Here is what comes to mind, it may not qualify as a computer. A
Westinghouse Numa-Logic PC700. It is an early PLC. uses a Sinetics 8X300
bit slice. Unfortunately Westinghouse only started to invest in PLCs about
the time the they merged with CBS and in a few years
all of Westinghouse became history.
BTW Looking for parts, manuals, software, the "lug-able" CRT based
programmer, IDE PC interface etc. etc.
Also will get my Allen Bradly PLC with core memory running someday.
-pete
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 11:49 AM, Rick Bensene <rickb at bensene.com> wrote:
 A selection of some of my more unusual computer-related stuff:
 - A Tektronix 4132 Unix workstation  using a National 32016 CPU and a
 4.2bsd port called UTek
 - A Digital Equipment PDP 8/e system with 2 RK05 drives, high speed paper
 tape reader/punch, RX01 Dual 8" floppy drives, 16K of DEC core
 memory(commonly runs with a 32K NVRAM board), 2 serial ports, EAE, RTC,
 Memory Extension/Timeshare board, Diode boot board (RK05 boot)
 - Wang 300-series calculator field service parts kit (two wooden
 briefcases)
 - Friden 6010 Computyper Diagnostic Console
 - Friden Electronics Training Course manuals (1960s)
 - Wyle Laboratories WS-02 punched card programmable electronic calculator
 (1964)
 - Busicom 207 punched card programmable electronic calculator
 - Altair 8800 with Altair dual 8" disk drives
 - IMSAI 8080 kit built in high school as a school project in 1976/1977
 - Televideo Personal Terminal
 - GE transistorised current loop acoustic coupler modem (110 baud)
 - Hewlett Packard 9100A and 9100B programmable electronic calculators
 - Tektronix mini-Board Bucket computer and many boards for it (EPROM
 Blaster, TI TMS9918-Based Video Board w/RTC, SASI Interface, 6809 CPU, 6809
 ICE CPU. 32K Static and 64K Dynamic RAM Boards, 300-Baud Modem Board, 5
 1/4" Floppy Controller
 - SWTPC TV Typewriter
 - A large format (4'x5') Summagraphics digitizing tablet with GPIB
 interface
 - A Tektronix 4052 desktop computer (bit-slice implementation of Motorola
 6800 CPU) with very rare RAM Disk module installed under keyboard
 - Wang Laboratories dual-cassette drive for 700 series calculator
 - An old fluorescent-lighted, two sided sign advertising Denon electronic
 calculators
 - Some original Digital Equipment System Modules (Used by DEC for making
 some of their early computers)
 ---
 Rick Bensene
 The Old Calculator Museum
 
http://oldcalculatormuseum.com