping all the OS 3.1 features: CrossDOS, better datatypes, PCMCIA fixes, and the 3.1 Intuition. What’s Inside the Binary? Let’s hexdump -C the first 64 bytes:
Let’s pull it apart, byte by byte. Commodore officially shipped the A600 with Kickstart 37.300 (OS 2.05) or later 37.350. OS 3.1 (Kickstart 40.63) was designed for the A1200, A4000, and A2000/A500 via ROM switchers. Amiga-os-310-a600.rom
00000000 11 14 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................| 00000010 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................| 00000020 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................| 00000030 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................| Wait — that’s all zeros? No, the first two bytes ( 11 14 ) are the ( 0x1114 = "Kickstart" magic). Then zeros until offset 0x28 where the exec base pointer lives.
Subject: amiga-os-310-a600.rom File size: 524,288 bytes (512 KB) Hardware target: Commodore Amiga 600 (the “diet” Amiga) Released: Never — officially. If you’ve spent any time in Amiga preservation
So next time you fire up WinUAE or boot your real A600, think of that 512KB EPROM. Inside it, a few dozen patched opcodes keep a 68000 thinking it’s a 68020, Gayle pretending it’s IDE, and all of us pretending Commodore didn’t blow it.
If your file matches, you have the genuine patch. If not, someone may have added their own hacks (68010 cache instructions, etc.). The amiga-os-310-a600.rom is more than a file. It’s a statement: that the Amiga community refused to let a hardware generation die. It’s a masterwork of binary patching — changing maybe 200 bytes total, yet transforming an entire machine. The amiga-os-310-a600
So what is this amiga-os-310-a600.rom ?
In 1998, when OS 3.1 was already two years old, a German Amiga magazine published the patch instructions. Doobrey automated them. And suddenly, the “loser” Amiga (the A600) became a tiny, IDE-equipped, PCMCIA-ready OS 3.1 machine. For the purists: The official CRC32 of the unmodified amiga-os-310-a600.rom (as in TOSEC v2020) is 0x8D3A1F9E . SHA-1: 7A2F8C9E4D1B0A3C5E7F9A2B4C6D8E0F1A2B3C4D