Many different PS3 consoles have been made and they are identified by the model number. So a Model number for the PS3 is not a single number, but a method to identify which PS3 model it is. The following chart of different PS3 models does not include the new PS3 160GB and 320 GB models, but does include most of the others that were sold retail and is available at the related link for PS3 support:
PlayStation 3 modelsOriginal Hard Drive Capacity
Model Number
USB Ports
PlayStation 2 Software Compatible
Release Date
In Production
250GB
CECH-2101B
2
No
May 2010
Yes
120GB
CECH-2101A
2
No
May 2010
Yes
250GB
CECH-2001B
2
No
November 2009
Yes
120GB
CECH-2001A
2
No
September 2009
Yes
160GB
CECHP01
2
No
November 2008
No
80GB
CECHL01
2
No
October 2008
No
80GB
CECHK01
2
No
August 2008
No
80GB
CECHE01
4
Yes
August 2007
No
60GB
CECHA01
4
Yes
November 2006
No
40GB
CECHH01
2
No
March 2008
No
40GB
CECHG01
2
No
November 2007
No
20GB
CECHB01
4
Yes
November 2006
No
Other PS3 models also exist and some can be identified from the PlayStation 3 Secrets related link which includes models that were not offered for retail sale, but have actually shown up for sale at auction sites like Ebay
I think it is N1000
Its either PSP-N001PW (Piano White
or PSP-N001PB (Piano Black)
if you mean the model number, it's the PSP-4000
Only The Psp GO
PSP-1000, or PSP Phat, are just the names for the PSP's original model, yes. PSP-1000 is the model number.
it depends the psp go is faster by a Little but there both the same its just the psp go is a newer model i recommend the psp no go if you have money to spend to psp go also the psp go if falls a lot when playing the screen comes off
The number at the end is the PSP's region which can affect the movie UMDs you can play on it, and PSN availability. One marked as PSP-2000 is a Japanese model, PSP-2001 is the North American model.
PSP 3000- $130 PSP GO- $211 PSP Vita- Wifi model $250 Wifi/3G $300
Take off your battery pack and look at the top right. It should say "PSP-2000" or whatever your model is.
The number shows which model the PSP is, the final digit is the region. The original model of PSP, is PSP-1000. The 'street' PSP is 'E1000' not 1000, it is a slightly different model and is the last to be released, after the PSP-3000. It has the PSP-3000's updated screen, but has mono sound instead of stereo, and no wireless functions. The '4' at the end is the region code for continental Europe and India.
There's no such thing as a PSP game that's model specific, they'll work on any PSP. However the PSP GO has no UMD drive, so of course, those won't work. Any PSP game available on the PSN though will work on both PSP 2000 and PSP GO.
There should be a barcode and some numbers on the bottom edge, right at the end is the PSP's model and region, ie, 100X, 200X or 300X for the model number, where the X is the region code.
It depends what kind of PSP your buying. If your buying a PSP 1000 model (Fat Model) than your looking at a good $150-$170 dollar price. If your buying a PSP 2000 (Slim Model) Going to a $170-$180. If your going with a Slim and Lite model, (PSP 3000) your looking at a straight $200 price. Last but not least, if your buying the PSP GO (16GB hardware NO UMD DISK DRIVE) than your looking at a $250 dollar price. Now I have the PSP 1000 and the PSP 3000. I do not recommend the Go because it is very lame and isn't worth 250 considering that you could just add 50 and ta da! you got yourself a PS3. So Go with the 3000. If your low on money. Go to the 1000. If your in the middle. Go with the 2000
There are five versions of the PSP, the original PSP, the second one is PSP Slim and Lite, then PSP-3000, next was the PSP-Go, and the latest is the 'Street' PSP, a budget model released in Europe. The evolution of the PSP has been rapid and it is still widely used by gamers.