Yeah, as long as someone uses it. PM me your shipping address, I'm sure you've moved since last time.
I don't need the 360 controller (have one that I don't have time to hack). You can think of something to end me later.  ; )

Just found these 2 items in a clean-up and don't need them.
I'll take a trade for whatever you feel has equal value for either item or both. Music/game/electronics/broken whatever!

GP2X MIDI Link V5B   (based on Firestarter-music.de plans)
   This gives you midi-out to your volcas or whatever from a GP2X running Piggytracker!

Here's the info:  http://www.firestarter-music.de/gp2x/


and Here's a VGPocket bootleg 8-bit game system. It has a bunch of games on it, and TV out. Use it to mix in and VJ your sets. craptastic!

3

(7 replies, posted in Trading Post)

PM'd with a 100CT

Libretto still for trade. I adjusted my wanted/trade list above. Srry for the confusion.

Hey Matej,
We've experienced that here with a lot of pressed plastics, and I believe it's the oils they use to release the plastic mold. Remember, we're paying less for someone else to make things as fast as possible.
I've had good luck wiping things down with Oxyclean and letting it sit out (outside) for a day. The goal is to break down the mold-release greases. I occasionally use a green car degreaser if it's really bad, though that needs aired-out longer. Plastics usually have very little odor once that coating is gone.

Trading one of my beloved FM machines: This one served as my FM jukebox on my workbench while I work, but it will make a great adlib music maker. It comes with a full port docking station & good power supply. I can dig up other accessories depending on the trade value.

This one has a new bios battery, and sports WIN98 PLUS w/ full DOS. A couple of lines are out on the lcd (never bothered me, as they're all the way to the left & off the adlib screen), and someone broke the little lock-tabs on the screen. It still stays closed, as I refreshed & tightened the hinges last year.

I'd rather a trade, but will sell it in the $120USD range. Trade-wise, I'm looking for a synth in the MT-32 family, sc-55 family, a revo K101 or a hp 100lx. I'm always open to other trades, for synths, handheld consoles etc. If the trade is real big, I'd throw in that boombox behind it smile

@Claudius ... Messaged!

THis is a U.S. Company, but if you have an electronics overstock/junker over there, these are usually cheap:
http://www.goldmine-elec-products.com/p … ber=G21036

They are very commonly used in assembly lines, and still manufactured in various sizes.

THis is a U.S. Company, but if you have an electronics overstock/junker over there, these are usually cheap:
http://www.goldmine-elec-products.com/p … ber=G21036

They are very commonly used in assembly lines, and still manufactured in various sizes.

Cleaning House & found some odds & ends. I'm really only interested in trades for this stuff. I'd take almost anything (even broken --I do electronic repairs) retro-computer, vj stuff, gadgets, game, zines, maybe cassette releases, etc.. I still collect worthless old 999 in 1 pirate carts, too.

Make any trade offer - I'm in Central Pennsyltucky in the U.S.
Not pictured for trade: (message for pics)   
     A crappy Dell laptop 2.6Ghz running Ubuntu. Everything works, but it's ugly and will not die.
     A 1960s Segova (no, I didn't misspell that) amp that I converted to a custom 5W chip-amp ala cigar-box banjo style. I can convert to a busking amp if you want, as it runs on DC power.



Amiga Music Construction Set Disk,Box,instruction Book, like new. There's a "not copy protected" note on this one.


Like New disk set of Cranberry's well known Amiga C compiler with doc & tutorial disks.


VG Pocket pirate NES game handheld. This one has 50 games, TV out and works great. It's smaller than my phone.


Never opened IBM OS2. Still shrinkwrapped..If you collect old OS's or mess with pre-pentiums... you want this smile


This is a 3.5" itsy-bitsy clamshell laptop that runs linux. I used it to stream tangerine radio to an amp for a while.

11

(40 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Pin 2 on the monitor output jack gives a B&W composite. Wire it to an RCA cable where Pin 2 goes to tip and pin 13 goes to the ring (GND).
Also, Pin 1 is audio out, wire it the same way.

At least you can test video and/or audio output and function on it, so the next guy isn't a sucker.

I'm guessing from the solder in the background that this is in your ability! smile

12

(12 replies, posted in Atari)

I can confirm that. I've seen a couple that passed across my bench as soldered ICs. I don't think they are more common, but knowing Atari, they are very late in production (trying to save money) as apposed to an early version. Most Atari products went through a period where they were trying to lay less metal (traces and connector) over less space. This was the next largest cost issue after custom components and board size.

13

(3 replies, posted in Trading Post)

These have moved to eBay for $99 + shipping.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/-/262125041858?

I'd still rather trades, so if someone is still interested, I held a couple aside.

14

(7 replies, posted in Other Hardware)

I think Matej wants to use the same machine to do some beeper music. There are a few Dos drivers that PWM a PC speaker the way folks are doing with the Spectrums.

15

(3 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Looks like I'll have 6 of these left now.
I can set them up to boot straight into LGPT (and shutdown on exit) if someone wants. I may also have a spare usb audio card here, to go with one of them.

16

(7 replies, posted in Other Hardware)

Your idea will work, but not be perfect.. (I'd say, "good enough").
If you're using a mono cable from this jack to the line-in on your card, be aware that some cable jacks are too shallow to correctly get a mono signal from a tied stereo jack. You'd be better off using a mono jack.

Also, by going line-in into your recording computer, you're relying on the speaker volume to control recording volume. This may cause some clipping (Which you may or may not like ). I'd recommend going into a mic-input on your soundcard, as they usually have a pre-amp circuit built in. then you can keep your speaker volume very low, and control volume with the mic-in pre-amp.

Most mic inputs are also mono, so you can then go speaker>mono jack>mono cable>mic input.

Again, this is not a perfect situation to begin with, so your ear will be the best judge.