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Monitors and Floppy Disk Haul

JT737

6502
So these were headed for the trash-until I saved them! This is part of a larger haul I got yesterday. At the same place, there is a stack of mostly off-brand CRT monitors....I haven't decided if I am going to take any more of them.

Most amazing to me was to find three unopened boxes of 5 1/4 floppies, as well as two unopened boxes of 3.5" floppies. Sadly I didn't find too many 800k floppies, just a box of 8 of them. DSC02338.JPG
 
Nice haul. FYI it’s not a good idea to store formatted disks on or next to a CRT
I know! They are just their for the photo shoot. This is also after I gave the monitors an extensive cleaning; these two were being stored in a dusty garage:
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DSC02332.JPG
 
I like that IBM EGA display!

It looks rather similar to the CGA display which was also designed to match the 5150 and 5160 (aka PC/XT).

I almost had one back in 2017, but it got completely destroyed during shipping, and I haven't been able to afford another one (indeed, I haven't even been able to find another one locally; I will never have one of these shipped again!)

c
 
Keeping/rescuing CRT-monitors is not at all an easy decison.
They are bulky, use a lot of electricity, are in need of repair and that repair requires working next to high voltage.
Sometimes they require a specific video card.

Well done sir for keeping these alive!
They are as much a part of the 1980s & 1990s as the computers driving them.
 
Keeping/rescuing CRT-monitors is not at all an easy decison.
They are bulky, use a lot of electricity, are in need of repair and that repair requires working next to high voltage.
Sometimes they require a specific video card.

Well done sir for keeping these alive!
They are as much a part of the 1980s & 1990s as the computers driving them.
Reminds me of a Sci-Fi short story I read years ago; the main character needed to use a Mac Plus to do something for some reason -- which was tricky, because they were considered highly illegal contraband at the time because of the (relative) amount of energy they consumed. Eventually the hero tracked one down and fired it up to save the universe. They had to build their own AC circuit from scratch to power it, while shielding the entire operation so the EM radiation wasn't visible to the scanners, IIRC.

I'm glad there are still those of us brave enough to preserve this old hardware against such times :)
 
Sure hope it never comes to that. I like the current arrangement: if I'm willing to pay for it, I can use it!
 
Reminds me of a Sci-Fi short story I read years ago; the main character needed to use a Mac Plus to do something for some reason -- which was tricky, because they were considered highly illegal contraband at the time because of the (relative) amount of energy they consumed. Eventually the hero tracked one down and fired it up to save the universe. They had to build their own AC circuit from scratch to power it, while shielding the entire operation so the EM radiation wasn't visible to the scanners, IIRC.

I'm glad there are still those of us brave enough to preserve this old hardware against such times :)
You know, these old compact Macs actually don't use as much electricity as you'd think. I myself always thought that something like a Mac Plus would use somewhere around 100 watts-which isn't completely horrible, especially compared with some of these modern gaming rigs!

But it actually uses far less, about 33 watts according to my meter:DSC02449.JPGDSC02448.JPG
 
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