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Thread: Doogie Howser's PS/2

  1. #1

    Default Doogie Howser's PS/2

    First of all, LOL... ...and secondly, I've never seen an IBM PS/2 series monitor (it looks like an 8513) with that light gray trim around the CRT. All the ones I've ever seen had the dark gray accent color there. Maybe it was a custom repaint for the show?


  2. #2

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    Or just a trick of the lighting? Doogie's skin also seems to be just about the same shade of gray...

    --T
    Jam the computer...trash every lethal machine in the land! --Timothy Leary
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  3. #3

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    Quote Originally Posted by Terry Yager View Post
    Or just a trick of the lighting? Doogie's skin also seems to be just about the same shade of gray...

    --T
    No, it was definitely repainted, either by IBM or by someone else. On a stock PS/2 8513 monitor, the IBM logo in the upper left corner is the same dark gray (almost brownish) color as the bezel surrounding the picture tube. Here the logo is the original color but the bezel is much lighter.

  4. #4
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    I wouldn't be so sure about that. I've seen a PS/2 monitor a few years ago in a thrift store that looked exactly like that one, same colors and everything.

    --Jack
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  5. #5

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    IIRC, the color monitors had different color badges than the mono. Could this possibly explain the difference? The mono badges had the lettering in gold (silver?), while the color badges had full-color (R,G,B) lettering.

    --T
    Jam the computer...trash every lethal machine in the land! --Timothy Leary
    _____________________________________________

    Please visit the Vintage-Computer Wiki. Contributers welcome.

  6. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by Terry Yager View Post
    IIRC, the color monitors had different color badges than the mono. Could this possibly explain the difference? The mono badges had the lettering in gold (silver?), while the color badges had full-color (R,G,B) lettering.
    Aren't you thinking of the ThinkPad logo? It is the only multicolored IBM logo I can think of.



    The PS/2 series logo was either chrome-painted raised type or white printed text, either on a dark brownish gray background. There may have been some variations, but that was the usual format.

  7. #7

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    Could be, I spend a lot of time staring at ThinkPads.

    --T
    Jam the computer...trash every lethal machine in the land! --Timothy Leary
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    Please visit the Vintage-Computer Wiki. Contributers welcome.

  8. #8
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    Looks better with the lighter bezel.
    Vintage Computers and Parts is now LegacyComputersnparts.com/catalog

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  9. #9

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    the first PC I bought with my own money new was an IBM PS/2 Model 25, w/ the "grey shades" (not color) VGA monitor. I immediately got tired of the dual drives and found a hard drive for the thing.
    http://www.vintagecomputer.net (my blog) and http://www.midatlanticretro.org (VP MidAtlantic Retro Computing Hobbyists)

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by billdeg View Post
    the first PC I bought with my own money new was an IBM PS/2 Model 25, w/ the "grey shades" (not color) VGA monitor...
    I can elaborate a little more that the grayscale CRT was only offered on the 8086 version of the Model 25 (later 286 and 386SX version always had color CRTs). Of course to say two 3-1/2" floppy drives (720Kb stock, but can be upgraded to a 1.44Mb drive) is also the 8086 version. And truly the grayscale Model 25 wasn't VGA, but rather MCGA.

    Back to the discussion, there are later series of IBM systems (like the ValuePoints) that kept the oval logo. Many, many different types of monitors, so I doubt it was redone just for the show. It's either the lighting or a model with a lighter colored bezel.

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