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Not rare but unusual thread.

Strimkind

Well-known member
Nothing too spectacular in my collection but I do have:

Expansion Bay HD for a Pismo

Some old Massive SCSI case (maybe HD?) that I picked up with 2 512s and a 128k

G3 Vimage upgrade for 1400 (never heard of the brand before)

Thats about all that might even stand out.

 

Bunsen

Admin-Witchfinder-General
Quite a few oddities there H3NRY, but these three pique my curiosity:

a spread spectrum wireless base station with 68K CPU, RAM, 3 expansion slots, etc. from 1991a LocalTalk - ethernet bridge with built-in HD and NAS

a HD which emulated an Apple//c floppy or a Mac 128 floppy depending on firmware
As does this!

• CardReader (Simcards and others) for ADB
Strimkind's post reminded me of another oddity of mine: a tower with 7 slot loading SCSI DVD-ROM drives. There's also a 3U rack storage server that mounts 14 IDE/ATA hard drives to a SCSI bus.

 

MrMacPlus

Well-known member
Not exactly sure whether you'd call these unusual but here goes:

-Original HP Vectra (PC Semi-compatible from 1985)

-An e-Reader for my Gameboy advance (the card reader where you could tediously read a tiny program by scanning around 10 barcodes)

-A still-functional (AFAIK) Game Genie for my original Gameboy

-A still-functional (AFAIK) Game Genie for my (broken) NES.

-All sorts of other peripherals for that old NES including a power pad.

 

macgeek417

Well-known member
Post your unusual things you have.
Gravis Mac Gamepad.

Ment to be ADB but has a serial? type connector. Must be in the wrong box but looks the same as the picture.
Meh. i have 2 mac gamepads.

 

shred

Well-known member
I have a wooden crate with a large Apple logo and the words "Expedition Equipment" stencilled on top of it. It was part of an Apple sales promotion from the mid 1990s.

 
would like to add a couple of things I've found in my collection:

a MacPhone (the one that attaches to the side of a compact (any one have a line on a good copy of the software?))

a MacHandwriter tablet

an ADB 4 port switcher for kb/monitor

a LaCie FM Tuner (ADB)

 

olePigeon

Well-known member
Formac ProFormance 3 video card.

32MB video card with 3D glasses. This was in 1997. It was a pretty darn good card for its time. I think it's funny that ATI and nVidia are only now getting into 3D games. I had Quake 3 running 3D on my Formac. It was fun.

 

netfreak

Well-known member
Poqet PC (the netbook of the 1980s.. runs DOS 3)

CP/M cards for Apple II (never learned enough about it to test)

IIgs Woz Edition w/ RAM upgrade and SCSI (no longer have)

If any of that really counts... Better yet, maybe the eWorld brochure I found yesterday.

 

trag

Well-known member
What I really would like to see are those 128MB 72pin Simms in 50NS (!) which were availaible for a short time around 2001 for my 6100 w/g3 and 2nd videocard.
Any particular reason that 60ns won't do? They are not uncommon.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
I bet the 6100 does not run any faster with 60NS SIMMs either, just because the RAM is faster doesn't mean the chipset timing will take advantage of it. Now if you want to hack the system timings I can see wanting faster memory.

 

cangrande

Active member
LaCie FM Tuner (ADB)
This gadget produced one of the great one-liner reviews in a Mac magazine (can't remember which one):

"Use this $50 gadget to turn your $2000 computer into a $20 radio!"

 

Quadraman

Well-known member
Power Computing Power 80/100/120 machines--the 8100 clone. These have spots for 5 NuBus slots on the motherboard, but one would need to steal the Fat-AMIC chip from a 9150 to implement the two uninstalled slots.
Is stealing the controller the only mod required?
AMIC is a 160 pin chip and FAT-AMIC is 208 pin.

The regular AMIC is in 7100 and 8100s

In the Power 80/100/120 the AMIC resides on the I/O daughter card, which is unique to those machines.

to replace the AMIC with a FAT AMIC you'd pretty much have to redesign that card

Their original plan was probably to sell a three slot and a five slot version. The three slot version would use the AMIC I/O card. The 5 slot version would have an I/O card bearing the Fat AMIC.

So the only difference between PCC's three slot and five slot versions would be the I/O card.

So, the question is, was there ever a five-slot I/O card made?
I'm willing to bet at least one prototype machine with the 5 slots enabled was made. It was obviously their intention to utilize those additional slots at some point or they wouldn't have included the pads on the production machines or put the controller on a swappable daughter board.

 

Trash80toHP_Mini

NIGHT STALKER
More unusual was the PCI/NuBus Riser that PowerComputing released for some model or other, but it's probably too rare to list and i don't have one!

I've got an IR wireless ADB Mouse, does that count?

 

envirogeek

Active member
Nova fan controller, 1 installed in my iix, 1 still in shrink wrap.

Adjusts power supply fan speed based on a temperature sensor probe you tack to your internal hard drive with foil tape.

 

trag

Well-known member
More unusual was the PCI/NuBus Riser that PowerComputing released for some model or other, but it's probably too rare to list and i don't have one!
I've got an IR wireless ADB Mouse, does that count?
PowerWave. My friend who worked in PowerComputing support says that riser card never really worked all that well though. The combo riser card had a name, and now I can't remember it. My old posts on the topic were probably at Powerwatch.com and that site is long since history, although there might be an archive.

I have an IR wireless mouse which works in either an original Mac (through Plus) or as an ADB mouse. However, it has a noticeable bit of latency, so I prefer a wired mouse.

 
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