Well, Evan asked me to come in on Sunday, to review the terminals and inventory them. That's because of my experience in the era of the 1970's and 80's. I was a minicomputer and mainframe site manager, and I was a technical student user at various universities; later I was a digital engineer. I also repair terminals. I'll walk though what I saw, and post a summary here to inform the people Evan is asking for help. I'll send Evan a more detailed report, but he has the list and location-of information I compiled Sunday.
I did a quick survey (two hours), focused on CRT-based terminals and gave the list to Evan. Only warehoused terminals, not ones on display. Mostly there's DEC terminals. A dozen VR-201's (most with "moldy" CRTs). VR-201's are CRT "heads" which have a cabled keyboard, and often were used with DEC desktop computers. Also a few DEC VT-100 or VT-180; the 180's may have a microcomputer. A few DEC 200 or 400 series terminals.
A few each, of ADM-3A, Heath H19 (Zenith Z19), a Perkin-Elmer model, an IBM model, a few other brand/models. There's a small number of one-each of ASCII based commodity terminals - this is what Evan called "obscure" I think. Hazeltine brand, ADDS, and so on. Evan has the list, he can provide details. Some of these have "moldy CRTs" too.
Many terminals used detatched keyboards. There's boxes of keyboards, which I did not survey; so I don't know if there's enough or too many! And there's a few mechanical or printing terminals, which I did not survey but noted. I didn't cover monitors - I'll explain why that matters to terminals.
I saw many "moldy" CRT's - that's when the front of the CRT has a transparent cover that's separating from the glass. Repair means replacing the CRT, which can take most of an hour depending. CRT's are available for tens of dollars for common types, some CRTs can be swapped around from microcomputer monitors, even old TV's. A number of tech volunteers are familiar with these repairs.
Evan said "There are some obscure terminals that we probably don't need". I disagree, for several reasons. If they work, they are useful; if they don't the CRTs may be useful. It's a matter of history - lots of little companies made terminals, it's not all IBM, DEC, HP. Here's my experience, Evan - computer rooms in the era used lots of kinds of terminals. Also: to provide public visitors with a terminal they can bang on. And, terminals won't be EASIER to get in the future.
But, it's ALSO true, there were computer-rooms with one kind of terminal. The HP, Perkin Elmer, IBM, DEC terminals I saw may go with specific minicomputers in the collection. The museum may need more of those. Only DEC VR201's seem to be in any quantity.
Evan's focus on Sunday, was to identify and organize. I'm looking a little further ahead, to repair and potential uses. Now, with a list in hand, Evan can ask others to look over specific terminals for repair, to identify monitors as "CRT donors", to solicit CRT's for replacement. And to start looking to match minicomputers with terminals for display and use. And, to allocate terminals for various purposes, and to tell people what terminals we have or don't have. I'm describing my general results here in the list, so people with terminals or monitors, or skills, are better informed and can offer specific help or items.
Herb Johnson
We definitely picked the right person for this job! Thanks again Herb for the detailed report you gave me yesterday.