---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: Mark-8 opinion question
From: "Brad H" <vintagecomputer at bettercomputing.net>
Date: Wed, October 12, 2016 2:38 pm
To: "'General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts'" <cctalk
at classiccmp.org>
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I asked this on vcfed and I don't know how much
overlap there is here so I
apologize if this is hitting all the same people over again. As some are
aware I recently won an auction for 9 original Mark-8 boards (it has 4 1k
RAM boards). To say I was elated would be an understatement - I certainly
have some unusual stuff in my collection but this is something truly rare.
And these are rare both in their own right and for what they are - unused.
Pretty much spotless.
I feel kind of in a bind about it now though. As an amateur historian, my
first impulse is to stick em in a frame and hang em. Not even lay a finger
on them. But I've a stubborn practical side. Like that guy that has an
original AC Shelby Cobra and actually drives the thing. He was asked why
he'd actually drive such a rare and valuable vehicle and he said 'What's the
point of a car you don't drive?'. But then he can say that - that Shelby
doesn't have zero miles on it.
Realistically, I'm never likely to own a complete, vintage Mark-8. There
are simply too few of them and I couldn't afford one even if one popped up
(I could afford the computer, just not the divorce afterwards :)). So here
I am with one path to having one that would be, by virtue of the boards, way
more legit than a clone, but still have that 'built in 2016' asterisk beside
its name for serious collectors.
Anyway, I'm just soliciting opinions from those I haven't already heard
from. This is just for the purpose of discussion, because I'm sure this
isn't the first and won't be the last time somebody buying vintage gear runs
into a situation like this. Whatever I end up doing, it will not happen for
years anyway. I'm not at a skill level yet to pull it off, and I'd still
like to build that clone first and see what I achieve before touching
priceless originals.
It sounds like you've already made your mind up. If it were me, I would
not build on the originals. I would engage someone to repop the boards,
their labour cost would be recouped with the sale of a few sets.
What I would do is make sure the repops are easily identifiable as such
so that they are not in future passed off as orignals at the same time as
preserving your investment in the real thing.
I recall seeing photos of a WWI biplane fighter being restored by the Smithsonian,
and on the new pieces of wood they used to replace damaged or missing fillets,
longerons and other parts of the airframe they had clearly stamped 'REPRODUCTION'
so that future conservators would know what was original and what was not.
Steve.