I also love vintage electronics, though my main fascination is with the 8 bit microcomputers made from 1976-1986. I especially like Radio Shack computers, but really all the 8 bit systems are pretty awesome to me. I even still do some programming once in a while on one of them.
I still have a CoCo III hanging out, although it's easier to emulate them these days.
Hang onto that, they're going for up to $600 these days, and climbing. A very hot item.
You ever look into Drivewire or the CocoSDC?
Drivewire: If you have the resources to make your own Program Paks like I do, you can make an HDBDOS cartridge and can use any PC with Java8 on it as a disk system by using a serial cable.
There is a way to get three of the PC boards needed for $20: https://www.nf6x.net/2013/10/cocoeprompak/ and if you have access to a 3D printer there are various shells available for the board.
Cloud9 will ship you the HDBDOS EPROM for $15 plus shipping if you don't have an EPROM burner:https://www.frontiernet.net/~mmarlette/Cloud-9/Services/index.html
Here is how to build your own serial cable, though you can also buy one if you look around online for a drivewire cable: https://www.cocopedia.com/wiki/index.php/How_to_build_a_DriveWire_serial_cable
Here's where you can get the connector to turn any d-sub9 serial cable into a Drivewire cable: https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/cui-devices/SD-40/96995?s=N4IgTCBcDaIMYAcC0BGADAFjUgdgExAF0BfIA
CocoSDC: The most elegant solution to getting your Coco3 fully realized as a complete standalone system including enough disk space to contain all Coco software ever written. Here's where you can get one: https://thezippsterzone.com/2020/06/25/the-coco-sdc/
The Coco Software Archive: https://colorcomputerarchive.com/repo/
Yeah, I'm familiar with drivewire, I just never really had an interest in doing it because anything I want to run, I just emulate. I probably should try to pick up a replacement keyboard for it, if they still exist - I wore out a 16K and a 64K CoCo II because of the cheap inner membrane RS used on the keyboards.
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