Amstrad CPC 472
An Amstrad distributed by Indescomp (the brand's distributor in Spain, which would later become the subsidiary Amstrad Spain) exclusively for the Spanish market. It was identical to the CPC 464, but had a printed circuit board in the ROM socket that included an 8KB RAM chip, increasing the original CPC 464's memory from 64KB to 74KB, theoretically to accommodate the new commands and routines of the new BASIC 1.1 it incorporated.
But this was only a ruse to avoid the 15,000-peseta tariff that all microcomputers imported into Spain with 64KB or less of RAM had to pay starting in August 1985.
Subsequently, all computer keyboards sold in Spain were required to be adapted to Spanish, so the Ñ key had to be added to the computer, and the translated ROM version of BASIC 1.0 was used.
A few months later, Spain joined the European Economic Community, so the import tax had to be eliminated.
Amstrad then incorporated the Ñ key into the original CPC 464 model and stopped selling the CPC 472 model.
Technical specifications of computer Amstrad CPC 472
Manufactured by: Amstrad
Launched: 1985
Manufactured in United Kingdom
CPU: Zilog Z80A
@ 4MHz
Memory: 72 KB
Support: Cassette
Hard drive:
None
Operating system: BASIC 1.1 ver. sin Ñ
or
BASIC 1.0 ver. con Ñ