Announcing the birth (or perhaps reanimation) of Neltuma Technologies, LLC.
Announcing the birth (or perhaps reanimation) of Neltuma Technologies, LLC.
What began as one man’s refusal to accept that “obsolete” means “beyond saving” has metastasized into a slightly-larger-than-a-hobby enterprise devoted to the noble art of necrotechnomancy — the resurrection of machines that really should have stayed dead.
Some think obsolete means beyond saving. We think it means something worked so well it stopped making money for the manufacturer.
Our mission, if you can call it that, is to document, refine, and occasionally improve the results of Dmytro’s late-night experiments in applied stubbornness. When the world says, “Parts are no longer available,” we say, “Then we’ll just make them.”
Expect practical sorcery, questionable engineering, and a few triumphs that probably violate several consumer-safety assumptions. Because at Neltuma Technologies, we don’t let obsolescence rest in peace — we dig it up, polish it off, and put it back to work.
None of the above applies to the engine in the photo — its sacrifice has been noted, its components repurposed, and its spirit released to haunt inferior replacements.