The IBM PS/1 models 2011 and 2121 both use the same monitor with power supply
inside. I get several emails from people that buy the CPU but didnt get the
display with it. PCjr power supplies show up every once in a while around
here, especially at hamfests. In fact, I bought a jr a few months back with a
second story floppy drive that connects to the main unit. I'd like to hook up
my PCjr hard drive to it also.
In a message dated 10/17/2001 11:43:23 AM Central Daylight Time,
lgwalker(a)mts.net writes:
<< The 1640 reminds me of the IBM 2011 with the power supply in the monitor
unit. There was an informative thread a while back on the mail list in the
spring of 1999 regarding the 1640. I have one but alas no K-B. I did win one
on e-bay but was never able to get a reply from the seller.
I also have a PCjr and like you don't have the PSU. They come up on e-pay
occasionally but either I haven't had the money at that time or else the
seller
wouldn't ship to Canada. I have managed to acquire some manuals for it,
including the IBM one, however, as well as some cartridges but they are
buried somewhere among my stuff which is still in disarray due to my move
this summer. When I run across them I'll let you know.
Lawrence
Went to a new thrift store this week. Ended up with
way more stuff
than I expected to. The big items were a complete Amstrad PC 6400
(8-bit PC clone, dual half-height floppies, 3 ISA slots, proprietary
monitor that powers the base through a monster DIN connector,
proprietary keyboard with 9-pin joystick connector) and a nearly complete
PCjr w/128K and parallel port sidecars (got non-chicklet keyboard w/cable
and CPU, but no PSU). How much should a PCjr PSU run me? What cartridges
were there for it? The company I used to write kids games for (Software
Productions - makers of "Alphabet Beasts and Company, Micro Mother Goose,
Micro Habitats, etc.) did support it, but I was the C-64 dude, not the
PeeCee dude. (ob digression: when the company closed, we _did_ hold the
door open with the PCjr - it really was a doorstop ;-)
The scary part is that the Amstrad was about triple the cost of the Peanut
(~$6 (after markdown from $11) vs ~$2). I guess size does matter.
So far in my digging, I've found that the Amstrad PC 6400 is the
American name for the Amstrad PC 1640, and I found a good Amstrad
resource at
http://web.ukonline.co.uk/cliff.lawson/index.htm
Any other good tips?
-ethan
>>