Ohhh, and RCA 703 eh?
I've been after an RCA 704 for a long while, for no good reason.
Personally, I'd jump on the 703 in a heartbeat.  What kind of shape is
it in?
"Jeffrey S. Sharp" wrote:
  I went to a grandpa-of-a-friend-of-a-friend's
scrapyard Saturday.
 It was one of those disappointing wish-you-were-here-a-month-ago
 visits.  Yes, the guy did have a bunch of Univac stuff.  The key
 word here is 'did'.  About a month ago, he loaded it onto 16
 pallets and sold it to some people "from China".  He said some of
 it was "never taken out of its original crate".  Please give me a
 second to cause bodily harm to myself.  :-(
 The first cool thing I found was a set of old air traffic control
 radar stations.  They had been out there a *while* and weren't in
 good condition at all, but they were cool to look at.
 I found the twisted remnants of what was apparently an old Four
 Phase switches-and-blinkenlights mini.  It looked like it had been
 out there for several years also.  Underneath the layer of grime,
 the central processor (about the same size as a BA11 box) seemed
 mostly intact except for a missing faceplate.  Anyone know what set
 of computers this could be?  Even though it's hosed, is it a rare
 enough find that I should buy it and salvage what I can?
 Next find was called a Raytheon 703 Central Processor.  It looks
 like it has light-up pushbuttons instead of LED/lamps and switches.
 From the lights it looks like it has a 16-bit word
size and 15-bit 
 addresses.  Anyone know what this is?  It looks to be in decent
 condition.  Should I pick it up?
 I found several highly OEM PDP-11 systems that looked like they
 were some kind of radar controller computer.  Unfortunately, the
 cabinets looked like they had been picked up by the nearby crane
 and dropped to their present location (i.e., smashed to hell).
 I'll investigate further when I can bring a can of bug spray to
 take out the integrated hornet nests.
 Final find was a set of MicroPDP-11 BA23s, in various states from
 complete to completely stripped.
 --
 Jeffrey S. Sharp
 jss(a)ou.edu