• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

Look what I found in the woods!

avadondragon

Well-known member
Well I had time to do some more testing and I now have a spare working CRT! I think I have a friend that managed to break the yoke on their SE/30 a decade ago I'll probably give it to them if they still have the machine.

IMG_20151213_172339.jpg

I also hooked up the hard drive to my PowerMac7200. It spun up and was recognized by system profiler but sadly I couldn't read any Mac partition info. I think one of the heads fused to the platter judging by the ting ting ting noise it is making.

 

trag

Well-known member
Nah, that's only bears... But you know what they say bears do in the woods. Perhaps there's a magical bear out there that excretes old Macs.

 
Last edited by a moderator:

olePigeon

Well-known member
No, don't turn it on!  They say that if you watch the screen of a Mac you find buried in the woods, you'll die 3 days later! :O

 

djcommie

Well-known member
Too bad it wasn't a Lisa. That would've been something!

c
I once found a Lisa at the local ancient ewaste recycler in horrible shape (got it for free) and put it on eBay. I documented the condition well and mentioned it was likely only good for a case and bracketry and it sold $244. The buyer gave me neutral feedback saying it wasn't in very good condition... The buyer was the Computer History Museum.

 

uridium

Well-known member
That Intergraph monitor.. that's off a Clipper UNIX box. Probably a 2xxx series. 

I used to run those on some 2400's and a 6800 with CLIX. Dead tech sadly, though it was a lovely UNIX and the Clipper RISC (C[1,2,3,4]00's) processors for the day were pretty nice. Quite unobtanium these days.

Monitors were easy to get working off VGA if the card supplied SOG signals correctly.

 
Top