I received some some cool (and most importantly, vintage) stuff, from a fellow forumer. Think I should probably let the pictures do all the talking...
Soyo SY-6BA+III
At first it didn't want to post, and almost ended up in waste bin. Not really sure what is going on here, but eventually it powered up fine & POSTed as expected. If I'd have to guess, I'd say the board is having cap issue(s), except they all appear to be fine *shrug*
This one was quite a mystery... After loads of Googling (random numbers & codes, from the PCB) it turned out to be a Siemens board. Weird one, but eventually tested OK!
Yet another Socket 7 board ... except this one comes with pretty cool (and I would even dare to say unique) IBM processor - 6x86. So now I got all the "x86" models, except for earliest 2x86 & 3x86
Teac 5.25" floppy drive ... this one will most definitely come in handy at some point!
Followed by this server back-up unit. It has a tape deck, which (to be completely honest) I've never seen before in my life. Unfortunately, the pinch roller (which drives the tape, pulls it across the head) seems to be shot and it even melted into a goo. Which will no doubt require some serious cleaning. Not sure about the replacement, something tells me that spare parts for this thing will be impossible to find!
Also received this S775 Gigabyte board. At first glance it seemed to be OK, but then I found one of the two BIOS chips wedged inside the PCI slot. The other chip was apparently de-soldered at some point & then re-attached. Don't know why, but eventually I'll give it a try to see if it boots up or not.
Speaking of 4x86 gear, this here is an old 4x86 board. I was surprised to see the unusual, even obsolete socket choice for this kind of board (since most of the other boards already had a ZIF one at this point) so I'm not sure how is this going to work out, especially without any cooling, heatsink on top. But either way, it's here & will most likely come in handy. Now I have a perfect excuse to build yet another 4x86 machine!
Unknown ISA controller card. The parallel port controller looks familiar, but there appears to be more than just your average COM port controller. I'd appreciate any insight on this card!