
Cherish your Ford and show it some love with TouchUpDirect’s touch up paint that's an exact match to your vehicle. Whether you own a brand new F-150 or a vintage Mustang, there’s no doubt that owning a Ford is like owning a piece of the American auto history. It would be easy to overlook the discontinued brand that used to emanate from Ford the short lived Edsel and the more recently terminated Mercury. Ford did not stop there, the company also built buses, tractors and it successfully participated in making race cars. Over the years, the Ford brand is known as the source of many technological improvements to its line of cars, but the brand is equally illustrious for its trucks. With its ground-breaking manufacturing process and profitable employee measures, Ford brought cars to the people of America. Not only has it built world renowned cars but within a decade of its establishment, the company completely revolutionized the inner mechanism of the assembly-line. and relegate the Macintosh II stock board to a nice, grounded, climate controlled place on my museum wall, but then my IIfx will have a II faceplate, and it provenance will be nearly wiped clean.Dissociating Ford from the American car industry is almost impossible. with AVID and ProTools if I can find them.
#Paintboard fx mac#
My instinct is to swap in the IIfx board, get it a modern 128MB RAM kit, a SuperDrive, and put 7.6.1 on it, and just make the killer 68k mac of all time. I will obviously clean, polish, recap and re-battery both systems in the least invasive way possible. I've got both a clean FANCY IIfx board set and a clean STOCK Mac II. Visible but apparently minor electrolyte corrosion. Soldered VARTA batteries "Made in West Germany".

original video card, 40MB SCSI and 800k floppy. I opened my "new" Macintosh II with joy, and it was in fact as advertised. apparently excellent condition, with some paperwork and provenance for $300 delivered.
#Paintboard fx full#
Lo and behold I found a full Macintosh II IN ORIGINAL BOX with foams and its original mouse and power cord. I figured I'd find something with nice plastics but awful battery leakage and swap things in, mount the destroyed board on my museum wall as an homage and get that beast up. Accessible history suggests that the IIfx is the white wale it is often reported to be, and I've only found ones that are either precious in their own right or KNACKERED. but I'm curious if my RaSCSI can emulate such madnessĪaaaaaanyway, I know I could bench it and mock up a modern PSU, but that baby deserves some respect, so I was looking for IIfx chassis on Craigslist and eBay. I do have a chain of 9.1GB SCSI drives I could attempt to get going. Incidentally if anyone on these forums has more knowledge or experience of the AVID MC I system I'd LOVE some more insights in to it. I'm going to get it properly tended to no matter what. Clip Studio Paint is also ideal for illustrators who specialize in linework. There's a thriving community of users who constantly contribute to the online materials library. The painting brushes are highly customizable and easy to use. A way to clear the GridPane and maintain the Gridlines is as follow : Node node grid.getChildren ().get (0) grid.getChildren ().clear () grid.getChildren ().add (0,node) the first Node in the GridPane (if you set the GridLinesVisible before adding elements in the grid. Clip Studio Paint is optimized for drawing and painting, making it ideal for illustrators. I'm fairly adept at SMD rework and I've already ordered a cap replacement kit. So you should find another way to make your gridlines, and then call. There is a tiny bit of capacitor induced corrosion but the open air display has minimized it and I can find no PCB lead degradation. and the whole thing collecting a little dust and UV but in a carefully climate and humidity controlled setting. RasterOps PaintBoard Prism GT video, DigiDesign ProTools card, ATTO Silicon Express IV Fast SCSI, NuvoTech NuvoLink II Ethernet, and the AVID Base+Composer and Janus MJPEG boards. After doing some contemporary research I've discovered that it's an AVID MEDIA COMPOSER I box. It's been sitting on my museum wall for about 15 years. I didn't have space for the whole thing so I pulled the board, cards and HDD, and discarded the rest (it pains me to admit that now).

I was fairly ignorant at the time, but it was from a client I was working for and I was assured it had been A BEAST back in the day. Many years ago I was gifted a Macintosh IIfx.

(Tale as old as time around here I'd expect) clean up and curate what's valuable, and either sell, give away or ethically recycle the rest.

Now I'm trying to take stock and really decide where the value and enjoyment in my collection comes from. I've been lucky enough to come across lots of great finds and not have to put too big a financial investment in to my collection. So: I've been a vintage collector (read, borderline hoarder with a vague curatorial philosophy) for years. Your perspectives are greatly respected and appreciated.
