I'm working on getting a shipment of some 1980's computer equipment
>from Stanford, CA to the Netherlands arranged. I've sorted out the
pickup, shipping, and delivery part of it, but the systems will need
to be palletized prior to pickup. So, I'm looking for someone, or a
business, in the area that can go to the location where the systems
are with 5 40"x48" pallets and other packaging materials, and then
load the cabinets (up to 500 lbs each) onto the pallets, cover them
with which corrugated cardboard, secure them to the pallets with
straps, and put shrink-wrap all around it.
Recommendations for this kind of service are most welcome. Suggestions
for alternate packaging options are also welcome.
Kind regards,
Camiel Vanderhoeven
So, does anyone out there actually have a KT11-B? I ask because I have just
realized that the "KT11-B" sold on eBay:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/201624309371
was not, in fact, a KT11-B! If you look closely at the pictures of the unit
in the back of the cabinet:
http://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/7sYAAOSwGtNXiUAM/s-l1600.jpghttps://i.sli.mg/zvOSH1.jpghttps://i.sli.mg/6fWvkw.jpg
although it has the quad-high backplane of the general type used by the
KT11-B, the Flip Chips plugged in are completely not those given in the Flip
Chip chart for the KT11-B:
http://gunkies.org/wiki/KT11-B_Technical_Manual#Module_Locations
Rather, the ones shown in the images show it to be (mostly) an RK11-C. Cool,
but nowhere near as cool as a KT11-B. (On a cool scale of 10, I rank the
RK11-C as a 6, a TC11 as an 8, and a KT11-B as a 23.)
I say "mostly" because there appear to be extra cards on the right hand end;
whether those are some sort of upgrade to the RK11-C, or whether someone just
stored spare Flip Chips out there, I have no idea.
Noel