Commodore IBM PC compatible systems

The Commodore PC compatible systems are a range of IBM PC compatible personal computers introduced in 1984 by home computer manufacturer Commodore Business Machines.

Incompatible with Commodore 64 and Amiga architectures, they were generally regarded as good, serviceable workhorse PCs with nothing spectacular about them, but the well-established Commodore name was seen as a competitive asset.

History
In 1984, Commodore signed a deal with Intel to second source manufacture the Intel 8088 CPU used in the IBM PC, along with a license to manufacture a computer based on the Dynalogic Hyperion. It is unknown whether any of these systems were produced or sold.

In 1984, the first model released, the PC-10, sold for $559 without monitor ($ in ). They were sold alongside Commodore's Amiga and Commodore 64c/128 lines of home and graphics computers. The PC10 was comparable in the market to the Blue Chip PC, Leading Edge Model D and Tandy 1000 line of PC compatibles.

Models
The line consists of the following models: Series 1

First generation – Series I
Commodore PC 5


 * Introduced in 1984, at $1395, the Commodore PC 5 is the low-budget option with a Hercules monochrome video card. It has a Intel 8088 running at 4.77 MHz and 256 KB RAM on-board (expandable to 640 KB). RS232 Serial and Centronics parallel printer ports are on the motherboard rather than on separate cards thereby making more slots available. it has one 5.25" floppy drive and no hard disk (can be installed). The PC 5 was released with MS-DOS 2.11 and GW Basic 3.2. The PC 5 had 5x 8-bit PC BUS Slots. It has two motherboards. One contains the CPU, RAM and ROM v. 2.01, an NPU socket and some VLSI chips. The second mainboard is connected by gold pin connectors, it is an "I/O board" containing serial and parallel port, ISA slots and all I/O chips. Some tracks from ISA slots are factory cut by drilling. The early PC5 has no RTC, HDD controller or reset switch, in front it has DIN keyboard connector

Commodore PC 10

Commodore PC 10-1
 * The Commodore PC 10 is a same as a PC 5, but with added color ATI video card and two 5,25 floppy drives


 * a 512 KB RAM and single floppy drive version. Price: $519

Commodore PC 10-2


 * 640 KB RAM and dual floppy Drives. Price: $619

Commodore PC 10-S


 * a PC 10 with a single floppy drive. (PC 10 have two floppy drives)

Commodore PC 20


 * The Commodore PC 20 is a PC 10 with a 20 MB hard drive an only one floppy drive.

Commodore PC 40


 * PC 40 is the top model of the first generation Commodore PC’s with improved 16bit "AT" hardware compared to 8-bit XT in the others. It had a Intel 80286 that runs at either 6 or 10 MHz choosable by the user. Standard RAM was 1 MB and the video card was the same as in the PC 10 and 20. It had one 1.2 MB HD 5.25 drive and a 20 MB hard drive. The cabinet had a key lock switch added Notes: The "PC AT" is a "PC 40" with a "AT" added to the name.

Commodore PC AT
 * The "PC AT" is a "PC 40" with a "AT" added to the name.

Commodore PC 40-40
 * The Commodore PC 40-40 is a PC 40 with a 40 MB hard drive an two 5.25 floppy drives.

Second generation – Series II
Commodore PC 10-II

Commodore PC 20-II
 * The Commodore PC 10-II is a minor revision of the original PC 10. It have mainly the same specifications and casing, but the main difference is that it has a new revised single motherboard opposed to the original PC 10 that have two motherboards combined. As the original PC 10, it comes with dual floppy drives and no hard drive.
 * The Commodore PC 20-II is a PC 10-II with one floppy drive and one hard drive.

Third generation – Series III
Commodore PC I Commodore PC 10-III
 * The Commodore PC 1 is a special small form factor PC inspired by the design of the Commodore 128, meant for budget homes or office use. The PC 1 has no internal room for Harddisk, the "PC 1-20" Harddrive came with a 3.5" 20 MB hard drive and can be connected to the expansion port. The machine can also be expanded with the "PC 1-NET" which added a Novell Ethernet 10 Bit card connected to the expansion port. There is no internal sound, but an 8 Ohm speaker can be added. There was also an expansion box for connection 3 ISA cards.
 * Expansion slots: Commodore "PCEXP1" is a special expansion cabinet made for PC1. this gives 3 additional ISA Slots plus an extra 5.25 drive

Commodore COLT
 * The Commodore PC 10-III is a complete revision of the PC 10 and 10-II machine. it have a new sleeker cabinet and better specifications. while the two generations before only went at 4.77 MHz, the new III series uses an 8088-1 CPU capable of 10 MHz speeds. The PC 10-III/Colt Faraday FE2010 chipset allows the CPU speed to be adjustable via a SPEED.EXE utility via DOS or through keyboard commands. The default is the standard 4.77 MHz but the speed is adjustable to 7.16 MHz and 9.54 MHz. It also had more standard ram and a better video card. it is still a 8bit machine. it came with two floppy drives.


 * An American version of the PC 10-III with slightly different front design. The front is a white variant of the PC 30-III front with the COLT logo on.

Commodore PC 10-III SD

Commodore PC 20-III
 * a PC 10-III with one floppy drive. (PC10-III have two floppy drives)

Commodore PC 30-III (also sold as Select Edition 286)
 * Same as PC 10-III but with a 20 MB HDD added.


 * The commodore PC 30-III is a new generation AT machine with a EGA video card, a 3.5 floppy drive and a 20 MB hard disk. The PC-30-III motherboard is the same as the PC40-III MB but with the VGA hardware missing from the Motherboard (it is empty space on the motherboard for the VGA hardware).

Commodore PC 35-III
 * PC-35-III is a PC 30-III but with VGA hardware added to the mainboard and the same 20 MB hard disk as PC 30-III.

Commodore PC 40-III
 * PC 40-III is same as PC35-III, but with a 40 MB Hard disk.

Commodore PC 45-III


 * Same as PC-40-III but with an AMD equipped CPU instead of Intel in the PC-40-III.

Commodore PC 50-II
 * The Commodore budget 386 machine. it could be delivered with 40 or 100 MB Hard disk or a 3.5 floppy. Comes with SVGA.

Commodore PC 60-III
 * a top-of-the-line tower PC for professional use.
 * Price: ?
 * CPU: Intel 386DX 25 MHz
 * Optional CPU: A 387 FPU can be added.
 * Standard RAM: 2 MB onboard RAM
 * Optional RAM: upgradeable to 18 MB RAM via two expansion cards with max 8 MB on each card.
 * Video Card: Paradise 88 VGA card
 * Floppy Drive: One Chinon FB-357 1.44 MB 3.5" and one Chinon FZ-506 1.2 MB 5.25" floppy drive.
 * Hard drive: Comes with different choices of hard drive from 60 MB to 200 MB hard disk.
 * Expansion Bays: 4× 5.25 bay and 2× 3.5 bay.
 * Expansion Slots: 7× 16-bit AT expansion slots + 2× Commodore Slots for memory card. 9 total.

Generation 4 "SlimLine" series
Commodore 286 SX
 * Price:
 * Description: Slimline computercase
 * Motherboard year: 1991
 * Processor: Intel 80286 running at 8/16 MHz. (A 80287-16 FPU can be added to an empty slot.)
 * ROM: 64 KB Phoenix BIOS
 * RAM: 1 MB onboard standard, expandable to 5 MB
 * Video Card: VGA 256 KB, expandable to 512 KB
 * Disk drive: 1× Chinon F-502L 360k 5.25 drive.(Optional 720k Commodore 1010 og 1011 can be added to the Amiga style Disk port on the right side)
 * Harddrive: 40 MB - (313241-02), 50 MB - (311839-01) and 100 MB - (311840-01)
 * Network: "PC 1-NET" came with a Novell Ethernet 10 Bit card connected to the expansion port
 * Options: Expansion box for connection ISA cards and Harddrive. an additional 8 Ohm speaker can be added for sound.
 * Operating System: MS-DOS 3.20 and GW-BASIC
 * Ports: VGA, Component video, RSR-232 Serial port, Centronic Parallel port.
 * Expansion slots: 16 bit x1 (expandable to 16 bit ×3 + 8 bit 2 by use of riser card)
 * Keyboard: 84 Key XT Keyboard
 * Cabinet: Special small form factor inspired by the 128C

Commodore 286-16
 * A 16 MHz 286 with 1 MB RAM, VGA video card, 3.5" floppy drive and 2× AT 16-bit expansion slots.

Commodore 386SX-16
 * A 16 MHz 386 with 1 MB RAM, VGA graphics card, 3.5" floppy drive and 5× 16-bit ISA expansion slots.

Commodore 386SX-25
 * A 25 MHz 386 with a Cyrix 387 FPU, 4 MB RAM, Cirrus Logic GD-5402 VGA (512 KB video RAM), 40 MB HDD, 3.5" floppy drive and 5× 16-bit ISA expansion slots.

Commodore 386DX-33
 * A 33 MHz 386 CPU

Commodore 486SX-25
 * A 25 MHz 486 with 4 MB RAM, VGA video, 1× 3.5" drive and a 150 MB HDD

Commodore 486DX-33
 * CPU: 33 MHz 486 with
 * RAM: 8 MB RAM,
 * Video Card: VGA video,
 * Floppy drive: 1× 3.5"
 * Harddisk: 150 MB HDD

Laptops
Commodore C286SX-LT
 * a 12 MHz 286 with 1 MB RAM

Commodore C386SX-LT
 * a 386 with 2 MB RAM and a 40 MB HDD

Model table
The following table lists all Commodore PC compatible systems specifications: