Comes with some two drives, a Bell & Howell tape deck in leather, as well as lots of printed manuals and the original redbook that came with the unit. Here's a link for anyone interested: https://www.ebay.com/itm/255637857744
I have resold stuff I bought, but never right away. I hold onto most of it for a few years first.I can't fault a guy for trying to make a profit, but selling something for 2x what you paid just a couple months ago is pretty bold...also there's this.
Someone on this forum?Thats whats really has me peeved. I spent hours with this (the 486 i sold) guy helping him build something for him to just take 30+ hrs of my time, let alone stuff I sold just cost of shipping, for him to turn around and sell it. And this flipping crap really is the same thing.
Haha, that would be an epic fail. Trying to advertise it to sell with profit on the very same forum he bought it from a few weeks earlier
ITT: OP got busted not only flipping a computer they had been asking around to find because they "Used to enjoy working on one when I was a kid.", but also lying that the intent was to hold onto it. Even if this was just a case of ADD the optics look really bad.
Protip: It's not bannable to buy and flip but getting caught doing so and leaving a trail of how much you marked it up often gets you privately blacklisted and ignored from most communities the next time you ask for something. Highly collectable machines are usually only sold to people who are trusted not to flip or break it up for profit. Doing so breaks their trust.