Hi,
I sent a private message too. I am looking to get (if possible) and
compensate for the Packard Bell 286, Hethkit H89 and one MicroVAX
3100. I live in the Bay Area and I can easily come by and pick up.
Regards,
Vlad.
https://sites.google.com/site/digiloguemuseum/
On 21 November 2014 08:18, Sean Caron <scaron at umich.edu> wrote:
Wow, plenty of nice stuff there. I'm still taking
in my two new BA23s so I
think I'll sit this one out :) Hope it all finds a good home. If there
aren't any bites on the 3800 I'd at least take the boards out of it if
anyone wanted to facilitate... Better than having them go to WSW :| If Indy
has NG-24, I could use one of those... I'm just trolling for guts & parts,
LOL.
Best,
Sean
On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 1:53 AM, Jacob Ritorto <jacob.ritorto at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hey Seth! I'd like to call dibs on the blue adm3a! Will send a friend
> over from HMB to pick it up at your convenience. Will you reply pirvately
> & let me know when's best and what's a proper tip, pls?
>
> thx
> jake
>
> (fourfifteen)952-5372
>
> On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 1:18 AM, Seth Morabito <lists at loomcom.com> wrote:
>
> >
> > Well, it's finally happened. I've bought a house west of Seattle, and
> > I'm going to be leaving the bay area.
> >
> > First things first: I am NOT getting out of classic computers! I'm
> > taking a nice little core collection of microcomputers with me. That
> > said, the move is going to be extremely expensive and I have a lot of
> > stuff that I'm just not likely to ever get around to. Liquidating
> > some stuff could save me thousands of dollars. So, it's time to try to
> > pass it on.
> >
> > Everything here is located in Fremont, California, very close to I-880
> > and Decoto Road. It's in a garage for very easy access. Because of the
> > craziness of moving, I'm very sorry to say that everything here is
> > pick-up only. I cannot make the time to pack and ship. If you're remote
> > and you'd like to get someone else who's local do some picking up for
> > you, of course you're more than welcome.
> >
> > Anyway, I hate to do this, but it's time...
> >
> >
> >
> > First, the non-free stuff. I'd actually like some money for these. How
> > much? I'll take reasonable offers. I'm not looking for eBay money.
> > Seriously. Make an offer, the worst that could possibly happen is that
> > I'll counter.
> >
> > - PDP-11/35. This is my semi-infamous restoration project that
> > consumed much of my 2012. I very lovingly restored the power supply,
> > backplanes, chassis, and front panel. The logic is almost certainly
> > beyond repair. It needs a new set of cards. This system is housed in
> > a full-height rack that has seen much better days. Includes a Diablo
> > Series 30 drive, ECCO paper tape reader (not punch), and a DSD 440
> > 8" floppy drive. I'll throw in a big huge pile of 8" floppies.
> >
> > - PDP-11/53. This is a nice half-height DEC rack with a PDP-11/53 card
> > set in a PDP-11/23+ chassis, plus two working RL-02 drives. Will
> > include 10 RL-02 packs. This is a nice setup. It pains me more to
> > get rid of this than it does the 11/35, if I'm honest. (Drive heads
> > are currently parked and secured!)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Now, the cheap and/or free WORKING stuff. Just make a token offer to
> > help defray some moving costs and I'll be thrilled.
> >
> > - MicroVAX 3800. Nice system. Used to belong to Lockheed Martin and
> > once had Hubble Space Telescope pointing control software developer
> > accounts on it!
> >
> > - Two AlphaServer DS20e systems and 4 SCSI storage arrays. Marginally
> > classic, but come on, you know you want them.
> >
> > - TWO MicroVAX 3100 model 80s. Loud little beasts. Lots of small
> > SCSI disks. Ideal doorstops.
> >
> > - AlphaStation 200 4/233. Cute little desktop. Works great!
> >
> > - Sun SPARCClassic.
> >
> > - Sun SPARC IPC.
> >
> > - Assorted Sun keyboards / mice.
> >
> > - SGI Octane. It's a perfectly nice system. No keyboard / mouse. It
> > has texture RAM!
> >
> > - SGI R5000 Indy. Also no keyboard or mouse, sorry. At least these SGI
> > systems are PS/2.
> >
> > - A C-One FPGA system. This is not technically classic, but it is
> > neat. These were sold as a re-targetable FPGA system to emulate
> > Commodore Amiga A500 among other systems. Had a minor following in
> > the early 2000s before the project dried up.
> >
> > - Heathkit H-89. Had to do some minor power supply repair to get it
> > working, but it works great now. Hard-sectored floppy drive. I'll
> > throw in 6 hard sectored floppies. That's all I have!
> >
> > - Tandy TRS-80 Model 4.
> >
> > - Tandy Color Computer 3, still in the box!
> >
> > - No-name serial terminal. It's always good to have more of these,
> > right?
> >
> > - Sharp PC5000
> >
> > - TWO DEC Rainbows (one has a bad power switch), plus monitors and
> > keyboards.
> >
> > - Panasonic Sr. Partner luggable computer.
> >
> > - Packard Bell 286
> >
> > - 2 or 3 TI Silent 700 terminals. (I'm keeping a few, but I have an
> > absurd number of these things)
> >
> > - Execuport 4000 printing terminal.
> >
> > - DEC LA100 printing terminal.
> >
> > - 90% working blue ADM-3a terminal. Needs some slight logic repair,
> > should be an easy job.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Finally, the stuff that DOES NOT WORK. I just want this gone. Please
> > take it. Any of these could be a fun project. If you don't take it, it
> > will go to WeirdStuff Warehouse where they'll do horrible things.
> > I especially
> >
> > - KayPro 10.
> >
> > - Another MicroVAX 3800. The non-working version of the one above.
> >
> > - DEC Professional 350. Dead video.
> >
> >
> >
> > That's it. If you happen to come over and we're going through stuff
> > and I find something else I should get rid of, you're welcome to it!
> >
> > -Seth
> >
>