Difference between revisions of "CSD-G1M"
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File:Aiwamcd3.jpg|The connection cable on the back. | File:Aiwamcd3.jpg|The connection cable on the back. | ||
File:Aiwamcd4.jpg|The unit wrestling with a [[Sega 32X]]. Due to the shape of the add-on it's impractical to stand the system up normally. | File:Aiwamcd4.jpg|The unit wrestling with a [[Sega 32X]]. Due to the shape of the add-on it's impractical to stand the system up normally. | ||
+ | File:File-Aiwamcd5.jpg|High quality picture of the Aiwa Mega CD. | ||
+ | File:Aiwamcd6.jpg|High quality picture of the Aiwa Mega CD top. | ||
+ | File:Aiwamcd7.jpg|Close up. | ||
+ | File:Aiwamcd8.jpg|Back. | ||
+ | File:Aiwamcd9.jpg|Controller. | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
{{MegaDrive}} | {{MegaDrive}} | ||
[[Category:Mega Drive Hardware]] | [[Category:Mega Drive Hardware]] |
Revision as of 21:35, 25 August 2010
Probably the most unusual of any incarnation of the Mega Drive was the Aiwa Mega CD (also known as the Aiwa CSD-G1M), which was built around an Aiwa CD player.
The unit is made up of two components - an Aiwa bookshelf-size CD radio and a dock which added the Mega Drive connections (apart from sound, which the main radio unit handled.) Oddly, Sega and Aiwa chose not to place the interface between the two on the sides that would connect, but instead opted to use a connection cable on the back. This variant of the Mega Drive is one of the rarest made, and only saw limited release in both the Japanese and European markets.
Gallery
The unit wrestling with a Sega 32X. Due to the shape of the add-on it's impractical to stand the system up normally.
- File-Aiwamcd5.jpg
High quality picture of the Aiwa Mega CD.