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hunter

(40,657 posts)
31. Their electronic components were expensive.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:02 PM
Yesterday

I used to order everything by mail and wait a week or two to get it. If I discovered at the last minute I'd left something out of my order I'd ride my bike to the local Radio Shack to get it. But a single transistor there, for example, might cost five or ten times what a mail order transistor did.

It was not a place where I could get any questions about electronics answered. It seemed to me the employees hardly knew anything about electronics or computers and it irked me when they tried to "help."

When I got my drivers license I could drive to the city where there were several much larger electronics shops I could choose from, some with knowledgeable staff and interesting customers -- lot's of retired guys who were happy to talk about their radio and electronics hobbies. One shop had a stack of old radio and electronics magazines they sold for ten cents each. Sometimes they'd just give them to me.

My grandpa was a good source of information too but he wasn't much interested in transistors or integrated circuits. He was still building stuff with vacuum tubes. Foolish youth that I was, I assumed much of his knowledge was obsolete. It wasn't until I was taking physics in college that I realized my grandfather knew all that stuff and that I'd been an idiot. It didn't matter that he preferred vacuum tubes to transistors or slide rules to calculators.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

It certainly was a big help to me over the years... hlthe2b Yesterday #1
Lafayette Electronics closed its doors even earlier -- corp. mismanagement. eppur_se_muova Yesterday #2
I miss Lafayette, Mock Electronics, and W&W here in Huntsville. House of Roberts Yesterday #4
I Liked Lafayette Better! BBbats Yesterday #28
Back in those days, you could go in there with a thing you needed to replace, House of Roberts Yesterday #3
take a pic, and mopinko Yesterday #6
My husband still misses that store. He could get components for his various projects. Ritabert Yesterday #5
the ceo in the late 60's mopinko Yesterday #7
Tried to buy a replacement cable to a radio Orrex Yesterday #8
Corporatism proved once again... GiqueCee Yesterday #10
Remember Heathkits? James48 Yesterday #9
Built two Heath Kits in 1969, a radio receiver and an amplifier. PufPuf23 Yesterday #16
Heh. I remember that particular Pacific Stereo well.... 68er Yesterday #27
Amazon needed to have been busted up decades ago Blue Full Moon Yesterday #11
Bozos bagimin Yesterday #13
Remember RadioShack wayback when it had government surplus. Sneederbunk Yesterday #12
I miss it very much. Nobody fixes anything, anymore. Buddyzbuddy Yesterday #14
Find your nearest Repair Cafe, a non-profit which can work on anything from broken zippers Wonder Why Yesterday #18
Thank you Wonder Why, for the information. Buddyzbuddy Yesterday #33
I know because I am one of the volunteers. However, I'm on indefinite hiatus until I have my leg back. Wonder Why Yesterday #36
I'm sorry to hear that. I wish you a faster painless recovery. Buddyzbuddy 21 hrs ago #42
A good friend of mine built a computer from Heathkit Norbert Yesterday #15
Laz used to manage a Radio Shack in a little rural strip mall near a military base. haele Yesterday #17
We purchased our first computer, the TRS 80 from Radio Shackwhen our son was 7 or 8 yrs old. scarletlib Yesterday #19
There are still... 2naSalit Yesterday #20
Change or die SocialDemocrat61 Yesterday #21
Thanks for posting. LudwigPastorius Yesterday #22
The video is AI-generated and narrated, on a channel that's almost completely AI, adding about one AI video highplainsdem 22 hrs ago #41
I worked at a Radio Shack for years hurple Yesterday #23
I take it that the manager did not get to go on the cruise. LiberalArkie Yesterday #26
My son worked at a RadioShack for years. StarryNite Yesterday #24
I had a 'Trash-80' which I liked GenThePerservering Yesterday #25
If I had a time machine I would go back to the 70's and buy up all the vari-loop coils I could get my hands on yaesu Yesterday #29
I miss stores like RadioShack, and this makes me feel a certain way. Mostly nostalgia. Oneironaut Yesterday #30
Their electronic components were expensive. hunter Yesterday #31
A very happy memory is buying a breadboard, some LEDs and other components for my son when he was in elementary school. NNadir Yesterday #32
The same thing that happened to Wolf Brand Texas-Style Chili...capitalism. pecosbob Yesterday #34
Another AI-generated channel. highplainsdem Yesterday #35
I didn't watch the video. I rarely do. hunter 22 hrs ago #39
There are a lot of videos on YouTube about RadioShack. highplainsdem 21 hrs ago #43
It's the tech bro capitalist philosophy -- if people are buying that crap, they will sell it. hunter 18 hrs ago #44
Anyone remember when they gave a 10% discount to shareholders and lots of people, including yours truly, Wonder Why Yesterday #37
The closest fucking thing now to those kits is a little motherfucking robot you can make with a Raspberry Pi at the core SoFlaBro Yesterday #38
I saw a Radio Shack this week, but not in the USA IzzaNuDay 22 hrs ago #40
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