Jonathan Chapman > retrobrewcomputers.org
Their boards are high-quality modern production with proper hard gold edge plating ...
It wasn't clear if they (Goodman) is offering what they call "unbuffered" or "plain" S-100 prototype boards. The buffered board is apparently expected to be memory or I/O, not a processor board or bus-controlling board such as a new-designed 8080 board as Joe Giliberti may be considering. And without detailing the differences, there's different flavors of S-100 bus; Joe may desire the earliest kind for IMSAI/MITS operation. Prices at "auction" for old-stock S-100 prototype boards with no layouts, as old stock commercial products, seem to be in the $25-$50 range plus shipping. The newly produced bare boards at retrobrew, seem to be in that range also. The cheapest possible least-desired old S-100 cards touch that range also, as I've observed. Thus I'd call that range "the bottom" for S-100 boards of any sort. And it's hard to find S-100 connectors below $10 a pop, for that matter, they are often more. It's not appreciated, that S-100 PC mount connectors came in two pin-widths between the two rows. Different brands of backplanes used one or the other. It's a gotcha to buy the wrong width connectors for a particular unpopulated backplane. So much for "standard" S-100. ;) Regards, Herb Johnson -- Herbert R. Johnson, New Jersey in the USA http://www.retrotechnology.com OR .net preserve, recover, restore 1970's computing email: hjohnson AT retrotechnology DOT com or try later herbjohnson AT comcast DOT net