Standard Specifications
Case Type: |
Set Top Box / VCR |
Processor: |
Unknown |
MMU: |
Unknown |
FPU: |
Unknown |
Chipset: |
ECS (plus additional chips Grace and Beauty) |
Kickstarts: |
V2.05 |
Expansion Slots: |
1 x FMV slot
1x Video Slot
1 x PCMCIA styled connector.
Note, this is NOT a true PCMCIA connector, only very early experimental units ever contained a true PCMCIA slot |
Standard CHIP RAM: |
2MB |
RAM sockets: |
Unknown |
Hard Drive Controllers: |
1 x (2.5"??) IDE Controller |
Drive Bays: |
1 x 3.5"
1 x 5.25" |
Expansion Ports: |
1 x Mini-Din Serial
1 x 25pin Parallel
1 x 23pin RGB Video
1 x S-Video
1 x Composite
1 x 23pin External Floppy
2 x RCA Audio (Left/Right)
1 x MIDI IN/OUT
1 x 3.5mm Heaphone Socket |
Floppy Drive: |
1 x Internal 880k Floppy Drive |
Motherboard Revisions: |
Unknown |
Battery Backed Up Clock: |
Unknown |
The CDTV-II, perhaps correctly called the CDTV-CR (CR = Cost Reduced) was intended as the successor to the original CDTV. Unfortunately like many of Commodore's projects it was never officially released to the public. Like the original, the CDTV-II also includes an infra-red remote controller but it also has a digital LCD display on the front and a built-in floppy drive which the original doesn't have. The CDTV-II does not have a keyboard port, or a mouse port like the original model* Around 60 units was produced.
* 11-03-2016: Correction. According to picture submitted by Stefan Egger the CDTV-II HAS a keyboard port.