On 7/21/21 3:20 AM, Liam Proven via cctalk wrote:
I _think_ ISA ones are in more demand these days.
I suspect there are more people restoring ISA systems than PCI systems.
But that's probably a matter of time.
CD, or CDRW, or DVD, or DVDRW?
I doubt it's likely, but (traditional) WORM drives are not out of the
question. (I'm not counting CDs / DVDs in the /traditional/ WORM mix,
despite many early writable drives being exactly that.)
You can't tell?! They don't even look similar.
Google will give you
pics in seconds.
Sadly, that might not be enough to discern things. I've seen similar
cases used for a lot of different internal components. The OP (or
someone else on their behalf) is almost certainly going to need to get
more details to share with would be buyers.
You will need to identify this stuff much more
specifically. Makes,
models, capacities, speeds, etc.
Yep.
E.g. nobody wants 10base-2 or Thick Ethernet cards
much any more. UTP,
slightly more so: 10base-T, not much, 100base-T somewhat yes.
Um ... that's not true. I just purchased 10Base? cards specifically for
the AUI ports to connect to my 10Base5 / "Thicknet" segment. Depending
on price, I'd probably walk away from a swap meet with more too.
Plain old CD? Probably not. DVDRW? You might find
takers.
It depends. I've talked with a handful of people wanting some sort of
CD-ROM or their retro computers. They prefer the faster IDE drives.
But they would rather have the slower IDE drives than nothing. So I
believe that there is a reasonable chance that CD-ROMs sill have some value.
Graphics: depends what. Early 3D cards are somewhat
wanted.
I still see some value in 2D cards. I'd lay down a $5 bill for a PCI 2D
card like I had years ago. -- If I'm willing to do it, I assume that
there are others that are willing to do it too.
Tiny IDE hard disks, probably not. CF-card is cheaper,
faster and
more reliable.
It depends on the capacity and price. And /known/ status of the drive.
"For parts"? Probably not much value at all. Maybe for in a lot for
someone else to test. "Known working / passed SpinRite Level 4" much
more likely.
They aren't IDE, but I suspect that drives in IBM PS/2s that were known
to be working would be worth more than the smaller IDE drives. I think
that mostly means ESDI and SCSI.
It's not worth a lot.
OTOH, those unique Compaq combined 5.25" + 3.5" floppy drives are
quite sought-after.
#truth
SCSI drives are quite desirable.
It's probably not worth a _lot_ but maybe a few hundred bucks if
you are specific and ship anywhere. Remember a lot of collectors are
in countries where this stuff is very hard to come by, and will pay
top dollar.
But you need to be willing to be specific, list exact model numbers,
take photos showing ID labels, and ideally, to _test it_.
Yep.
Though it sounds like the OP wasn't interested in doing this. As such,
I suspect that the OP is probably looking for someone to acquire (large
portions of) the lot and let that buyer test / resell things with
details and shipping to lots of places.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die