A.R. Duell wrote:
> Ok, you have just put us all to eternal shame. Do you have a list of all
> you've got? cuz I'm entirely interested to know. Or perhaps just an
> excerpt of your more rare systems. Where the hell do you store it all?
Wow.... This lot totally dwarfs my little collection (I think I have about
150 machines, including calculators, but excluding interesting
peripherals), and I thought I was doing pretty well!
150 computers is doing VERY well, I just have a lot of friends who found
a suc, er, someone to take the stuff so they don't have to throw it away
:). Yesterday, another friend gave me a C64, disk drive, and color
monitor. I started collecting sometime about 1986 and was fortunate in
having quite a few friends in the computer business as well as space to
store the stuff. Additionally, I help a local private school put on a
"Computer Rummage Sale" and end up with a lot of stuff they couldn't
sell. Hope I haven't given you the impression I am a junk collector :).
On a more serious note, there is also a local Classic Computer club with
a small (a dozen or so) but devoted membership who are extremely
knowledgeable about a wide range of the older computers. From that
group, I was given a couple of Jonos computers, TRS Model 4, a Smoke
Signal Broadcasting BFD-16, an Altos system, and a number of other
computers. I also have three other friends who, like myself, are
interested in putting together a computer museum. The biggest problem
is financing such a venture since to do a professional job, we would
most likely need at least 5000 sq ft of building.
the earliest is probably the PDP 8i, and PDP
11/05. Of course the Mits
Do you have any other minis? I find them a lot more interesting than
micros, as I think I've mentioned before, since you can actually
understand how the CPU works at gate level.
I have a bit of DEC stuff including a Minc (I think that is the correct
spelling) that I have no idea what it was used for, a couple of 11/23s,
and at least one 11/34. There is also a Kennedy Disk Unit, a 470 MB
Hard Disk (probably for the Dec stuff) that is a rack mount, and a bunch
of spare M and K series interface boards. One thing I am *really* glad
now that I didn't get rid of are the engineering drawings and
maintenance manuals for the PDP 8i, PDP 16, PDP 11/05, PDP 11/45, and
some of the perpherals (RK05 disk unit and ???? memory). I spent about
6 weeks or so up at DEC in the early 70's and was able to get
documentation for the things I was working on.
A tip : Get known where you work (and at church,
clubs, etc) as somebody
who wants old computer and electronic 'junk'. It's amazing what you get
given - several times people have said 'Oh, we're about to throw this out,
do you want it' where 'this' is a complete computer system with all
manuals.
I am "known" :). That is the way I have gotten most of the stuff I
have. Occassionally, I'll actually buy something (like the mint Xerox
820-II) but I try to avoid that if possible. I tend to overdo whatever
I get into and I still have a 10 or so coin ops that I am starting to
try and get rid of. At one time, I had about 50 of them and I wasn't
even in the business! When people had machines that didn't work, I
ended up with them. Of course, being able to repair them made things
easier :).
Another thing
I am looking for are the docs and schematics for the Zenith
H-67 Hard Disk sub-system used with the H-89. The H-67 has a bad power
supply board, and without the schematics, it is a bit hard to
troubleshoot.
Power supplies are either linear or switchers. Linears are next-to-trivial
to sort out (at least if they use any of the standard regulator IC's), and
switching units can be repaired.
If it was just that, it would be easy, but I think the HD and Floppy
controllers are built onto the same board. As I recall, it is not a
switcher but rather a linear type supply. I started into it a few years
ago and decided at that time to wait until schematics were available.