I agree.
I think these all Storage Hunters, Storage Wars and other Shit Collectors
"reality" TV series, is what to blame here:
"What is is?" "Looks like old door but it is just probably pile of
shit!" "Man, you get AT LEAST 5000$ of it!"
Oh, I can't wait episode when they find full IBM 360...
If I'm serious, eBay prices are totally out of this planet. Like that PDP-8, which
looks like seen nuclear war (probably twice), driven over Caterpillar D9 and covered
manure, price tag: 4800$. Whoooaa!
Some weeks ago there was little bit beaten up System/3 on auction, start price was
something like 10 000 or more. I offered couple thousand of it, which I think should be
quite fair price (at my point of view fair price, I have to pay another thousand of
freight, toll and taxes), but seller refused my offer. Even I really like to own one,
I'm not needing that bad I spend it more than my car. I think any realistic chance to
get some really good stuff is another hobbyist or just pure luck to get donated some old
good stuff.
But another thing is collectors. Would be reasonable if we have just some machines, those
what we really, really want, not hundreds and hundreds just for standing still and
collecting dust? What is value for machine which nobody can come to see, nobody use and
like Al said, machine which will be dumped to scrapyard by our childrens after our journey
ends?
Of cource it more than nice for all if somebody collect stuff and understand its
(historical or emotional) value to others. I try to do that. If I see some computer which
I'm not personally interested, but I can understand somebody other would love to get
it, I'll take with me. I'm not that greed that I should take profit of it, just my
own costs.
I tried keep my collection in reasonable state, I sold and donate all my 80s (home)
computers away around year ago. It is totally insane to stock items which not mean to you
that much. I have never used some Spectum, so why have to own something like that? What
for? When I gave those Commodores and MSXs I made over ten people happy, when they get
their childhood computers (...or they just put computers to dark warehouse, waiting for
scrapyard...) I think shared fun is better fun.
What I want (for my whole lifetime) is just couple minicomputers and mainframes (first is
coming!), so I can use all my efforts to bring those back to life, study them and show
those to people fairs and etc. I have over 50 good years ahead, but still I have no time
to study all computers on the world.
I introduce myself later better, but quick version: I'm from Finland and I work
automation business. Interested 60s and 70s minis and mains and all things what is related
same eras automation and process control. And I'm not big fan of Storage Wars...
Johannes ThelenFINLAND
From: cctalk at
fahimi.net
To: cctalk at
classiccmp.org
Subject: RE: Bay Area: IBM 4341 and HP3000
Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2015 10:39:07 -0800
The problem is that most collectors pay diddlier
squat.
I don't know if that is true. The question is if the seller has something collectable
for sale. If you have a beat up, rusted, gutted item buried under junk then it really has
no collectable value. It is junk and yes the junk dealer will pay more for it. However, if
you have a nicely cared for system that is just being disconnected from service (properly
disconnected not just cutting wires because it is easier) in working condition a collector
will definitely pay more than the junk dealers. This is true across all collectable items
- comics, baseball cards, cars, whatever. No one will pay top dollar for a bunch of moldy,
water damages, torn up comics - why should computers be any different?
Problem is that most sellers are selling junk but want collectable prices.