Even if he allowed the circuit board to be photographed then it would do the Amiga community a good service.
Ahem - How many years ago did I post this?
http://www.blachford.info/computer/walker/walker_inside.htmlWell, the synth Minator is interested in seems to be in the $3000-$4000 range on eBay and he's proposed a swap for the synth on the offchance someone here has one, so that might be a starting point...
What I'd like and what I get are often two different things!
Anyway, the price is ...whatever it goes for! I haven't set one.
BTW I'd also swap it for a CS80 ;-)
Out of curiosity was was Toni, what did it do?
I think it's a memory controller.
It belongs in a museum!
I'm inclined to agree. Whoever gets it could always loan it to a museum.
I am interested in buying it for the case, I think a new MSI board with an AMD 6 core processor should bring it right up to date, and don't worry, I will even put win UAE into it, so it can be used as an ultra fast Amiga.
The idea of someone buying it and putting another board in it absolutely horrifies me.
You just don't do that to old very rare machines!
That said, it's a prototype. There are no mounting points for anything and you'd have to cut holes in the back to put cables through
.
What did you pay for it yourself?
I'll say after
It was something of a bargain. I got it at the Thendic-France bankruptcy auction.
I think its value is solely as a prototype/curiosity. What is there to gain in making it work 100%/reproducing it? It's a 33mhz A1200 compatible system, and an incomplete one at that, probably with some unresolved hurdles.
Correct. It's a prototype. Given the number of patch wires on the board I suspect it would of needed quite a bit more work before putting it into production.
Some guy over on EAB (or actually it may have been two separate guys) put together their own Walker case replicas, one of them was looking pretty good.
Yes. That looked amazing! It's probably better made than the real thing.
If you wanted a Walker case that's the way to do it.
Walker was just another frantic attempt to do something original carried out by people given not a slightest bit of imagination
I don't agree at all. AT were pushing towards moving to PPC and the Walker was an intermediate step to update the range before the PowerPC machines were ready.
Certainly *nobody* was doing cases like that in 1995. It was all beige boxes back then - even from Apple!
Unfortunately the case if anything was too imaginative, if AT had continued it would have been sold in a different case.
BTW Apparently I haven't read my own pages in a long time - it did read from the floppy when it worked.
I tried to fire it up last night but it wasn't playing ball. It may be the capacitors have gone or something like that but it needs someone qualified to look at it.