Yes it will be running but only because you are restoring it... keep in mind when you got it, it was in pieces and not running properly so it didn't last it's first 40 years.
Wrong.
I'm just meticulous, but it was all there and with little more than re-seating some connections I could have already been using it.
Was it tip-top? No, but that's not a design issue...it was neglected. That has nothing to do with its longevity. You'll die an earlier death too if you don't take care of yourself. But in spite of that the solenoids worked, motors worked, I've done
nothing to or for the electronics modules and they all work 100%. I'm spending a lot of time cleaning it up nice, redoing some stuff that wasn't done well by somebody along the way, replacing bearings, etc...but NONE of that makes or breaks it running and doing its thing.
Read my MM-1000 thread and show me where I'm wrong.
Still running after 40 years even after some neglect, and its got a
lot of miles left...period.
Part of my job is domain administration for our business network of about 70 machines and 80 seats. We operate on slim resources so we don't have the luxery of aging machines out on a regular 3, 4 or 5 year schedule...We've got machines running XP and business apps that are over 10 years old. I've babied them. They'll HAVE to be aged out soon because of a looming need to align the network on a 64-bit field...our server we'll be getting this next budget year will have enough horsepower to run virtual servers so we'll be able to operate on 32
and 64-bit but eventually it will be advantageous from an administative standpoint to move everthing to 64-bit.
Now...there's some forced obsolesence for you, but even so I think its pretty rare to have 10, 11, 12 year old PC's chugging away. The problem is that when the micro stuff ages, and because it all operates on such low current, when something DOES finally go kaput the chances of that "something" taking out any number of nodes exists...I've got a boneyard of computers that have met their demise in that way. Hey...if a hard drive goes, no big...optical drive? No sweat. Bad RAM? Okay...can usually fish that out and recover unless it took a hit from a PSU failure...then usually there are "co-morbidities". But MOBO issues? Forget it...down it goes to the boneyard for surplus, and typically that happens well before 10 years. I'm talking hardware and not even software or OS obsolesence. Yes I'm focusing on PC's and a computer is not the only thing "digital" used for recording, but there is a common manufacturing genre there that differs from the "muscle car" recorder...
Does anybody think that a somewhat neglected computer will be running at ALL in 40 years?