Not a great haul, but at least anything.
I love harddrives so much that I try to rescue every single one. But few days ago I came around two HDDs that even I was hesitating to get them. About two weeks ago it was snowing so hard that I can't even remember if it was this bad before. Week after it started melting in daylight, but at night the temperature dropped well below 0°C (-15°C - again, don't remember that happening before). It was melting and freezing and so on, and on the bottom very thick ice was formed (3-5 cm). And in this mess were trapped two harddrives. When it melted enough to the point I saw them, I had to KICK them out of the ice and brought them home, just to discover that somebody got a screwdriver and pryed the circuit board off. Funnily enough, when I tried to swap the board, they came alive and even passed the seektest, but because of inccorrect alignment they couldn't read anything. So the data IS recoverable (not that I want to).

When the snow/ice melted all the way, I returned and found a VCR. I need one because my grandmas one is waaaay past its mileage mark (maybe 4 or 5 times - super cheap Watson VCR working everyday since 2004, what got me was that it has page on radiomuseum 😁 http://www.radiomuseum.org/r/watson_video_cas … er_vr_3731.html). It is some Daewoo VCR (T220P maybe? I don't remember...), pretty cheaply made, but it has way less on odometer. It was eating tapes and not ejecting them. Quickly I found out that it just needed to clean the mode switch, heads and lubricate the pulling mechanism and now it works great.

Yes... You see correctly. The label really says what you think it says. 😁
I don't watch this kind of... umm... filmography, but when I pulled it apart I found this tape hopelessly stuck inside. I just can imagine that horny teenager wanted to see some action, but the tape got stuck, so rather then admiring it to parents he just threw it to the dumpster. 😁
What is way a little bit scary, when I tried to play it, just for lols and giggles, there was a TV show about Multiple sclerosis...
And today I found this beast. It is Tesla Sonet Duo reel-to-reel player from early 1960s. It has steel case, weighs about 10 kilograms and has 5 tubes inside! (2 audio output, 1 eye tube and two more that I couldn't identify from first sight)


There is no way I would plug it into outlet, it needs recapping and some love before I can. But hey, in our country this is legendary piece of equipment!
Bah, super long post again. Please tell me, is it interesting or annoying when I write those long posts?