Apple IIGS, part 1 of ∞ * π
Recently (within the past month or so), the school my mother works at was preparing to throw out / recycle some old computers. I frequently collect old computers, as members of my family frequently break theirs and/or need replacement parts. So my mother asked if she could have the stuff, and was permitted to take it.
A semi-complete list of the haul is as follows:
- One Pentium 4 desktop @ 1.8 GHz. It had a 20 GB hard drive with Windows 98 on it and 256 MB of DDR RAM. I upgraded it to 1 GB of RAM and installed Xubuntu 12.04 on it. My sister is currently using it; I expect it to be broken within a month, as is typical of her
- One AMD Athlon 64 motherboard and processor @ 1.8 GHz, IIRC. No hard drive, RAM, or power supply. Case is nice looking but with a broken power button. I installed 1 GB of DDR RAM, a 20 GB hard drive, and a power supply, and put Ubuntu 12.04 on it (which is slow on such specs, but meh!) Currently sitting in my bedroom doing nothing
- Two 3Com Baseline switches (model 2024). Both have "no power" written on the bottom. Accurate, as neither will power on when plugged in. I suspect a power supply issue rather than something wrong with the motherboard, but they use a proprietary power supply so I can't just swap one out. I will probably experiment with these eventually. Even if I can't get them working, the boxes look nice and are extremely sturdy, so I can always put some goofy project in them
- Two Apple IIGS computers
The ROM01 with Woz lid |
The ROM03 |
The ROM03 also has some slight scratches along the top. I may use Retr0Bright to try to clean it up, but in general, slight yellowing doesn't bother me. Some might even call it a feature.
The ROM02 is packed full of cards, most of which I can't identify on sight. I will have to examine and document them to find out what they do. I don't have any software for the Apples yet, and it's possible some of the cards are so obscure that I may never get them working.
Anyway, back to the haul list:
- Two Apple RGB monitors. They are similarly aged and yellowed. I only got one cable with them, so I can't operate both computers at the same time unless I hook one up to a TV. They didn't work when I first tried them, and I was about to chuck them, but tried one again and it worked. I guess the knobs in the back are sensitive; touching them seems to jiggle the picture out of existence.
Apple RGB Monitor. Not pictured: The one that looks just like it |
- Assorted floppy disk drives. All of them are 5.25", which should make getting disks a fun challenge. I did get a box of 5.25" floppies a few weeks later, but I don't know yet if they're any good or whether they'll work in the GS. I didn't count how many drives I got, but it was about six or seven, which is about four or five more than I'm likely to ever need, assuming they all work. The ones in the middle are a single unit and labeled as a PC TransDrive. They are standard PC-type drives, and apparently go with a special card and software so you can transfer software between PC-compatibles and the GS. I think I may disassemble it and see if the drives are internally the same as an PC drive and/or are swappable. It might make for a neat experiment to switch them with something else, like a 3.5" drive
Stack of 5.25" drives. I don't think this is all of them, just the ones I could grab quickly from my stash |
- An Apple Desktop Bus keyboard. Slightly dirty, but surprisingly unyellowed
- An Apple Desktop Bus mouse. Very slightly yellowed, but much lighter than the computers, monitors, drives, etc...
- A massive external SCSI drive. It looks to be of a similar vintage as the Apples, but it doesn't have a cable and nothing on the ROM01 (which has all the cards) jumps out at me as being a SCSI controller. The sticker on the front has a Q on it and says "42 MEG" underneath, so I assume it's a 42 MB drive
Front of hard drive |
- A cable with a min-DIN 8 connector on both ends. This is the kind of jack used for the serial and printer ports on the GS. I assume it was for a large ugly daisy-wheel printer, so I will henceforth refer to it as the ImageWriter cable
Labels: Apple II GS, Apple IIGS, Apple RGB monitor, junk, ROM 01, ROM 03, ROM01, ROM03, SCSI, Woz
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