Hello!
Having wandered around various vintage communities, I've realised there's a wide range of opinions on what a 'proper' restoration is, with different attitudes prevailing in different communities.
Bearing in mind that if you own it, you can do what you want -- in the grand scheme of things, it's really not that important... but I'm curious: what's your restoration 'philosophy'?
Personally, I have a few preferences:
I'm also wondering what criteria people have for their collections? "I just think they're cool, and want them" is absolutely fine! I started off with "firsts, lasts and oddities". So I have Atari's last computer, last console, first handhelds; Commodore's odd CDTV. But then I ended up getting machines simply because they're cool -- the Mega STE, Mac SE, C64C. Does anyone else have a rhyme or reason?
Having wandered around various vintage communities, I've realised there's a wide range of opinions on what a 'proper' restoration is, with different attitudes prevailing in different communities.
Bearing in mind that if you own it, you can do what you want -- in the grand scheme of things, it's really not that important... but I'm curious: what's your restoration 'philosophy'?
Personally, I have a few preferences:
- No Irreversible Case Modifications. Most electronic modifications are reversible or are simply modern equivalents of long-unavailable components. But no-one (with a few rare exceptions) is making replacement cases for old systems.
- Quality-of-Life Upgrades. I always add modern mass-storage solutions, as large as the system will handle. Same for RAM -- upgrade all the way!
- Contemporaneous Hardware Upgrades. I like upgrading a machine to be as good as it could be as was possible in its lifetime. So overclocking, CPU upgrades -- in principle, fine. But I'm not personally a fan of upgrades which change the nature of the machine. A big example for me is the CT60 upgrade for the Atari Falcon. The board takes over so much of the original hardware and runs at such an increased speed that it doesn't quite feel the same machine. It's more a "CT60 with Falcon I/O" than an accelerated Falcon.
- A/V and Peripherals. I try to get an RGB video output and line-level audio where possible. The reason being, I have all my machines connected via a 16-port VGA/Stereo KVM switch. The output of that goes to an OSSC and then into an AV receiver and large TV. Where possible, I try to add some sort of wireless keyboard/mouse/gamepad too. I like to make them as quick and as convenient to use.
- No Retrobrighting or Painting. Not a strict rule, to be fair. I'll stick a yellowed machine out in the sun to brighten without peroxiding, which is slow but works. And I have a Mega STE whose previous owner botched a retrobright attempt and left it mottled and horrible. I am sanding, priming and respraying that machine -- pretty much the only way to get it anywhere close to looking nice again.
I'm also wondering what criteria people have for their collections? "I just think they're cool, and want them" is absolutely fine! I started off with "firsts, lasts and oddities". So I have Atari's last computer, last console, first handhelds; Commodore's odd CDTV. But then I ended up getting machines simply because they're cool -- the Mega STE, Mac SE, C64C. Does anyone else have a rhyme or reason?