Oldest machine I've ever seen for sale...

From: Francesco Bonomi <f.bonomi_at_agora.stm.it>
Date: Wed Dec 22 15:49:54 1999

It seems that nobody has noticed that on ebay is going for sale an IBM 604
calculator. This is the oldest electronic machine I've never seen for sale,
and if it weren't for an ocean dividing me and it...

The IBM 604 was launched in 1948, and kept in commerce up to about 1953.
It's about 2000 pounds total, 1400 tubes, a programmable calculator reading
programs out of an punch reader (offered in this sale).

There is a specimen of this machine at this dutch computer museum, with a
photo of the little thing:

http://www.wins.uva.nl/faculteit/museum/604.html

This is how IBM depicts the 604 in it's own history:

http://www.ibm.com/IBM/history/timeline.nsf/products2

The specimen on ebay has the 521 card punch/reader. This is the description
of the seller:

>IBM 604 weights 1300 pounds. LxWxH 52 1/4" x 31" x 60".
>IBM 521 weights 740 pounds. LxWxH 41" x 25 1/2" x 50".
>They require 220 volts & draw 36 amps running & 30 amps
>at idle. These 1950s era EAM machines have around 1,000
>glass tubes & will heat up a room quickly. Sold as is,
>may not be complete, some manuals but no parts catalogs.
>This pair probably has not been used in 20 years. I repair
>IBM card punches but not these babies!

The machine is in Santa Fe, Texas, and the current bid is $224,
ridiculously low if you consider that a single IBM tube of that series has
been sold for up to $170 on ebay, and there is one currently going for $50.
There are 1400 of them in the machine, and if somebody here does not act I
am afraid the machine will be bought and cannibalized to sell pieces!

There is still 1 day, 5 hours to the sale close! This is the ebay URL:

http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=219958046


Ciao
Francesco Bonomi (from Italy)

PS please let it be clear to anyone that I am not the seller; I just would
like to be the buyer, but I can't becaus of obvious distance problems!
Received on Wed Dec 22 1999 - 15:49:54 GMT

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