@@irridesu Buy a mechanical keyboard, put keycaps made of ABS plastics, and let it sit all by itself in a bath of lots of UV light for a few weeks, then let it sit in the bath of UV light while submerged in hydrogen peroxide and water
This was my very first computer. My wife made me give it away in the mid-90s but I had it from the early 80s and used it all the way through the early 90s (straight through college!). I had to rebuild several cables and keep it dusted, but it never failed me. In a way, I miss it, but there have been so many other, better machines in my life since then that I can't be too sad. Thanks for doing this work. It pleased me to see it.
What happened to your keys is the original outer gloss/protective layer of the keys was removed in the retrobrite which led to exposed raw plastic being exposed to air, so the exposed underplastic oxidized. It usually can be neutralized/prevented by giving the keys/plastic a nice alcohol wash after the retrobrite then immediately rub some petroleum jelly or soak in some mineral oil for a while to allow the exposed raw plastic to absorb some of the oil. So you may want to attempt retrobriting a key for a short time just to remove the marbled pattern, then quickly give a alcohol bath, and immediately coat in petroleum jelly or dip into mineral oil for a good 15-30 min, then you should be good to go..
Those are some trippy-looking keys now! Looking forward to part two, since the internals can be a real "fun time" to deal with, especially the disk drives. Haha, my O1 still needs work after all the years I've had it. I appreciate the mention as well!
I’m not even into computers at all and I found myself watching your videos for an hour... great job editing and explaining your steps... makes me want to pull apart my old Atari and give it a good cleaning...
I think I may know a fix for the marbled Keyboard. I don't know if it's for the same reasons but sometimes I see such discoloration on plastic inside my car after some rain drops fall on it through the open window as well as on the bottom of my air washer. The fix for that is Petroleum Jelly or Mineral oil. After applying some to the discolorated area and then wiping off the excess[the plastic appears to absorb it so the surface is not sticky even without washing, which could cause it to discolor again] the white color fades and the plastic is back to normal. You could try it on one key, and if it doesn't work you can just wipe and wash it off. tl;dr Try to coat the keys with Petroleum Jelly or mineral oil.
That is my guess as well. In fact I would put any retro-plastic in mineral oil and leave it out in the same temperature as when it was retro-brighted. He didn't notice it when he first took it off, because it was wet. The water filled in the rough surface of the oxidation. The oil once worked in under heat will do the same, but will not evaporate.
I'm not the greatest at English, but during my research, I just found that mineral oil and the jelly are very similar and that's why I suggested it since the jelly worked for my plastic. I'll surely look into the silicon oil!
I wonder if Trim Shine, Armor All or a similar silicone spray would fix the keys as they work on discoloured plastics on cars. Worth a try 8 bit guy. 😊
My dad used to do this stuff for a living. He even taught himself to program on a Commodore 64. I think that's why I'm so intrigued by these videos. Lol That and the restoration process is very satisfying.
Dude, the feel of your intro tune takes me right back to those 80's sitcoms that we all know and love. Great work; so well made. I often click on the videos just to hear the intro!
My dad was employee 27 at Osborne. We used to have a few at home and it was the first computer that I learned to program in BASIC on. Hope that you have more luck with the rest of the restore, really looking forward to part 2
My new camera has a bizarre white balance and I look green in the images. So I try to correct in post. However, I'm partially color blind so it is a real challenge for me. All I can usually do is get close.
I really admire your dedication to 8 bit restoration. I remember a co-worker that bought an Osborne 1 about 1981-82. I thought that was so cool. A portable computer. Amazing.
On using the White Lithium Grease, thats a metal-on-metal lubricant, and I would definitely go out of my way to avoid using that on plastics, especially older plastics. WLG is going to use a combination of mineral oil and paraffin as its lubricant base, and who knows what else, and it can react with and degrade plastics. Its also not the most stable of greases, and the lubricants can separate from the lithium thickener after not too long, which just leaves things messy. For plastics I recommend sticking with silicone greases. I'm not sure the best spray silicone, but I've had good success with the only one I've tried, WD-40 brand. The best silicone grease I know of is 'Super Lube Silicone Lubricating Compound', and I would highly recommend that as your primary plastics lubricant. Its also waterproof, dielectric, and its still appropriate for low pressure metal on metal applications.
I know this comment is old, but my Unicomp keyboard I have (basically a modern Model M) seems to have white lithium grease on the spacebar stabilizer, and it came that way from the factory.
1st, thank you for the nostalgia and care you take with these classics. i loved my C64 as a kid. 2nd, you are an excellent presenter. Very professional speaker. Love watching your show
It doesn’t feel that long ago that I was waiting every day for the next part to come out. It feels like last week but it’s been about a year now. I guess I have known this channel longer than I thought!
I was born in '95. I have little-to-no idea how a motherboard works (I assume its by magic). I'm afraid to even look at a soldering iron... and yet, here I am. Watching this man restore computers. It's soothing in a strange way... like Bob Ross or The New Yankee Workshop. Kudos!
Swirls in the plastic might be where some of the bromine mixed into the plastic irregularly. I know when I was a plastic mold injection operator we could get color swirls in plastic parts if the mixing speed wasn't fast enough. Also nice find on the Osborne 1.
The reason why I love this guy is the restoration video is the best with him explaining what is the problem and explain how he will do it and that soothing voice
I had a similar thing happen with some old calculator keys when retrobrighting. I found that the best way to get the streaks out is to let the plastic "eat" some oil. Wd-40 soaking was the best thing i found. It seems that the plastic gets dry when bleaching and needs to connect with it's petrolium roots to even out the color.
@@devourerthegoop2887 Yeah, I'm glad he did. The only thing I wonder about with submersion is why use a black crate? Likely to help heat up the water, but you also allow way less light into the crate, which seems way more important. Why not use one of those big clear plastic totes instead?
If I know my vintage machines, it was one of those film capacitors used in the AC filter circuit... Had the exact same thing happen to my TRS-80 Model 4P.
Too bad you can't smell it, that would give it away instantly. When said component gives up the ghost and lets the smoke out, you'l know what it is. No other component I'v encountered has such a distinct smell. TL;DR IMO it's a gone to crap cap.
Can't wait for part 2! This is one of the few retro computers between yours and LGR's channel I've actually seen. I knew a guy who owned 2 of these, and only one worked. He said it took 20 minutes to boot, but I think he was just pulling my leg.
8-bit Guy is getting crazy good at capturing attention. A shot of a fully operational retro computer suddenly going up in smoke, and there's no way I can avoid being glued to my seat for the rest of the video!
You might want to try rubbing some olive oil into the keys to see if it mitigates the mottling effect from the H2O2. Not sure if it will help, but it has helped me with similar issues on vintage SGI workstations.
That is my suggestion to... try a mineral oil... I'd try a synthetic first and then an organic or semi-synthetic... Leave a key over night in it t get it fully saturated and then wipe it clean... Make sure it's a low viscosity oil so it penetrates well though...
That "marble" pattern is very similar to the results I got with my yellowed Super Famicom (I used your method)... I think it has something to do with the heat: As the hydrogen peroxide begins to evaporate, it begins to "bleach" the plastic (parts become too white), making that bizarre effect. That's why I would avoid retrobrighting when it's too hot. (the super famicom was my first attempt, and since then I didn't really need yet to retrobright stuff so this last part is just a guess)
When you're stood still talking about it the camera has a pinkish tint. It's pretty dope, you should do that to the other ones too (but maybe not as extreme)
Well, part of the reason was I originally planned this to be one episode only, probably 20 minutes long. Once I realized it was going to be closer to 30, I decided to break it up.
The 8-Bit Guy Double the AdSense is also nice then ;) Nah but still, I enjoy longer episodes more tbh. Some may not but only you can find out since you have the stats, heh.
I loved this episode. It's a shame about the marbled keys, but they do look better than they did before the retrobrighting. Their original color was rather sad. I adore your opening and closing credits! That music is sensational! Thanks for the video. I really appreciate all your hard, hard work.
Keeping us in suspense about where the magic smoke came from until next episode. :P Can't wait to see the guts of this thing. Thanks for sharing the restoration process.
Well, it isn't smoke from a fire. What happens is the electrolytic filter capacitors in the power supply develop cracks in them over time which lets moisture in. When enough moisture gets in and current is applied they burst apart and release the magic smoke. No fire is involved and it is an very easy fix.
I'm suspecting what happened to the keys was that the difference in contact with the wrap made some parts have more hydrogen peroxide on them, which led to some reaction with the plastic. The same thing happened with the cover, but it was far less noticeable as the cover, being a plain big piece of plastic, is a lot easier to even the contact of the wrap, opposite to the keys which are small pieces of plastic spread out. I suspect the temperature outside had to do with it as well, as apparently those marks appeared when they started to get colder.
I have to say these are my favorite videos of yours. Very thorough and well presented. I also recommend the Computer Chronicles video on entrepreneurs as Osborne is featured in that episode. I may well attempt to restore a Compaq Portable due to inspiration from these!
As a Osborne owner myself, my heart sank when I saw the magic blue smoke. I hope you do get it working--they're very interesting machines. And I'm worried about the keys. Do you have any idea on how the marbling happened?
You're my man are a legend. I saw hundreds of *watch this video and you'll be asleep at the end* None of them worked but your videos... Idk they have some energy in them. Its interestnig and enjoyable but i always feel like im going to collapse at the end. Fell asleep like 3 times on your videos. Just wanna say thank you for curing my sleeplessness.
The new intro looks like an infomercial -thingy from the 80's..... the old one was much better! Oh well, just an intro... I'll get over it, eventually.. I think :DDD
Hi. I don't really have much of value to say, I just wanna say I'm a huge fan of your videos and that you're my favourite nerd. Also your long videos kick ass. I could listen to you talk about old tech for hours.
I know I'm **way** late to the party, but Mother's Back to Black will help a lot with the bloom on those keys. Fixes a lot of discoloration due to bloom. You'll want to buff it off real well after it's had time to do it's thing or it'll feel really greasy.
Its about time some genius came up with a proper solution to fixing yellowed plastic, non of this making your own recipe and sticking it out in the sun, I fix vintage toys and yellowing is a massive problem, I am new to this site and its brilliant, keep it up
These videos are so relaxing, kinda like asmr or something.Some people like old cars being restored to their original state. Me, i like pc's...... LGR, 8 Bit Guy these are what makes me happy ;-)
I like the "marble" look to the keys. Super cool.
I would love them on a modern mechanical keyboard
I was recomended it now, after 4 yrs?
@@irridesu Buy a mechanical keyboard, put keycaps made of ABS plastics, and let it sit all by itself in a bath of lots of UV light for a few weeks, then let it sit in the bath of UV light while submerged in hydrogen peroxide and water
Same
It certainly tells a story.
This was my very first computer. My wife made me give it away in the mid-90s but I had it from the early 80s and used it all the way through the early 90s (straight through college!). I had to rebuild several cables and keep it dusted, but it never failed me. In a way, I miss it, but there have been so many other, better machines in my life since then that I can't be too sad. Thanks for doing this work. It pleased me to see it.
Wives... the natural enemy of fun.
What happened to your keys is the original outer gloss/protective layer of the keys was removed in the retrobrite which led to exposed raw plastic being exposed to air, so the exposed underplastic oxidized. It usually can be neutralized/prevented by giving the keys/plastic a nice alcohol wash after the retrobrite then immediately rub some petroleum jelly or soak in some mineral oil for a while to allow the exposed raw plastic to absorb some of the oil.
So you may want to attempt retrobriting a key for a short time just to remove the marbled pattern, then quickly give a alcohol bath, and immediately coat in petroleum jelly or dip into mineral oil for a good 15-30 min, then you should be good to go..
Would general use also help restore it a little? I know lots of keyboards get glossy over time with just oily fingers
absolutely, there's no substitute for natural cheeto oils
Raven thanks google
@Thomas Munn
c o p e
Thanks Raven, my other guess was a possible reaction to the water itself. Alcohol cures all though kinds of cleaning problems >__
Am I the only one who finds these videos really relaxing to watch? It's so satisfying to see it get repaired and cleaned.
I am on my grandma's account and I also like how satisfying restoration is.
@@tinaochoa7289 Same
Those are some trippy-looking keys now! Looking forward to part two, since the internals can be a real "fun time" to deal with, especially the disk drives. Haha, my O1 still needs work after all the years I've had it.
I appreciate the mention as well!
Lazy Game Reviews I love you Clint, please be my retrowaifu
A wild LGR appeared!!
LGR is here
and he brought
FANCY SANDWICHES
for everyone!
going to watch the osbourne LGR episode now
Lazy Game Reviews I'm searching for the LGR Osborne 1 video right now!!!
Freaking love the care and respect you give these old machines.
Id honestly love to see a 2+hr episode
I watch these while I do my programming so... the longer the better
damn. i can only code in total silence. i wish i was like you :P
Always been enjoying your videos so much! keep your passion going!! :-)
GOTCHA
Hi
Uchuu kitaaaaa
I’m not even into computers at all and I found myself watching your videos for an hour... great job editing and explaining your steps... makes me want to pull apart my old Atari and give it a good cleaning...
Finally and episode where something goes boom.
Boom boom boom boom
Boom
*an
*b o o m*
Lol😂
I think I may know a fix for the marbled Keyboard. I don't know if it's for the same reasons but sometimes I see such discoloration on plastic inside my car after some rain drops fall on it through the open window as well as on the bottom of my air washer. The fix for that is Petroleum Jelly or Mineral oil. After applying some to the discolorated area and then wiping off the excess[the plastic appears to absorb it so the surface is not sticky even without washing, which could cause it to discolor again] the white color fades and the plastic is back to normal. You could try it on one key, and if it doesn't work you can just wipe and wash it off.
tl;dr Try to coat the keys with Petroleum Jelly or mineral oil.
That is my guess as well. In fact I would put any retro-plastic in mineral oil and leave it out in the same temperature as when it was retro-brighted. He didn't notice it when he first took it off, because it was wet. The water filled in the rough surface of the oxidation. The oil once worked in under heat will do the same, but will not evaporate.
Yeah, but instead of mineral oil I would take silicon oil, best for plastic
OOhhh interesting! I will keep that in mind.
I'm not the greatest at English, but during my research, I just found that mineral oil and the jelly are very similar and that's why I suggested it since the jelly worked for my plastic. I'll surely look into the silicon oil!
I wonder if Trim Shine, Armor All or a similar silicone spray would fix the keys as they work on discoloured plastics on cars. Worth a try 8 bit guy. 😊
Oh no, not the magic smoke!
Magic smoke smells like nerd tears and shouting.
I know this first hand.
Quick! Before it disappears!
its why its called the smoke test Finish HIM !!!
Osborne smoke, don't breathe this!
It’s just decoration
My dad used to do this stuff for a living. He even taught himself to program on a Commodore 64. I think that's why I'm so intrigued by these videos. Lol That and the restoration process is very satisfying.
Dude, the feel of your intro tune takes me right back to those 80's sitcoms that we all know and love. Great work; so well made. I often click on the videos just to hear the intro!
My dad was employee 27 at Osborne. We used to have a few at home and it was the first computer that I learned to program in BASIC on. Hope that you have more luck with the rest of the restore, really looking forward to part 2
I like the marbling effect on the keys post reassembly, to be honest...
Same, actually I think more keyboards should have marble textures
Same
These replies are on a 3 year old comment
@@jandajanda2242 SO. WHAT.
Marble looks a lot better than yellow for sure.
Is it just me, or are your studio shots slightly pink?
Blowtorch the Robot ditto, one of his other recent videos seemed tinted slightly orange
not just you, i noticed it too
Apparently he got a new camera but i think he needs to adjust the white balance
My new camera has a bizarre white balance and I look green in the images. So I try to correct in post. However, I'm partially color blind so it is a real challenge for me. All I can usually do is get close.
The 8-Bit Guy It's all good, videos are still awesome!
The marble pattern actually gives it some kind of a modern vibe. Looks cool!
Received notification after 2 hours.I'm proud of you RUclips
Patreon supporters got to watch before us.
It hasn't been two hours since it was uploaded
wew
stampycat656/stampylongheadjr well, roughly
DarkGabbz reeeeee
I really admire your dedication to 8 bit restoration. I remember a co-worker that bought an Osborne 1 about 1981-82. I thought that was so cool. A portable computer. Amazing.
On using the White Lithium Grease, thats a metal-on-metal lubricant, and I would definitely go out of my way to avoid using that on plastics, especially older plastics.
WLG is going to use a combination of mineral oil and paraffin as its lubricant base, and who knows what else, and it can react with and degrade plastics.
Its also not the most stable of greases, and the lubricants can separate from the lithium thickener after not too long, which just leaves things messy.
For plastics I recommend sticking with silicone greases. I'm not sure the best spray silicone, but I've had good success with the only one I've tried, WD-40 brand.
The best silicone grease I know of is 'Super Lube Silicone Lubricating Compound', and I would highly recommend that as your primary plastics lubricant.
Its also waterproof, dielectric, and its still appropriate for low pressure metal on metal applications.
I know this comment is old, but my Unicomp keyboard I have (basically a modern Model M) seems to have white lithium grease on the spacebar stabilizer, and it came that way from the factory.
it's metal-on-plastic.
1st, thank you for the nostalgia and care you take with these classics. i loved my C64 as a kid. 2nd, you are an excellent presenter. Very professional speaker. Love watching your show
"definitely different than they did before."
- The 8-bit Guy
I like that I'm taking that lol.
9:09 holy crap what a difference! I had no idea you could restore the old plastic! Great job.
i love this tipe of video!
Ludo Thorn type*
type*
@James manson no dual correction*
what are you talking about*
I love these tipe of comments
How good he is at fixing this stuff it's unbelievable I love it
I love the intro! You should do more restorations!
this is a comment that describes its context and proves you can read
I HATE that intro!
It doesn’t feel that long ago that I was waiting every day for the next part to come out. It feels like last week but it’s been about a year now. I guess I have known this channel longer than I thought!
Anyone else think the keys kinda look cool like that?
Ye I do
It reminds me of 90's web design
Yeah
tbh I liked how the Osborne looked before the restoration better than afterwards. The green tint made it look like a military device
@@LiquidSnakeSSJ4 imo looks more like a brassy matte color
You're one of those few tech channels that don't bore me to death. Nice video.
You had a real uxwbill "Smoke Test!" moment there.
I was born in '95. I have little-to-no idea how a motherboard works (I assume its by magic). I'm afraid to even look at a soldering iron... and yet, here I am. Watching this man restore computers. It's soothing in a strange way... like Bob Ross or The New Yankee Workshop. Kudos!
Swirls in the plastic might be where some of the bromine mixed into the plastic irregularly. I know when I was a plastic mold injection operator we could get color swirls in plastic parts if the mixing speed wasn't fast enough. Also nice find on the Osborne 1.
The reason why I love this guy is the restoration video is the best with him explaining what is the problem and explain how he will do it and that soothing voice
I had a similar thing happen with some old calculator keys when retrobrighting. I found that the best way to get the streaks out is to let the plastic "eat" some oil. Wd-40 soaking was the best thing i found. It seems that the plastic gets dry when bleaching and needs to connect with it's petrolium roots to even out the color.
i second this
The intro for this Osborne serious is super sick! It's so up-beat and poppy, reminds me of classic synth from the 80's/90's! FABULOUS!
"The tried and true method."
Literally the worst retrobrite experience on the whole channel.
Yeah, it's weird to see these old videos where he uses this obsolete method.
At least he found a better way
@@devourerthegoop2887 Yeah, I'm glad he did. The only thing I wonder about with submersion is why use a black crate? Likely to help heat up the water, but you also allow way less light into the crate, which seems way more important. Why not use one of those big clear plastic totes instead?
@@KnightRider378 I think he uses it because it's the biggest he could find. He uses a smaller and transparent crate for smaller things in occasion
Loved the audio while you were narrating. It was cool to hear everything as you took it apart/put it together.
I love these old portable computers!!!!!
portable like the foundation of a 2 story house!
That's why they were sometimes called "luggables". :)
I'm glad to see the channel grow. I love your videos, keep up the good work!
Aww.... I wanted to see the component the magic smoke escaped from!
Nathan Boody this
You'll see that in part 2.
If I know my vintage machines, it was one of those film capacitors used in the AC filter circuit... Had the exact same thing happen to my TRS-80 Model 4P.
Too bad you can't smell it, that would give it away instantly. When said component gives up the ghost and lets the smoke out, you'l know what it is. No other component I'v encountered has such a distinct smell.
TL;DR IMO it's a gone to crap cap.
4P... ...P for what? D was for Deskmate in ROM.
Another great vid, and what a treasure of a computer! Every time you do a restoration I learn something new. Can't wait for Part Two!
I just started watching you videos today I love them I’m obsessed with tech restoration videos of yours bye
This is definitely your best restoration video you've ever made!!
Love the channel
*sees The 8-Bit Guy uploaded new video* - me: YAAAY!
Can't wait for part 2! This is one of the few retro computers between yours and LGR's channel I've actually seen. I knew a guy who owned 2 of these, and only one worked. He said it took 20 minutes to boot, but I think he was just pulling my leg.
Is that a Weyland-Yutani Osborne 1?
8-bit Guy is getting crazy good at capturing attention. A shot of a fully operational retro computer suddenly going up in smoke, and there's no way I can avoid being glued to my seat for the rest of the video!
You might want to try rubbing some olive oil into the keys to see if it mitigates the mottling effect from the H2O2. Not sure if it will help, but it has helped me with similar issues on vintage SGI workstations.
zuctronic thanks ill try that and let ya know, i did a similar thing to some lego
That is my suggestion to... try a mineral oil... I'd try a synthetic first and then an organic or semi-synthetic... Leave a key over night in it t get it fully saturated and then wipe it clean... Make sure it's a low viscosity oil so it penetrates well though...
I like all your videos, but I love your restoration ones! Thank you for sharing.
David: -Plugs in the Osborne-
The Osborne: “KRAKATOA!!!!!!”
I like those 'marbled' keys. Makes it feel special.
That "marble" pattern is very similar to the results I got with my yellowed Super Famicom (I used your method)... I think it has something to do with the heat: As the hydrogen peroxide begins to evaporate, it begins to "bleach" the plastic (parts become too white), making that bizarre effect. That's why I would avoid retrobrighting when it's too hot. (the super famicom was my first attempt, and since then I didn't really need yet to retrobright stuff so this last part is just a guess)
Can't wait for part 2! Love your restoration videos, so satisfying! Keep it up David!
When you're stood still talking about it the camera has a pinkish tint. It's pretty dope, you should do that to the other ones too (but maybe not as extreme)
man, I really love your channel, keep up the good work!
You've cut this episode a bit too short tbh, some parts are far too quickly shown. Please go back to your old style, I love longer episodes :)
Well, part of the reason was I originally planned this to be one episode only, probably 20 minutes long. Once I realized it was going to be closer to 30, I decided to break it up.
The 8-Bit Guy Double the AdSense is also nice then ;) Nah but still, I enjoy longer episodes more tbh. Some may not but only you can find out since you have the stats, heh.
RUclipss drunk again
this video uploaded 3 mins ago
this comment was almost an hour old...
Not drunk, Patrons get to view his videos a bit earlier
EpicLPer i agree i like the longer videos
I loved this episode. It's a shame about the marbled keys, but they do look better than they did before the retrobrighting. Their original color was rather sad. I adore your opening and closing credits! That music is sensational! Thanks for the video. I really appreciate all your hard, hard work.
Ozzy Osbourne got a computer.
This is my fuckin' computer
Me too. XD
Osbourne Cox?
@@majorinconvenience We were wondering if you were worried about the security...of your shit.
I love Ozzy
Keeping us in suspense about where the magic smoke came from until next episode. :P
Can't wait to see the guts of this thing. Thanks for sharing the restoration process.
Noo you didn't show us what caused the fire! :(
Well, it isn't smoke from a fire. What happens is the electrolytic filter capacitors in the power supply develop cracks in them over time which lets moisture in. When enough moisture gets in and current is applied they burst apart and release the magic smoke. No fire is involved and it is an very easy fix.
You'll see it in part 2.
ooh, you're such a tease! :P
+The 8-Bit Guy is it just a joke?
The flux capacitor was obviously fluxing too much; which unfortunately causes heat and smoke.
Thank you so much for the years of education and entertaining content, David. You're the best!!!
Thumbs up every time I hear the opening tune!!!
I used one of these briefly back in the day. Always loved its smell and the disk noises it made.
Those keys actually look pretty cool
Awesome work! I love seeing an old machine get some cleaning done.
I'm suspecting what happened to the keys was that the difference in contact with the wrap made some parts have more hydrogen peroxide on them, which led to some reaction with the plastic. The same thing happened with the cover, but it was far less noticeable as the cover, being a plain big piece of plastic, is a lot easier to even the contact of the wrap, opposite to the keys which are small pieces of plastic spread out. I suspect the temperature outside had to do with it as well, as apparently those marks appeared when they started to get colder.
Back in the day, I really wanted one of those Osbornes. I had built the computer I was using at work and it was not easy to move around.
1:36 Damn I even have the feeling of smelling that smoke. What kind of black magic it is lol I'm the only one?
I have to say these are my favorite videos of yours. Very thorough and well presented. I also recommend the Computer Chronicles video on entrepreneurs as Osborne is featured in that episode. I may well attempt to restore a Compaq Portable due to inspiration from these!
The keys actualy look kinda cool imo :D
I love history. I love keeping it alive. You take it and polish it up. Instant subscribe.
"gizmo"
"went to town"
Texas! I love it.
The mat on the keyboard is so handy.
It prevents dirt and grime from building up.
As a Osborne owner myself, my heart sank when I saw the magic blue smoke. I hope you do get it working--they're very interesting machines. And I'm worried about the keys. Do you have any idea on how the marbling happened?
I think it's the surface becoming porous or roughened up, and i think it can be buffed out.
This channel is interesting and watching somehow gives me warm feelings of nostalgia
never clicked to new video that fast :D
I want to do restorations and repairs just like you do. It's amazingly satisfying to watch you work.
5:58 That bent pin is killing me!
ikr, I saw 2 of them. you could say that I'm TRIGGERED
You're my man are a legend. I saw hundreds of *watch this video and you'll be asleep at the end* None of them worked but your videos... Idk they have some energy in them. Its interestnig and enjoyable but i always feel like im going to collapse at the end. Fell asleep like 3 times on your videos. Just wanna say thank you for curing my sleeplessness.
I miss the clicky sounds of the keyboard in the intro :(
couldn't think of a name He had to switch from 720p to 1080p video, and reconstructing an intro in a new resolution is really difficult.
Me too
Julia K......it's not hard....
The new intro looks like an infomercial -thingy from the 80's..... the old one was much better!
Oh well, just an intro... I'll get over it, eventually.. I think :DDD
I was thinking the same thing. The sounds of the plastic parts working together was kinda cool.
The keys are sort of cool this way. They remind me of other devices of that era where this effect was intentional.
Can't wait for part two!
I think Marbled looks better than yellow
Well, that wasn't yellow, it was olive drab
Nice work on a frustrating restoration job. Looking forward to part 2!
1:35 Really scared me more than it should have.
Sweet, another retro-bright episode. My favorite.
Your white balance is off. At least in the first clip.
I love the colouring on the keys! It looks fancy! I want one like that!!
I actually really like the marbled streaks, I want keys like that.
Hi. I don't really have much of value to say, I just wanna say I'm a huge fan of your videos and that you're my favourite nerd.
Also your long videos kick ass. I could listen to you talk about old tech for hours.
Idk, the marbling makes it look like some kind of executive edition hah! Pretty cool.
It might not be intended, but the marble looks awesome.
I know I'm **way** late to the party, but Mother's Back to Black will help a lot with the bloom on those keys. Fixes a lot of discoloration due to bloom. You'll want to buff it off real well after it's had time to do it's thing or it'll feel really greasy.
i bet it was a rifa capacitor that blew at 1:35
Its about time some genius came up with a proper solution to fixing yellowed plastic, non of this making your own recipe and sticking it out in the sun, I fix vintage toys and yellowing is a massive problem, I am new to this site and its brilliant, keep it up
This episode is a bit too short but still enjoyable nonetheless
These videos are so relaxing, kinda like asmr or something.Some people like old cars being restored to their original state. Me, i like pc's...... LGR, 8 Bit Guy these are what makes me happy ;-)
try car wax to remove the marble effect
What an amazing video project and layout for all audiences to watch.
maybe you should buy a decent UV lamp
the sun is a deadly laser
@@UltraNyan not anymore, there's a blanket
Linuxpunk81 ultra violet ™️📶=🚮
Ultra Nyan yes the sun is a deadly laser the sun is a deadly laser
These videos are so cathartic. Thank you!