One of Apple's first computers is up for auction and it could sell for as much as $600,000.

The Apple-1 that is going under the hammer on Tuesday is one of the few surviving examples of Apple's first computer in the world, according to John Moran Auctioneers.

The lot includes an Apple-1 "NTI" motherboard and an Apple Cassette Adapter in a koa wood case, as well as a Datanetics Keyboard Rev D, a 1986 Panasonic video monitor, an Apple-1 connecting cable and a power supply, the listing states.

It also comes with an Apple-1 Basic Manual, the Apple-1 Operations Guide, an original MOS 6502 programming manual and two Apple-1 software cassette tapes.

The computer was designed by Steve Wozniak and assembled and tested by Steve Jobs.

The Apple-1 on sale has only had two owners. This particular example was bought by an electronics professor, who then sold it to a student in 1977, said the auctioneer.

"This Apple-1 has recently undergone an extensive authentication, restoration, and evaluation process by one of the foremost experts in the field, who inspected all components and generated a full condition report for the Apple-1," reads the listing.

There are only six examples of the koa wood Apple-1 case left, according to the auction house. The wood has become rarer and more expensive as koa tree numbers have been reduced due to cattle grazing and logging.

Only 200 Apple-1s were made in total, with 175 sold.

Fifty of the 175 computers were sold to Paul Terrell, owner of a store named ByteShop in Mountain View, California, the listing adds.

CNN