Stuff to Give Away

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Revision as of 22:16, 17 November 2005 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (→‎Computer Stuff: scanners)
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Introduction

In the interest of avoiding throwing away stuff which someone might be able to use (but which for various reasons can't be donated), and also being general packrats, we hereby present the following list of items which someone might be able to use. They are available free for pickup. If you live nearby (Triangle area), or on the way to somewhere I happen to be going anyway (e.g. anywhere on I-85 between here and Athens, GA), I might even drop them off for free. If you can pay the shipping, I'll ship to you via USPS or UPS (I can accept PayPal and credit cards).

Contact

The List

Computer Stuff

Inkjet Printers

  • An Epson 480SXU USB inkjet printer which cost me about $50 (including ink) when I first got it but which was amazingly durable in spite of being dropped repeatedly, stored in unventilated containers, left unused for about a year (with ink cartridges still installed), moved all over the place, and generally abused. After all the above had happened, I dug it out, cleaned the heads a few times, and it worked fine for over a year until suddenly one day, in between printing two sheets of paper, the software suddenly reported that it wasn't responding and needed to be taken to an authorized repair center. I've tried a few things, but maybe I haven't tried everything, and maybe someone with some ingenuity and a little more spare time can get it working -- or maybe someone can use the print head, which is probably ok. Driver disk available, and probably ink as well.
  • An HP OfficeJet 890C parallel-port inkjet printer, originally about $325 in 1998. Works except no bi-directional communication and no yellow ink. Broken printout retainer (prevents paper from being sucked back in after being printed -- but this doesn't seem to be a problem). The Windows HP utility will occasionally report that two-way communication is working, but usually it says it isn't (and sometimes it won't let you print when that is the case). I got it to work again once by wiggling the cable, but then it went away again and wouldn't come back. I tried this with 3 different cables, and on one cable with 3 different parallel port modes ("bi-directional", ECP, and EPP), but for all I know the parallel port wasn't working right. I was finally able to get it to print fairly reliably from the computer, and after I put in some fresh cartridges I was able to get some actual ink on the page -- everything looks good except there's no yellow. You can get the printer to do a test page without connecting to a computer by holding down the top button for a couple of seconds.
  • A Canon BJC-310 parallel-port inkjet printer which cost me over $300 new in approximately 1995. Not sure what's wrong with it; might be nothing. I think I had loaned it to someone who then used it for awhile and then reported it had stopped working, and I haven't had the opportunity to try it myself. The nice thing about this printer is that it takes separate cartridges for each ink color, so you only replace what has actually run out. The diagnostics will also let you clean each cartridge separately, which saves ink when only one color is causing trouble (as often happens).

Scanners

  • HP ScanJet 4p SCSI-port scanner, legal size (scan area approx. 141/4" x 83/4"). SCSI cable is currently AWOL, but it's around here somewhere. Includes manual and software (12 3.5" diskettes), in original box. Last worked properly on Windows 95. Drivers did not work right under Windows 98(SE). Got a response from it under Linux, but it wouldn't actually scan; the hardware may have developed problems since the last time it was used, or I may just not have set it up right in Linux.
  • OpticPro 9630P parallel-port scanner: power supply missing; needs DC 24v 550mA center-positive. Worked ok last time it was hooked up. Parallel cable available if needed.

Other

  • Lots of old SIMMs and DIMMs and related forms of memory, late-1990s era. Will try to get them all together and scan an image.
  • Lots of even older PC system boards, late 1980s and early 1990s (80286 through Pentium). I wanted to turn them into wall-art or mobiles, but I don't know when I'll have time for this; if someone else can use them for anything, I'm ready to let go of that project.