NJ, USA: Selling vintage/retro computer collection w/extras
Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2013 11:17 pm
(Every time I read what I've written, it sounds like the vintage-computing equivalent of a Nigerian email scam, or something equally improbable. That said, I'm just going to give up and post it. Let the chips fall where they may.)
My husband died recently and I am now in charge of selling his huge collection of vintage and retro computers, peripherals, software and whatnot. There is more of it than I can begin to sell piece-by-piece online, not only because of the quantity of items, but because I do not know enough about these things to even write a vaguely accurate item description. What I do know is that the lot consumes about 1/3 of the floor space of 2 storage units, not including the items in the basement and the garage. There are old Apple computers (probably a couple Apple II's, or more) a couple of LISAs (they were not well kept, in my opinion) and what I think is software for them, a couple stacks of external HDs for the old Apples (I think they take those old, flat, floppy disks, for the most part) as well as a boatload of keyboards, what I think he said was a Texas Instruments mini computer of some kind, an old Spark(sp?) station, some IBM-y things, and probably even our old Commodore 64 and 128s. There's definitely more, but I don't know what all of it is, nor can I really inventory it all, as I can't even move half of the stuff.
I know it sounds ridiculous--widow who doesn't know what she's got in storage, and all that--but it's entirely true. As I said in the subject line, I live in NJ, and the items are in a storage facility nearby. If anyone wants look over everything and buy the lot, I'm willing to give out the address of the storage place and meet them there so they can see what there is and make an offer. I have been told everything by everyone, from "it's all junk, it will never sell" by auctioneers to "you'll end up paying to get rid of it because of the batteries and CRT monitors" to "ZOMG, sell it on eBay and get rich!"
The estate closing requirements insist that I show the value received for whatever I sell, so I would provide a receipt for everything. I'd really like it if someone just bought it all rather than cherry-picking through the lot, but there really is a lot of stuff and I am sure that it would fill the floor space in a mid-sized UHaul (because I don't think you can really stack some of these things, like monitors).
If anyone in the South Jersey/Philadelphia/Wilmington DE area is interested, please let me know. It would help me settle the estate and offset the substantial cost of storage, and allow me the space to sort through the personal items I can't really get to right now.b (In the interest of everyone's comfort, it would be a bit silly not to have some company along. I'd probably bring a male family member, and any buyer should feel free to bring someone, too. The storage place has cameras everywhere, if that helps.)
I did read the forum rules, and I hope I followed them appropriately. My description is almost certainly inadequate, but it's not for lack of trying--I just don't know enough about them.
Thanks for reading! My husband would've loved this site. (Makes me wonder if he actually had an account here....)
My husband died recently and I am now in charge of selling his huge collection of vintage and retro computers, peripherals, software and whatnot. There is more of it than I can begin to sell piece-by-piece online, not only because of the quantity of items, but because I do not know enough about these things to even write a vaguely accurate item description. What I do know is that the lot consumes about 1/3 of the floor space of 2 storage units, not including the items in the basement and the garage. There are old Apple computers (probably a couple Apple II's, or more) a couple of LISAs (they were not well kept, in my opinion) and what I think is software for them, a couple stacks of external HDs for the old Apples (I think they take those old, flat, floppy disks, for the most part) as well as a boatload of keyboards, what I think he said was a Texas Instruments mini computer of some kind, an old Spark(sp?) station, some IBM-y things, and probably even our old Commodore 64 and 128s. There's definitely more, but I don't know what all of it is, nor can I really inventory it all, as I can't even move half of the stuff.
I know it sounds ridiculous--widow who doesn't know what she's got in storage, and all that--but it's entirely true. As I said in the subject line, I live in NJ, and the items are in a storage facility nearby. If anyone wants look over everything and buy the lot, I'm willing to give out the address of the storage place and meet them there so they can see what there is and make an offer. I have been told everything by everyone, from "it's all junk, it will never sell" by auctioneers to "you'll end up paying to get rid of it because of the batteries and CRT monitors" to "ZOMG, sell it on eBay and get rich!"
The estate closing requirements insist that I show the value received for whatever I sell, so I would provide a receipt for everything. I'd really like it if someone just bought it all rather than cherry-picking through the lot, but there really is a lot of stuff and I am sure that it would fill the floor space in a mid-sized UHaul (because I don't think you can really stack some of these things, like monitors).
If anyone in the South Jersey/Philadelphia/Wilmington DE area is interested, please let me know. It would help me settle the estate and offset the substantial cost of storage, and allow me the space to sort through the personal items I can't really get to right now.b (In the interest of everyone's comfort, it would be a bit silly not to have some company along. I'd probably bring a male family member, and any buyer should feel free to bring someone, too. The storage place has cameras everywhere, if that helps.)
I did read the forum rules, and I hope I followed them appropriately. My description is almost certainly inadequate, but it's not for lack of trying--I just don't know enough about them.
Thanks for reading! My husband would've loved this site. (Makes me wonder if he actually had an account here....)