A Leading Edge Model D with two 5 1/4″ floppy drives. It was made by South Korean manufacturer Daewoo and was IBM PC compatible.
The CPU was an 8088 chip.
Wikipedia: “The Model D was an immediate success, selling 100,000 units in its first year of production. It sold well for several year; until a dispute with dealers forced Leading Edge into bankruptcy in 1989.”
It is possible that I was the cause of that issue. When I received the computer, the instructions said to plug the monitor into the receptacle on the back of the computer. Since I always checked polarity before using a new device, I checked – it read mis-wired. The hot wire was connected to the chassis. This risked electric shock or worse. I contacted the dealer and reported the problem. They called back indicating that all the units they had were also wired that way and said they would call the distributer. They called back and said the dealer found all the units there were also mis-wired. The dealer called the factory whose response was “ground, what is that?”
Nevertheless, the PC served me well for several years.
At one time I ran a small computer repair shop but closed it when I moved to a retirement community two years ago. At 85, I still still build and repair PC’s for friends and other senior citizens.