the seller *gave* it to me! it's a D cell manufactured during World War II and it hasn't leaked and still has voltage! "extra long life battery" indeed!
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the seller *gave* it to me! it's a D cell manufactured during World War II and it hasn't leaked and still has voltage! "extra long life battery" indeed! 20 comments
my other flea market finds include this prototype of the PrairieTek 240, the 40MB followup product to the 220, which was the first 2.5" hard drive on the market. i also got this Shugart 606 hard drive (10MB). i don't think they did very well in the PC market. another find is this WD-2120D, a 120MB drive meant for the first IBM Thinkpads, like the 700 and 720. it is not IDE nor SCSI -- it is IBM ESDI, a poorly named drive interface that is effectively IDE but over Micro Channel and with a different register interface. i imaged the drive, but it just contains the same garbage sector over and over again. the only thing that changes is this 32-bit number, which increments. i suppose it's been wiped. finally, i got a little plastic tray with an Apple part number. 073-0061. it seems to be a parts kit for an Enhanced IIe or IIe Platinum. @tubetime Looks like those ROMs are for the original non-enhanced IIe. @tubetime You said your dad knew Al Shugart, correct? And IIRC, he said that he was a bit foppish in person? @cr1901 grandfather knew him. and, weirdly enough, i know his grandson. @tubetime If I can't get even the person right, dunno where I came up with the foppish part then :o. Yay fallible memory... @tubetime I'm glad the warranty seal is still intact, might be worth trying to RMA it.
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@tubetime the brand name was derived from "ever ready", as they were the first to build and advertise full sealed cells that do not leak or dry out @tubetime the benefit of brown coal batteries I assume. |
@tubetime I was really hoping you’ll do just that - measure if it’s still any good 😃