The PC1512, and also its successor the PC1640, sold very well . Part of it was explained because the basic model (one floppy drive, no hard disk) launched for £399, which made it one of the first cheap PCs in Europe. This price, which initially increased to £450, was restored in September 1987 amidst adjustments in Amstrad's PC range. Second, its design was compact and visually appealing. With the exception of the fan in the PC1640's ECD monitor, both the PC1512 and the PC1640 were silent. This was a significant difference compared to the quite noisy PCs sold at the time. Although the Amstrad PC1512 and PC1640 had to compete against faster AT-type architectures at the time of their release, they were sufficiently powerful to run office software popular in the late 1980s and early 1990s, including
WordPerfect 5.1,
WordStar,
Microsoft Word 4 and 5 for DOS, the spreadsheet
Lotus 1-2-3,
Matlab, and the database program
dBase III+ as well as
Ashton-Tate's
Framework II integrated office suite. The PC1512 and PC1640 were shipped with Digital Research's
GEM as a
graphical shell, but could run also
Geoworks Ensemble (up to Version 2.1), and
Microsoft Windows (up to Version 3.0, that did support a 'real mode'). The PC1512 significantly helped open up the European PC market to consumers as well as businesses, and Amstrad's advertising of the PC1512 was aimed at homes rather than offices. The 1512's influence was such that the UK PC magazine
PC Plus originally targeted itself at the "Amstrad PC 1512 and compatibles", since home ownership of other PCs at the time was rare. The PC1512 shipped with 512 KB of
RAM; it could be upgraded to 640 KB of RAM with 16 pieces of 4164-120 Dynamic RAM chips (64KBx1 per chip) and setting a jumper. Video output was compatible with the
CGA standard, with an extension allowing all 16 colours to be used in the 640×200 graphics mode. The
CPU of both the PC1512 and the later PC1640 was an 8 MHz
Intel 8086, which was sufficient for playing
The Secret of Monkey Island,
Maniac Mansion and
Prince of Persia. The power supply was located in the monitor, which made upgrading difficult. The
input devices supplied with the machine were notable. The mouse was an Amstrad Mouse, which was incompatible with serial mice common at the time. It was supported by some games, including
Elite, but many DOS programs had problems with it. The keyboard sported an
Atari-compatible joystick port for digital joysticks. Joystick movements and buttons were mapped to unused keyboard codes, allowing the joystick to be used in many DOS games that were written for keyboard control. The series was somewhat unusual for the fact that it had a physical volume control on the
internal speaker. This allowed the user to make the machine beep quietly, or silently, from boot time onwards. This innovation is still not present in most modern PCs: the legacy beeper is typically still a fixed-volume device. ==Specifications==