Whilst I haven't tried bidding I have watched and a working BBC with Disk Drives might set you back $300 or so. I think this is expensive.
Dave P.S. I have a non-working one in my loft. Whilst it would be nice to have it fixed, I think its low on my list. I have replaced the PSU caps but it still has the "I am not going to reset" bug and sits and whines. It has many extra ROMS but no floppy drive. Therefore if any one is interested let me know off list. > -----Original Message----- > From: cctalk [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Aaron > Jackson > Sent: 25 April 2016 15:21 > To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: Finding classic computers in the UK > > I can't speak for Sinclair and Amstrad, but aquiring BBC Micros in the UK is > incredibly easy. There are many of them and a huge number of them are still > working flawlessly. > > Roughly ten years ago I was secondary school. I noticed a BBC Master > 128 had disappeared from one of the maths classrooms. I immediately went to > ask the IT guys what happened to it. They told me they were getting rid of them > so I asked for one. Still working to this day, dual 5.25" > disk. Only issue is the CMOS battery, which I have not bothered to replace. > > There are usually quite a few on eBay for an acceptable price. > > Aaron > > > > [email protected] writes: > > >> Dave is right, I have bagged the VT220 and will be collecting it > >> soon. They are indeed quite hard to come by. Perhaps you could offer > >> the university a swap for their VT220? I mean a PC with putty on it > >> might suit their needs just as well. > >> You don't say where you are in the UK. I only ask because > >> occasionally I end up with too much stuff and look to pass things on > >> (free if I got them for free). > >> Regards > >> Rob > > > > How hard is it to get things like Sinclair Spectrum, BBC Micro and > > Amdstrad CPC type computers? > > > > - Ethan (USA) > > > > > > -- > > Ethan O'Toole
