Another functioning Apple I expected to command at least $600K in Christie's auction
A fully functioning Apple I, personally sold by company co-founder Steve Jobs, is expected to earn $600,000 when it goes on sale at legendary auction house Christie's this December.
Source: Bonhams
The machine set to go on sale is a "Ricketts" Apple I Personal Computer, named after original owner Charles Rickets, according to Reuters. The auction is scheduled for Dec. 11, and the machine is said to have been sold in 1976 by a 21-year-old Jobs out of his parents' garage.
Also included with the Apple I will be the July 27 $600 canceled check made out by Ricketts to Apple Computer. Ricketts labeled the check as "Purchased July 1976 from Steve Jobs in his parents' garage in Los Altos."
While the Apple I is expected to go for around $600,000, there's reason to believe it could fetch far more than that. Earlier this month, a rare working Apple I earned a record smashing $905,000 at auction, more than double what it was expected to sell for, purchased by the Henry Ford organization.
Prior to that, the record price for a vintage Apple I stood at $671,400, a value paid by an anonymous buyer in a 2013 German auction. Before that, another German auction netted $640,000 for an original working unit.
A total of 200 Apple 1 computers were made, each hand-built by company cofounder Steve Wozniak in Steve Jobs' garage in Los Altos, Calif. When the product was first released in 1976, it sold for $666.66 without power supply, display, keyboard or housing.
Source: Bonhams
The machine set to go on sale is a "Ricketts" Apple I Personal Computer, named after original owner Charles Rickets, according to Reuters. The auction is scheduled for Dec. 11, and the machine is said to have been sold in 1976 by a 21-year-old Jobs out of his parents' garage.
Also included with the Apple I will be the July 27 $600 canceled check made out by Ricketts to Apple Computer. Ricketts labeled the check as "Purchased July 1976 from Steve Jobs in his parents' garage in Los Altos."
While the Apple I is expected to go for around $600,000, there's reason to believe it could fetch far more than that. Earlier this month, a rare working Apple I earned a record smashing $905,000 at auction, more than double what it was expected to sell for, purchased by the Henry Ford organization.
Prior to that, the record price for a vintage Apple I stood at $671,400, a value paid by an anonymous buyer in a 2013 German auction. Before that, another German auction netted $640,000 for an original working unit.
A total of 200 Apple 1 computers were made, each hand-built by company cofounder Steve Wozniak in Steve Jobs' garage in Los Altos, Calif. When the product was first released in 1976, it sold for $666.66 without power supply, display, keyboard or housing.
Comments
How long before all historical items and important artwork end up on the walls of the powder rooms of the 1% of the 1%?
What’s your point?
And don’t put your Apple I in your powder room; the moisture will ruin it.
Wait a minute! Ricketts paid Steve Jobs $600 for a $666.66 computer? He got a 10% discount and didn't have to pay sales tax. I'll bet the government of the Peoples Republic of Kalifornia are going to be looking to get that back, with interest.
maybe he paid cash for part of it.
Ask God.
The value is in the rarity. There were only 200 Apple 1 machines made vs over 50,000 NeXTstations. When there are so many, you are up against competition:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NeXT-NeXTstation-MegaPixel-Display-1992-complete-working-set-free-shipping-/291142411846
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NeXTstation-VINTAGE-COMPUTER-STEVE-JOBS-APPLE-NeXTSTEP-NeXTCUBE-Macintosh-MAC-/331362455149
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Complete-NeXTstation-Monochrome-w-keyboard-mouse-monitor-Steve-Jobs-/321570469881
Even the iPhone 6 Plus is selling below its store price because there's plenty of them now:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Apple-iPhone-6-Plus-16GB-White-Silver-Sprint-Smartphone-CLEAN-ESN-IMEI-/281485939128
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Apple-iPhone-6-Plus-Latest-Model-16GB-SILVER-AT-T-MINT-/121477196455
It's only for a short time that they can get a premium because of the supply, which is why scalpers try to get them first.