I received something awesome a couple of days ago. Someone who lives here who is also into vintage electronics found me on YouTube, and offered me a vintage computer that he didn't want anymore for free.
It's a Sharp PC-7000 portable PC from 1986. 7 MHz Intel 8086, 320K of RAM, two 5.25" floppy drives, and a monochrome CGA LCD display. The display has an electroluminescent backlight, and this was apparently the very first personal computer with such a display. Reviews touted this computer as having the highest quality, clearest LCD display of any computer at the time. Which is funny, because the display is absolutely horrible, by today's standards anyway. The contrast between lit pixels and unlit pixels is so poor that you're constantly straining to read it. Not because it was designed or implemented poorly - simply because the technology was in its infancy. Being able to make a working 10.5" LCD panel in 1986 was a feat in itself. With that said, if this was the best LCD display of the time, I wouldn't want to see the lesser ones.
This is a pretty small computer. There are no expansion slots, so there is no provision to add a hard drive or any other expansion cards. You did get a decent selection of on-board I/O, though. In addition to parallel and serial ports, you could add an optional internal modem, CGA monitor interface, and a box which allowed you to plug in expansion cards. This unit was purchased with the modem, but sadly not the monitor interface, which would have REALLY come in handy with that display. lol
This unit works fine, but it does have a few minor issues. I accidentally discovered that there is probably a cold solder joint on the motherboard, as when you jostle the computer it does a hard reset. In addition, the PC speaker is barely audible, and I know from other videos of this computer on YouTube that it should be plenty loud. Finally, the power supply seems to be really weak. When the display backlight is at maximum brightness, you can hear the cooling fan slow down. When a floppy drive starts spinning, the fan slows down further, and when the heads on the floppy drive move, the display backlight significantly dims for an instant. I'm thinking maybe bad capacitors are causing both the speaker and power supply issues. Other than that, the computer works just fine. I can't wait to have some more free time and start playing with it.