How many of you still have your origional perchased new VIC?
Sadly no. I sold mine to raise cash to buy a Plus/4.
What a mistake to make!
Happily this sense of loss led to a huge retro collection for a about 5 years before it was fashionable.
Later the collection financed us temporarily during acquisition of small partial clone persons...
The Commodore collection remains as a few Vic 20s, 2 C64 and a Plus/4 now. The rest are pretty much gone.
Very happy to have Vic's back but not quite the same sense of attachment as with my first computer.
What a mistake to make!
Happily this sense of loss led to a huge retro collection for a about 5 years before it was fashionable.
Later the collection financed us temporarily during acquisition of small partial clone persons...
The Commodore collection remains as a few Vic 20s, 2 C64 and a Plus/4 now. The rest are pretty much gone.
Very happy to have Vic's back but not quite the same sense of attachment as with my first computer.
Vic20-Ian
The best things in life are Vic-20
Upgrade all new gadgets and mobiles to 3583 Bytes Free today! Ready
The best things in life are Vic-20
Upgrade all new gadgets and mobiles to 3583 Bytes Free today! Ready
Wow, not too many so far. But it's a wonder we still have ours. It failed sometime in the mid 80s. It servived a move and about 20 years in storage in non working condition. If our family weren't such pack rats...
oh wait, it's not that surprising then.
Shoot, we got junk kicking around way older than that thing!
oh wait, it's not that surprising then.

- highinfidelity
- Vic 20 Nerd
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- Vic 20 Afficionado
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- Website: http://wimbasic.webs.com
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Not quite the same
I still have the same that I bought in 1981, serial no WGC6038.
Back in those days I soldered 6x 2114 on top of existing RAM to get 3Kbytes extra and I replaced the 6502 for a 65C02. I still have the original CPU.
It survived many moves, about 10 I believe and it has served as an automated scarecrow in a cherry-yard !
Now I have replaced the keyboard because of two broken keys and I replaced a VIA.
I used to have a cassette recorder hooked up (not the original one, but a Philips with a small mod), now I use 64HDD.
And of course a 32Kbytes RAM extension.
Back in those days I soldered 6x 2114 on top of existing RAM to get 3Kbytes extra and I replaced the 6502 for a 65C02. I still have the original CPU.
It survived many moves, about 10 I believe and it has served as an automated scarecrow in a cherry-yard !
Now I have replaced the keyboard because of two broken keys and I replaced a VIA.
I used to have a cassette recorder hooked up (not the original one, but a Philips with a small mod), now I use 64HDD.
And of course a 32Kbytes RAM extension.
VICE; selfwritten 65asmgen; tasm; maintainer of WimBasic
Re: Not quite the same
Wow. What was that like?wimoos wrote:it has served as an automated scarecrow in a cherry-yard !
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- Vic 20 Afficionado
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- Website: http://wimbasic.webs.com
- Location: Netherlands
- Occupation: farmer
Sadly I have never made any pictures of the setup. In the cherry-yard we placed all kind of electrical devices that could rattle and scream to chase away the birds from the cherries (also used VICs soundgenerator to act as a siren!).
I built an autostart ML program and put it in an EPROM for the VIC. The VIC would then turn the devices on and off through relays that I connected to the I/O ports. With the screen and the keyboard, the respective duty cycles could be adjusted.
The ultimate effect was that the neighbours complained about the noise and called in the police
.
I still have the program and the EPROM I believe...
I built an autostart ML program and put it in an EPROM for the VIC. The VIC would then turn the devices on and off through relays that I connected to the I/O ports. With the screen and the keyboard, the respective duty cycles could be adjusted.
The ultimate effect was that the neighbours complained about the noise and called in the police

I still have the program and the EPROM I believe...
VICE; selfwritten 65asmgen; tasm; maintainer of WimBasic
- Muzz73
- Vic 20 Hobbyist
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- Joined: Thu May 03, 2012 12:12 pm
- Location: Farmersville, CA,
- Occupation: Consultant
Sadly, I never bought a new VIC-20... had a few used ones, though!
I suppose the closest I've gotten is my 10 yr. old son winning the boxed VIC-20 at CommVEx this year (which I think only had one owner) and he was as happy as a lark!
He was playing Choplifter and Jupiter Lander on the 47" in the living room today!
I suppose the closest I've gotten is my 10 yr. old son winning the boxed VIC-20 at CommVEx this year (which I think only had one owner) and he was as happy as a lark!
He was playing Choplifter and Jupiter Lander on the 47" in the living room today!
BCNU,
Louis
Louis
I've still got my original vic-20, received xmas of '82. I put a lot of miles on that sucker before finally upgrading to a c64 (still got that one also) and then several Amiga 500 computers.
At some point one of us kids (I think it was my brother) bashed two of the function keys off and they were replaced with washers screwed on. Ugly as sin, but worked nicely.
At some point one of us kids (I think it was my brother) bashed two of the function keys off and they were replaced with washers screwed on. Ugly as sin, but worked nicely.
- highinfidelity
- Vic 20 Nerd
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- Location: Torino, Italy.
Correct. Many products of those days came in uselessly HUGE boxes full of air, just to make people believe they were buying much more than they actually did. All the contrary, the VIC came in a box were it could just fit in. I think this also had to do with Tramiel's idea of a "computer for the masses": the VIC had to pile up at its best, to save room and let dealers stock as many as possible.rwv01 wrote:Yeah, I've still got mine as well. They were well designed. Durable and good for repackaging the computer for storage.highinfidelity wrote:For one reason or another I've always kept its original box as well.
I think that's why you see so many VICs that still have it. It just made sense to keep it.

GOD is REAL. Unless declared DOUBLE PRECISION.