New (almost) aquisitions

It's been a busy few days for accumulating old stuff....
Last Thursday I was sorting out some issues at a client, and they asked me what they should do with an old Digital Pentium. I mentioned that waiting until the next local eDay was probably the best option, but that I'd pull the drive from it for them so they have no troubles with data - never hurts to have a few smallish drives just in case.
(BTW if anyone collects old Digitals let me know, I'm sure you'd be welcome to this one!)
Once I explained what eDay was they said they had some other stuff they'd recently discovered when clearing out a storage area, and I said I'd be happy to have a look - I've been dealing with these guys for 12+ years and was expecting some early-mid Pentiums.
Well, I got a bit of a surprise - we climbed into a dusty storage area, dodged past some beams etc and she pointed out the "old junk" - amongst the weird scientific testing stuff was a CBM Pet! I mentioned that I'd be happy to take it away, that it was probably worth a litt bit but I am more interested in preserving technology. I then noticed an old monitor in the box with a keyboard sitting against it - which turned out to be an Amstrad CPC of some description. I'll be heading back there this week in old clothes to have a good look at what else they have!
Getting home I decided to post on Facebook, seeing it was such a shock to find this gear I didn't know existed. That led to an offer of "a couple" of C64's with "over 200" disks of software. Tonight I picked up that haul - one C64C, three floppy drives (what looks like an original 1541 and some of the newer models), joysticks, paddles, cartridges. I haven't catalogued or tested everything yet, but it certainly looks like a reasonable collection - although I doubt there's 200 disks, possibly 50-70.
So it's been a big week. I still haven't picked up the Pet and Amstrad (and checked to see if there's anything more there) and I've never been a Commodore person, but it's always nice to find some forgotten old gear.
If only I could find a Spectrum 48k and BBC Model B lying around I'd be even happier....!
Last Thursday I was sorting out some issues at a client, and they asked me what they should do with an old Digital Pentium. I mentioned that waiting until the next local eDay was probably the best option, but that I'd pull the drive from it for them so they have no troubles with data - never hurts to have a few smallish drives just in case.
(BTW if anyone collects old Digitals let me know, I'm sure you'd be welcome to this one!)
Once I explained what eDay was they said they had some other stuff they'd recently discovered when clearing out a storage area, and I said I'd be happy to have a look - I've been dealing with these guys for 12+ years and was expecting some early-mid Pentiums.
Well, I got a bit of a surprise - we climbed into a dusty storage area, dodged past some beams etc and she pointed out the "old junk" - amongst the weird scientific testing stuff was a CBM Pet! I mentioned that I'd be happy to take it away, that it was probably worth a litt bit but I am more interested in preserving technology. I then noticed an old monitor in the box with a keyboard sitting against it - which turned out to be an Amstrad CPC of some description. I'll be heading back there this week in old clothes to have a good look at what else they have!
Getting home I decided to post on Facebook, seeing it was such a shock to find this gear I didn't know existed. That led to an offer of "a couple" of C64's with "over 200" disks of software. Tonight I picked up that haul - one C64C, three floppy drives (what looks like an original 1541 and some of the newer models), joysticks, paddles, cartridges. I haven't catalogued or tested everything yet, but it certainly looks like a reasonable collection - although I doubt there's 200 disks, possibly 50-70.
So it's been a big week. I still haven't picked up the Pet and Amstrad (and checked to see if there's anything more there) and I've never been a Commodore person, but it's always nice to find some forgotten old gear.
If only I could find a Spectrum 48k and BBC Model B lying around I'd be even happier....!