



Buy Cloanto's Amiga Forever package which comes with licensed ROMs Revision 37.299 (Commodore, 1991) is used by: This was a software (floppy disk) update only and no Kickstart 2.1 ROM ever existed. Later on Amiga 600 owners had the possibility to upgrade to Workbench 2.1. These bugs were fixed in revision 37.350, which supported hard disks up to 4 Gb. Revision 37.300 had bugs which prevented it from using hard disks larger than 40 Mb. The later revisions (37.300 and 37.350), which were used mainly in A600HD, had these drives built into the ROM, and as such made it possible to boot directly from PCMCIA and ATA. Instead, drivers for these had to be loaded from floppy disk. With the first revision (37.299) it wasn't possible to boot from the PCMCIA device or the internal ATA controller. There are no visual differences between Kickstart 2.04 and 2.05. In short, use a new version of AmigaOS/Kickstart combination or AmigaForever and you will avoid a lot of headaches.Help Kickstart ROMs Kickstart ROM 2.05 Kickstart ROM v2.05 Kickstart/Workbench 1.3 was the first to allow bootable hard-drives but I'm not sure how the Kickstart 1.3 version of Fast FileSystem works with a hardfile but it ONLY works with hard-drives/hardfiles becuase the 1.3 version of Fast FileSystem doesn't work with floppies. ADF to boot from and just use the mountlist to mount the hardfile. If you have Kickstart 1.2 or older you need to use an. Try to use AmigaOS version 2+ and an equivalent Kickstart or better since it has the bootable hard-drive support in the ROM. ADF files to boot off of and format the hardfile with. If you still have your Amiga you can convert the AmigaOS boot disks to. If you have an AmigaOS 3.9 install disk you can use the emergency-install directory on the CD.

Back when I installed my bootable partition hardfile, I just used a magazine cover CD to boot from and installed from there. I think there is a file called disk-formatter that is required by the Workbench to format a partition.
