retrobits
Experienced Member
Hi all,
I was recently gifted 3 Altairs (8800b, 8800b turnkey, Icom Attache) and some MITS/Pertec 8" drives, a ton of spare cards, chips, manuals, etc. It's pretty amazing actually. I'm starting restoration on them.
The answer is probably "it can't be done" - but does anyone know how I might find or fashion the following two items:
I'd never seen an 8800b without the front placard before. It's just the metal plate with LEDs and switches. The functions of all the panel controls were labeled with masking tape. I'm told this machine was used in the MITS lab, so it has a kind of fun history. A small few of the switches are bent and the power switch is broken - will need to fix that. They are the flat lever switch style, and I believe I've found online sources for the appropriate American brand replacement models.
I'll make further posts with pictures (and hopefully videos) of the effort as I progress. Step one was taking the 8800b turnkey apart and cleaning it out - it needed quite a bit of cleaning but is in pretty nice shape otherwise.
- Earl
I was recently gifted 3 Altairs (8800b, 8800b turnkey, Icom Attache) and some MITS/Pertec 8" drives, a ton of spare cards, chips, manuals, etc. It's pretty amazing actually. I'm starting restoration on them.
The answer is probably "it can't be done" - but does anyone know how I might find or fashion the following two items:
- Two case lids
- A front panel placard for the 8800b (with labels for switches, LEDs, etc)
I'd never seen an 8800b without the front placard before. It's just the metal plate with LEDs and switches. The functions of all the panel controls were labeled with masking tape. I'm told this machine was used in the MITS lab, so it has a kind of fun history. A small few of the switches are bent and the power switch is broken - will need to fix that. They are the flat lever switch style, and I believe I've found online sources for the appropriate American brand replacement models.
I'll make further posts with pictures (and hopefully videos) of the effort as I progress. Step one was taking the 8800b turnkey apart and cleaning it out - it needed quite a bit of cleaning but is in pretty nice shape otherwise.
- Earl