Radio Shack Still Exists! I Visit a Store Still in Business

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  • Опубликовано: 19 авг 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @AntennaMan
    @AntennaMan  3 года назад +72

    This video is sponsored by Avantek. Check out their wireless doorbell kit at the affiliate link below:
    amzn.to/3m0vbwM #avantek #doorbell
    Thanks to general manager Ralph Hess and owner Steve Lowen. If you're a HAM their call letters are KC3KMT and N3RSH. Say hi to them!
    📡 Do you have reception problems? Consider an antenna recommendation from me below! antennamanpa.com/antenna-recommendations.html

    • @foureyedchick
      @foureyedchick 3 года назад +2

      Hi Tyler. I truly miss Radio Shack. I STILL have 2 Cat. No 1501874 HDTV antennas! I love the UHF loop, the 2 VHF rabbit ears, and the nice 75 ohm cable. I use one with a converter box and my CRT tube TV. The other I use with a 75-->300 ohm transformer for the desktop Radio Shack AM/FM stereo tuner. The reception is great I miss being able to go to a store in Chicago to buy one.
      BTW, keep up the good work.

    • @johnfkennedy2676
      @johnfkennedy2676 3 года назад +2

      My Fellow Americans 🇺🇸 USA,
      I'm so proud of This Bright Young man
      The Antenna Man Tyler ,. keep up the good work Tyler GOD Bless you and GOD Bless America 🇺🇸 USA

    • @MSRgoogle
      @MSRgoogle 3 года назад +1

      Tyler, you are the man! Fantastic video and a trip down memory lane. Your channel is the best on YT!

    • @HouseCallAutoRepair
      @HouseCallAutoRepair 3 года назад

      n1uzg (previous manager)

    • @christopherkeller2675
      @christopherkeller2675 3 года назад

      Great to see a radio shack still open I will most definitely make a trip down there is also a small radio shack in Whitney point NY

  • @eminence_front6043
    @eminence_front6043 3 года назад +321

    I miss Radio Shack. It was always handy for picking up electronic components when I was working on a project. People don't build their own electronics like they once did.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +13

      Heathkits.

    • @johnpoldo8817
      @johnpoldo8817 3 года назад +7

      @@dalethelander3781 Yes on wonderful Heathkits. I built a ham radio SSB transmitter, multimeter, auto analyzer., and more. Still have some of them.

    • @supremerulah420
      @supremerulah420 3 года назад +10

      Pretty much have to be a surgeon now thanks to surface mounts. I can barely hold those things let alone any type of board construction 😁

    • @Tibbs_Farm
      @Tibbs_Farm 3 года назад +19

      About a decade ago, I was hanging out with a buddy who's electric pressure washer started acting up.
      Pulled apart the gfi plug to the pressure washer, inspected it real good. And discovered a damaged resistor.
      Ran to the local Radio Shack (we use to have) and got a small pack of the correct resistors.
      Fixed his pressure washer for something like $0.19
      He was super amazed at the cost, because he was about to go out and buy a new pressure washer.

    • @brentfay6515
      @brentfay6515 3 года назад +8

      I spent alot of money at Radio Shack in the 70s & 80s.

  • @algorithminc.8850
    @algorithminc.8850 3 года назад +99

    I miss those from the 70's/80's ... and as a kid flipping the catalog for all of the parts I'd buy from some electronics projects. Thanks for the video ...

    • @JRobert111111
      @JRobert111111 3 года назад +4

      I always looked forward to getting the new catalog each year and seeing the new items available.

    • @kraig8812
      @kraig8812 3 года назад +4

      Yeah, I love Radio Shack. I bet Radio Shack was even more terrific back in the 70s and 80s.

    • @alexkay1874
      @alexkay1874 3 года назад +1

      I still flip through those catalogs and wish I have bought so many things when they were available but I didn't have the money

    • @algorithminc.8850
      @algorithminc.8850 3 года назад +2

      @@kraig8812 I think so ... they had those P-Box electronics kits, lots of parts, easy-to-use and easy-to-electronically-hack early computers, and they even had a small music synthesizer at some point.

    • @Mosfet510
      @Mosfet510 3 года назад +1

      I miss those days too! The people you would meet there were cool too.

  • @billschlafer
    @billschlafer 3 года назад +93

    Oh man. I miss Radio Shack too. Back in the 1970s (shortly after the glaciers receded) I used to visit Radio Shack stores every chance I had. Getting their catalog in the mail was like Christmas day, browsing all the cool electronic gear. I wish there was a full blown store like the one in your video within driving distance of where. The ones still around are poorly stocked and are mostly just generic wireless phone stores. I think there is a market out there for the old school Radio Shack stuff that is not being taken advantage of. There's a new generation of makers and electronic project kids out there, as well as a new wave of cord cutters exploring OTA TV that all need reliable gear. And, as you said, actually SEEING those parts in person is a much more satisfying experience than ordering junk online (if you can find it.). Thanks for this post!

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +9

      I lived for getting that catalog every year in the late summer-early fall.

    • @danbasta3677
      @danbasta3677 3 года назад +3

      @@dalethelander3781 Me to, and I loved to look at their tv antenns. Sorry, however Radio Shack is totally gone, who in the world is going to go to Philadelphia to buy things at Radio Shack? It made a bad move going in the direction that it did, and it put itself out of business.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis 3 года назад +2

      @@danbasta3677 : They're not quite dead, but most or all of the stores are affiliates instead of corporate.

    • @michaelmattson3515
      @michaelmattson3515 3 года назад +1

      @@dalethelander3781 We used to wait. Not any more. Everything is now.

    • @toonman361
      @toonman361 2 года назад +3

      As a teenager in the 1970s, I rode my bike there at least once a week. I loved the Archer kits, electronic parts and the component audio equipment. I still have a small RS cassette player which I occasionally use to make Mp3 files of analog audio.

  • @BenHodgeThemeParkEndeavor
    @BenHodgeThemeParkEndeavor 2 года назад +3

    That store sure does bring back memories, thanks for the video.

  • @kathym6603
    @kathym6603 3 года назад +63

    Yesterday I was looking at the RadioShack Weather Alert Radio that I bought in their store about 10 years ago and thinking how I would totally miss that experience today if I wanted that radio. Tyler, you're good!!

    • @LatitudeSky
      @LatitudeSky 3 года назад +1

      To be fair, my local Kroger sells Midland weather radios. There's just one choice but at least it is available. But of course, not the rest of what RS had.

    • @robertbangkok
      @robertbangkok 2 года назад

      I still have the one my dad bought back in the 1960s. Still works perfectly. And it looks cool, too!

    • @josemoreno3334
      @josemoreno3334 2 года назад

      I bought a weather radio that had only three NOAA frequencies back in 1975 and runs on a 9 volt battery. It's a table top model, Small and it still works today. I live in southwest Arizona and use it a lot during monsoon season. I even took it with me when I joined the USAF in 1979.

  • @rblevins97321
    @rblevins97321 3 года назад +134

    I miss the "able to fix it ourselves" time...they've made it nearly impossible for some things these days.

    • @AlexR_44
      @AlexR_44 3 года назад +11

      There are people out there trying to reverse that. Look up Right to Repair laws and see if your area has any organizations active in the fight. I too wish things were made with longevity in mind, like the good ole days.

    • @user-yg4kj2mf1p
      @user-yg4kj2mf1p 3 года назад +2

      ​@@AlexR_44 Right to Repair will give third-party shops access to the same parts, tooling and documentation the first-party shops have. Which is good. But it doesn't mean devices will become easier to repair (for example screws instead of glue or any other repairability metric), or use standardised parts, or become easily repairable by the common tools that most tinkerers have in their drawers.
      There are arguments to be made about not legislating for "ease of repairability", for example it could hinder waterproofing and affect gadget size and thickness for smaller forms factors (smartwatches etc), so I doubt such a law will ever be legislated.

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ 3 года назад +2

      I mean, miniaturization is a double edged sword.
      Amazing because it gives us better, smaller and more efficient technology.
      Bad because it's a pain to repair, it's not impossible but you can't just do it with your average soldering iron.
      Nobody in their right mind would buy a smartphone made from through hole components lol.

    • @reecenewton3097
      @reecenewton3097 3 года назад +1

      @@GoldSrc_ Devices super-miniaturized and built by robots and/or slave labor are meant to be recycled, not "fixed." I restore real radios from the 1930s!

    • @stall-u-rated1986
      @stall-u-rated1986 3 года назад

      @@reecenewton3097 Me too!! Very rewarding when my Philco 16b cathedral first roared to life after the rebuild... Love them wood radios.. :)

  • @oswaldjh
    @oswaldjh 3 года назад +8

    Bought my first multimeter from Radio Shack many decades ago.
    From there I bought the components to build a tone generator for troubleshooting audio circuits.
    Radio Shack also had electronics text books that taught the basics of the craft.
    The learning curve was greatly flattened thanks to this company.

  • @transmitterguy478
    @transmitterguy478 3 года назад +79

    I miss Radio Shack! I have dreams of the old days every night. Going in and buying a pound of rosin core solder for $4.99. 555 timer chips individually packaged, solder iorns, stereo amps, electronic kits to build, TRS 80 computers, The girl behind the counter that didnt know anything about electronics but had big boobs, Forest Mims notebooks, electronic gagets galore, did i say the girl behind the counter had big boobs? I miss those days.

    • @Michael_A_MN
      @Michael_A_MN 3 года назад +2

      hahaha

    • @billman6364
      @billman6364 3 года назад +1

      at least we can be NON-PC on yt

    • @youtoo2072
      @youtoo2072 3 года назад

      You didn't marry her.. she Had to move away, why do You think Life Changes ??!!!! Why?, Guys Aren't Serious Enough ... China can fix thaat Nowadays Too IF YOU GUYS ALL DON'T GET SERIOUS = NOW!!

    • @timcline8472
      @timcline8472 3 года назад +5

      I managed a RadioShack store near a university and told "my girls" to not worry about dress code. They wore low-cut blouses and separated those college boys from as much money as possible.

    • @mattcat231
      @mattcat231 3 года назад +4

      i literally just used the last bit of 60/40 solder i bought in 1998 the other day, solder nowadays is trash!!!!

  • @dennisanderson3895
    @dennisanderson3895 3 года назад +47

    Interesting how a private owner (franchisee?) can keep a store operating and stocked with what people want to buy when the company could not.

    • @jeromewysocki8809
      @jeromewysocki8809 3 года назад +13

      I'd like to see a Radio Shack store open as a franchise, stock Radio Shack stuff, then have the owner buy up all kinds of electronics parts from other sources, and sell then at that store, too. That would fill the voids that senior management of Radio Shack overlooks. Can you imagine a Radio Shack store that would have EXERYTHING? That would be awesome!

    • @iggy151
      @iggy151 3 года назад +13

      Because the corporate locations became Cellphone Shacks. 😂

    • @rupe53
      @rupe53 3 года назад +4

      Dennis ... also consider that Radio Shack originally saturated their own market with too many stores... and there were only so many customers. Compound that with trying to sell TVs and cell phones at prices that were not competitive when compared to other discount outlets and company owned cell stores. Verizon and T-Mobile were giving phones away cheap with a service plan and all people look at is the cost of the phone. You can also fill in the blanks where "kids these days" don't buy toggle switches and relays if they can get some kind of touch pad with with software to turn on their lights. Some of it's just the different market and some of it is not having the right stuff at the right time when Amazon can send almost anything by next day carrier.

    • @jeromewysocki8809
      @jeromewysocki8809 3 года назад +7

      rupe53 , I think you are correct. Radio Shack saturated the market, seemingly, to force their only remaining retail competitor, Lafayette Radio, out of business. Well, Lafayette is no more, and Radio Shack, with no competition, in just a few short years, deteriorated to basically a "me, too" cell phone store. Little wonder they themselves basically went under. There is a market for small parts, but senior management showed little, if any interest in meeting it, especially with Lafayette gone. I'm hoping for someone to pick up the ball that Radio Shack dropped. I'd do it myself, but at age 73, there is not enough sand left in my hour glass of life, nor the necessary vigorous strength left in me, to see it through to success.

    • @TehDeXXX
      @TehDeXXX 3 года назад +4

      That’s because they buy stuff from Amazon and sell it in their store for a markup. It’s a mashup of Radio Shack branded items and filler.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 3 года назад +3

    My step-mom bought a Radio Shack franchise back in 1989. She sold it in 2005 when she retired. Unfortunately, it's no longer in business - the people she sold it to had to close it because it wasn't making enough money. I miss The Shack. Used to be a great place to go shopping.

  • @IamDerick
    @IamDerick 3 года назад +13

    I remember the free battery card. When I was getting my start in electronics in the 70's this was the place. My first soldering iron and tools where from RS. It does look exactly as I remember it.

  • @scottwozniak3988
    @scottwozniak3988 3 года назад +25

    This was great. A real trip down memory "aisle".

  • @brodiegamboa8092
    @brodiegamboa8092 3 года назад +25

    I miss Radio Shack, it was one of the best places to buy and find A/V electronic accessories!

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel 3 года назад

      ? there are about 500 stores right now (2021)
      here is their map:
      www.radioshack.com/pages/store-locator

  • @truesimplicity
    @truesimplicity 3 года назад +18

    Took me back to my CB days in the 70's as a kid... Thanks Tyler.

    • @keiththomas3141
      @keiththomas3141 3 года назад +2

      Yeah ... I got all my CB stuff at Radio Shack in the 1970's and 80's too.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +2

      Realistic base stations were underrated.

    • @kraig8812
      @kraig8812 3 года назад +1

      I like CB radios. I wonder if Sheriffs and the Police ever used CB radios.

    • @aaronhiggs
      @aaronhiggs 3 года назад

      My dad had that AAA edition portable Cobra CB from Radio Shack that was all in 1. Man they dont make stuff like they used to.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +1

      @@aaronhiggs Cobra made that?

  • @yahoosierindiana5164
    @yahoosierindiana5164 3 года назад +12

    When I was a college kid, I couldn't afford a brand new stereo, but I bought a used one and bought plenty of speaker wire and adapters from my local Radioshack over the years. When I got older I bought a few new radios from there. Now I am looking to make a slight detour on my next vacation trip to visit one of their remaining storeros, maybe pick up another radio. Thanks for your video!

  • @majordisappointment8692
    @majordisappointment8692 3 года назад +21

    I spent many hours at lots of Radio Shack stores in miss them thanks glad to see there are some die hard dealers left.

    • @bernlitzner2739
      @bernlitzner2739 3 года назад +2

      Radio Shack and the old Lafayette stores. And Tech Hifi.....and Absolute Sound.....and....

    • @jeromewysocki8809
      @jeromewysocki8809 3 года назад

      Bern Litzner , yes I remember the old Lafayette Radio stores, too. Lafayette seemed to carry some items Radio Shack did not. Then, some time in the mid to late 1980s, Radio Shack somehow seemed to drive Lafayette out of business. Now, ironically, other forces seemed to drive Radio Shack out of business.

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel 3 года назад

      ? there are about 500 stores right now (2021)
      here is their map:
      www.radioshack.com/pages/store-locator

  • @crysknife007
    @crysknife007 3 года назад +40

    We got one right up the hill where I live in Fayetteville, Arkansas. I love going to it from time to time.

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 3 года назад

      For what? To see outdated tech

    • @speeddemon5339
      @speeddemon5339 2 года назад

      @@user-lu6yg3vk9z to buy outdated tech! And I can just go to goodwill.

  • @ColdFuse96
    @ColdFuse96 3 года назад +10

    I kind of hope Radio Shack makes a comeback one day. There's been many instances where I'm working on some tech project that requires a specific cable, connector, or just some little thing that they only sell in bulk on Amazon, but you could easily find in single or small packs in a store like Radio Shack. Plus, even through Amazon, you still have to wait a day or two to actually get the item where with Radio Shack it would just be a matter of driving to the store and getting it right then and there.

  • @wallychambe1587
    @wallychambe1587 3 года назад +3

    There is one in Cleveland Texas also, my brother said he thinks the guy bought out all their old stock.

  • @brianball426
    @brianball426 3 года назад +50

    You didn't cover the RC cars, That was my favorite part of Radio Shack, you could get really nice racing-grade stuff there, not the cheap Walmart ones

    • @jfkansas5508
      @jfkansas5508 3 года назад +4

      Nothing has ever been "racing-grade" at Radio Shack. This comes from a long time RC Racer of almost 30 years.

    • @rcyalater...2305
      @rcyalater...2305 3 года назад +1

      This is true statement

    • @bedlamite42
      @bedlamite42 3 года назад

      Radio shack couldn't dream of comparing to Associated or Losi.

    • @ysffkan2839
      @ysffkan2839 2 года назад

      Yea I remember I got a really fast rc car

    • @derekowenjr3599
      @derekowenjr3599 2 года назад +2

      Man you saying that makes me miss my dad. Walking in there with him you never knew what he might buy on any given day. The smell of the stores too !

  • @philipchapman250
    @philipchapman250 3 года назад +13

    Between the humor, the antenna smash back "flash back" and the fun tour of the radio shack, easily a top 5 antenna man yt channel video! (Only surpassed in my opinion by antenna man's road trips to find analog stations that were still active over the past year)

  • @jeopardy60611
    @jeopardy60611 3 года назад +9

    I was a TRS-80 computer user as a kid, and that got me started as a computer programmer. I loved exploring the computer equipment at the local Radio Shack stores in Chicago. I imagine that the Radio Shack featured in the video sells CDR's. I needed some and went to a local Best Buy and they told me they no longer have them at the store because no one buys them anymore.

  • @pwcorgi2000
    @pwcorgi2000 3 года назад +9

    I really miss Radio Shack, especially the older ones. It was such a cool store.

  • @markanderson350
    @markanderson350 3 года назад +2

    My First job was at a Radio Shack, I was only 16 and loved it. 1976

  • @lynnee.pagels8896
    @lynnee.pagels8896 3 года назад +4

    This brings backs memories. I was a store manager in the Detroit area in the late 70’s -80’s and then again early 90’s total 11 stores. Still have my DX -440 shortwave radio.

    • @69Dartman
      @69Dartman 3 года назад

      I worked at a Radio Shack my manager friend ran for a while in the early 90s. I was a stock person, he made a special position for me, but I wrote tickets and helped people when we got busy, plus the crazy store inventories every quarter or so. I used to hang out a lot at the store and trade for broken stuff to fix for helping him out so eventually he talked me into applying and working for him officially. I worked part time, usually evenings and nights. I got a LOT of decent gear from them as most of it was made by someone else and Radio Shack put their name on it. My buddy retired a few years after I left before it tanked and we're still friends though I don't see him much anymore.

    • @watershed44
      @watershed44 Год назад +1

      @Lynee E. Pagels
      The DX-440 was a great portable shortwave radio. Made by Sangean as the
      ATS-803A

  • @andrews.9286
    @andrews.9286 3 года назад +4

    This video and the comments brought back some fond memories. As a young "nerd" I used to hang out at Radio Shack in the late 70s and early 80s. Even as an adult I did shop there for other electronics and other products but it wasn't the same as in the late 70s and early 80s.

  • @domslivin
    @domslivin 2 года назад +1

    We used to have a Radio Shack in the little shopping center near my house. I would walk down there every time I got money just to buy something electronic and cool. The store owner had a CB radio hooked up in the store and would talk to local CB'ers all the time on it. When I got my first CB radio, I talked to him several times a week...it was a lot of fun. Any kind of adapter or plug I ever needed was a 10 minute walk from my house, and I always felt like a little kid in a candy store every time I went. I miss that store, it was a huge part of my child hood and the reason I'm so into electronics today.

  • @Markimark151
    @Markimark151 3 года назад +13

    I miss the old radio shack when it was all about specialty electronics, the antennas, VHS camcorder accessories, even PCs like Tandy computers! That radio shack you want to mostly an independent store that’s franchised. Also they still make blank cassette tapes because they’re used for dictation and backup for vinyl records even Rite Aid still sells Maxell UR-60 tapes in stock!

    • @youtoo2072
      @youtoo2072 3 года назад +2

      Cassette tape recording is also a fast way to add an interview in a broadcast if in a radio or etc transmitting studio n u jz simply plug the recorder into mixer board n hit play.. Audio is mmmuuuuch better loud enough vs some file fn sharing how can't n not all phones have headphone jacks if did on phone's audio recording.. Tape recorders for standard sized cassettes are not much bigger than a book..u can as well connect re orders to laptops n record Skype interviews.. Says the show producer herself.. Who does so;)

    • @youtoo2072
      @youtoo2072 3 года назад +1

      Dictation n composers on the go that add or adjust a lot, a real lot.. Its cheap good way to start w particularly.

    • @Markimark151
      @Markimark151 3 года назад +2

      @@youtoo2072 cassettes still have their niche for radio people and the audio enthusiasts where they prefer analog recordings.

    • @johnsiders7819
      @johnsiders7819 3 года назад

      were is a Rite aid ? they all closed around here !

    • @Markimark151
      @Markimark151 3 года назад

      @@johnsiders7819 Rite Aid is mostly in the northeastern states now, they’re the Radio Shack of drugstores. Their stores are more outdated than their competitors that they still sell older electronics like antennas and analog wires!

  • @DFWTexan42
    @DFWTexan42 3 года назад +5

    One of my first jobs was at a Radio Shack. Best place for electronic hobbyists. Glad to see some independent operators are keeping a few physical stores alive.

  • @kennylauderdale_en
    @kennylauderdale_en 2 года назад +3

    For me, the store ended when they switched to selling cellphone service. I just wanted some capacitors.

  • @RIPGLIDE
    @RIPGLIDE 2 года назад +1

    As the son of a Ham Radio Operator/electronics egineer, Radio Shack was an essential part of my growing up. From the science project kits to finding that needed component for a repair, the trip to Radio Shack was always special to me. Another place I miss is Heathkit.

    • @watershed44
      @watershed44 Год назад

      @steve moon
      Man I loved our local Heathkit store in Paoli PA back in the 1970s and 1980s...I always wanted a ham radio and amplifier but couldn't afford them.

  • @BrucesWorldofStuff
    @BrucesWorldofStuff 3 года назад +1

    I went to my first Radio Shack when I was 10 and my mom bought me my first kit to put together. I'm now 67 and when I was 63 I walked into both stores for the last time. The both was east and west of my small town. Even though they were so pricy at the time I still bought stuff from time to time as it was easier than waiting days for a transistor to finish a project...
    It was nice to see a store again that was as the old one were and not one that was more about phones and did not even have speakers or stereo radios. Just some little junk radios for kids... Sad to see such a great place go by the wayside...
    Thanks for the video!
    LLAP

  • @allmyhobbiesareexpensive2676
    @allmyhobbiesareexpensive2676 3 года назад +14

    I feel like I should light a candle and burn some incense for the sacred Radio Shack.

  • @kenf3539
    @kenf3539 3 года назад +8

    I haven't seen a Radio Shack in years, but I do live an hour away from the last Blockbuster video store.

  • @commercialelectric696
    @commercialelectric696 Год назад +1

    As a former manager of a Radio Shack (RS) in Channelview and Port Arthur, Texas, I can tell you that we were selling by 1980 Winegard antennas manufactured for RS and RCA. We started selling only anodized antennas. We also started selling only anodized poles tied down with guy wires mounted on multiple sections to reach the proper height...we sold a lot of antennas!
    Not to mention commision as SPIFS for amplifiers, cable (RG59 cable company standard) and splitters aside including RG58 for local low-loss and CB. Shielding was not given such importance then (only 75% shielding) including lightning surge arrestors. Grounding used to be so important, ground plains and ground sinks included...

  • @vladandlaika
    @vladandlaika 3 года назад

    I needed a new FM antenna and couldn't find one at Target, Walmart... and then I realized that there is a Radio Shack in Cullman, Alabama! I drove the 50 minutes to the store and was assisted by a very knowledgeable and helpful man and found exactly what I needed. It is good to know that a bit of what was good in the past is still with us today.

  • @donnaten2
    @donnaten2 3 года назад +5

    I miss Radio Shack too. Considering how much we are digitalized, more Radio Shacks (or the like) would make a come back.

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel 3 года назад +1

      ? there are about 500 stores right now (2021)
      here is their map:
      www.radioshack.com/pages/store-locator

  • @toddbu-WK7L
    @toddbu-WK7L 3 года назад +9

    I loved Radio Shack for components. When they went out of business, I went to Fry’s. When Fry’s went out of business, I bought a bunch of kits from Amazon - resistors, capacitors, diodes, etc. It cost me around $80. Switches are still a bit of a problem, but not insurmountable. So yeah, I sure do miss my local RS but have learned to live without them

    • @alakani
      @alakani 3 года назад +1

      Check out Jameco or Goldmine Electronics too, sometimes they have grab bags of switches

  • @atticusfinch4687
    @atticusfinch4687 3 года назад

    There used to be two Radio Shacks within 3 miles of my house.
    They are missed!
    There's an independent shop that used to be a Radio Shack on a small town 12-13 miles from me near my job. He still has the sign up and I'm glad to shop there.
    Tyler's videos are the Best ones ever! Straight to the point. No unnecessary jabber and tons of helpful information. My wife hates RUclips but thumbs up his videos!!!!

  • @josemoreno3334
    @josemoreno3334 2 года назад +1

    It's like seeing an old friend again. When I was in the USAF back in 1980's. I use to visit a Radio Shack near Norton AFB, CA. ( Closed in 1994 ). I was into scanning and bought four scanners mix base and handheld from them including antennas and frequency guides . Every time the AF sent me somewhere, I'll will take them with me . It was lot of fun and a great hobby. I also bought a lot of electronic things there . I was a telephone lines. They just open one in East Phoenix hear in Arizona. I going to drop by and see them soon. Oh, By the way. I still use those scanners today . I can only hear the airports and the DPS and a few first responders including Luke AFB near by... I going to buy one that I can listen into the trunk systems. Thanks for you great videos. It was like a visiting Candy store to me.

  • @fredparsons5134
    @fredparsons5134 3 года назад +3

    Radio Shack was the first to sell a CD player in my area in the late 70s, or possibly 1980. I paid 400 bucks for a player and they were the only place that had cds. They had about a dozen different music cds. First time playing music with no hiss or clicks during the soft sounds.

    • @TR47
      @TR47 3 года назад +1

      CDs were introduced in 1982.

    • @fredparsons5134
      @fredparsons5134 3 года назад

      @@TR47 , thanks and you're right. That would square up more with when I got one. Maybe I was thinking of that VHS I got that had a wire cable remote for 700.00 back then? A demo model at that. Lol

  • @itscringecat
    @itscringecat 3 года назад +5

    3:01 In fairness, from a former local resident, WHTM's signal is relatively weak and their transmitter is located further northwest than the transmitters of WXBU/WHP and WITF/WPMT. I was never really able to pick up their signal when I lived in the Lancaster city area. Their main signal is simulcast on the translator of channel share partner WLYH in Red Lion, between Lancaster and York, though it's also not perfect signalwise.

  • @RosaStringWorks
    @RosaStringWorks 3 года назад +1

    I really miss those stores. Amazed they could stay in business with all the on-line competition.

  • @johnpoldo8817
    @johnpoldo8817 3 года назад +3

    Tyler, thanks for bringing us down memory lane. Think I started buying electronics there in the late 1950’s in Boston and Waltham, MA. Radio Shack and other electronics stores had the components to build a ham radio transmitter and install a large 3-element beam antenna on the chimney of my childhood home. We depended on Radio Shack to stock components needed to fix anything electronic. That was when tech people fixed electronic vs replacing them. I have so many fond memories of just looking at electronics at Radio Shack. Let’s not forget the free battery card.

  • @billgreen1861
    @billgreen1861 3 года назад +12

    Talk about algorithms, I was just talking about Radio Shack yesterday and "I wished they were still around" is all I said and here it is. I used to go there at least once a week literally once a week. Now I'll be making a trip to Amish PA probably once a month. I'll have to make a list of things to buy and make the trip. Thanks Antenna Man.

    • @alvinmortimer7536
      @alvinmortimer7536 3 года назад

      I have had similar experiences but with odd things many times... Just speaking in conversations. I'm not very advanced and do not have Alexa etc.

    • @billgreen1861
      @billgreen1861 3 года назад +1

      @@alvinmortimer7536
      I'm not technically advanced either but, it freaks me out when I'm talking about personal things 😉 and later I see advertisement for - lets say "personal and embarrassing" 😊 stuff now that freaks 🤣me out all the time.

    • @virginiareeder9961
      @virginiareeder9961 3 года назад +1

      Once a week

  • @brendanmah
    @brendanmah 2 года назад +1

    I really miss Radio Shack.Everytime I would go there I would always learn about what new gadgets they had ,the workers were ' Very" informative & if they couldn't get this product, they would tell you where you can pick this item up.Bring Radio Shack back !!!

  • @WowplayerMe
    @WowplayerMe 3 года назад

    I'm very happy that RS hasn't completely disappeared. I have many fond memories of browsing in their stores as a kid.

  • @jayjaybar1188
    @jayjaybar1188 3 года назад +5

    I miss Radio Shack. It is the store where you can buy hard to find antenna accessories such as attenuators, filters, band mixers, good quality boosters and so much more.

  • @VincentVader
    @VincentVader 3 года назад +3

    I miss the old Radio Shacks from the 80s & 90s. That one is just like I remember them.

  • @swedesspeedshop2518
    @swedesspeedshop2518 2 года назад +1

    I took radio shack for granted growing up they had everything to build electronics from scratch

  • @Chordonblue
    @Chordonblue 2 года назад

    I've lived in the New Holland area for over 30 years now and at one time, this was my main Radio Shack go-to store. So glad it's still around - lots of good memories. Radio Shack helped give me my computer career way back in the day with the TRS-80.

  • @bjs2022
    @bjs2022 3 года назад +17

    Radio Shack was the 7-Eleven of its day, convenient but not low prices.

    • @jaimeramirez-perez7198
      @jaimeramirez-perez7198 3 года назад +1

      There used be a 7-Eleven where i live and used to have gas pumps there as well but now its a completely different store now

    • @timothyp1937
      @timothyp1937 3 года назад

      I thought radio shack had good stuff cheap I was 17 years old bought my first pioneer stereo system all separate components for $500 you can't find that nowadays

    • @bjs2022
      @bjs2022 3 года назад

      @@timothyp1937 Their small components like audio cables and adapters were horribly overpriced. They still are in stores like Best Buy or big drug stores.

    • @timothyp1937
      @timothyp1937 3 года назад

      @@bjs2022 the radio shack in the North Windham Maine did not have overpriced products and it's probably the only radio shack in the state of Maine the ones in Portland Maine all closed down last time I heard they had an inside job where they were being ripped off so they closed them all down there's only a select few that is open now like the one in North Windham Maine I know the owner there I've known him since I bought my pioneer stereo system there when I was 17 years old at that point he didn't own it his father did now he inherited the business and he's continuing the radio shack

    • @alakani
      @alakani 3 года назад

      @Digital Split That was then, it's now now

  • @DanPellegrino486
    @DanPellegrino486 3 года назад +3

    I worked at Radio Shack for years. This store carries a lot of things that corporate stores did not, or would have add to order manually. Even if you did, they eventually the would get recalled back so you didn't have stale inventory in the store.
    It's also a bit of a mess, but I guess without corporate breathing down your neck you can operate it more like a hobby store, and less like a cell phone store like the corporate ones did. We carried a lot of poor quality junk at the end of Radio Shack's life. We were especially inundated with cheap toys, junk RC cars, no name headphones, and low quality batteries. Was not a pretty sight at the end. I quit before it all came crashing down completely, but only by a few months. I took off when we stopped getting regular shipments of new products, I knew it was a lost cause. I miss it sometimes, but I think I was the only person who worked there who knew anything about electronics and not just cell phones.

  • @jchiliw
    @jchiliw 3 года назад +2

    My local Radio Shack sells lawn and garden implements and fertilizer.
    I remember buying an FM converter for my old Chevy truck.

  • @MrSTOUT73
    @MrSTOUT73 2 года назад +1

    I worked PT at a Radio Shack in Milwaukee in the late 70's. One thing I remember that I HATED was taking a total store, floor to ceiling, inventory every two months! Back then they had a whole wall that contained nothing but thousands of blister packs of transistors and resisters and diodes and other things for building your own electronics. The other thing I hated was having to ask every single customer for their address so they'd get the mailers and catalogs. If you turned in a sales receipt without it you actually got docked.

  • @303nitzubishi4
    @303nitzubishi4 3 года назад +3

    Incredible timing releasing this video, I just spent the past week working in Aspen, CO and drove past a commercial building that had "Radio Shack" prominently displayed on the roadside marquee and the building itself. I couldn't believe that they would leave the sign up so many years after the business had closed. Looks like I may have incorrectly assumed that the store closed at all! I'll be working up there again in few weeks I'll definitely stop in there

  • @scottlarson1548
    @scottlarson1548 3 года назад +3

    When the first two television stations in my city went digital around 2000, I went to my neighborhood Radio Shack to get my first outdoor antenna. It didn't work very well, but they had no problems with me trying and returning nearly every antenna they sold until I found the one that worked the best.

  • @sarge27271
    @sarge27271 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for sharing. I remember as a kid going to RS and asking the guy, "I wanna do this, what do I need?" And invariably I'd walk out with what I needed to get my project done. Miss those days.

  • @henryseldon6077
    @henryseldon6077 3 года назад +1

    What a trip through memory lane. Thanks!

  • @Sidecutter
    @Sidecutter 3 года назад +3

    Damn this is actually like an old-school Radio Shack. All the ones I knew went to phones and techy gadgets and got rid of almost all the electronics components 10-15 years ago

    • @-FAFO-
      @-FAFO- 3 года назад +1

      I was gonna say this too, this looks like what they used to have in the 80's-90's when i was growing up. Those newer stores didn't have nearly all of the things as the old ones did. I miss having one around

  • @God_of_Calamity
    @God_of_Calamity 3 года назад +6

    I would literally run amuck in that store. This stuff is what i dream about the night before Christmas.

  • @allhailwaldo1851
    @allhailwaldo1851 3 года назад +1

    The owner of this radio shack is a ham radio operator. The local ham community comes here to buy radio and antenna parts. I like that this store is still available, in my area.

  • @cornbread1955
    @cornbread1955 3 года назад +15

    I miss radio shack and all the good stereo equipment stores like we had years ago. They say things change to get better but not in that department it did not

    • @danbasta3677
      @danbasta3677 3 года назад

      Very true. They put themselves out of business.

    • @kdrapertrucker
      @kdrapertrucker 3 года назад

      You are right, I can't even find a decent stereo anymore, had to buy a car head unit, power adaptor, etc.

    • @DrForbin001
      @DrForbin001 3 года назад

      RadioShack after they decided to please stock holders and not customers sold the computer business (TRS80 ) to then AST and sold pieces of their manufacturing business off which included speakers and stereo. Their "high end" stuff was made by Pioneer, ewwwww!

  • @crowmigration8245
    @crowmigration8245 3 года назад +3

    Yass. I've been there. So much charm with the stuffed animals, it's at the back of someone's house. Stock was low but I found a really old multi room VCR system called "the rabbit". Also got some radio shack branded stuff, get it while you still can. Also that town is really cool, felt like time travel to the 80s.

  • @leviathansky7188
    @leviathansky7188 2 года назад +1

    I managed a small radioshack inside a true value hardware in Estes park, co. Really serves the community in a small mountain town. People come in just to check it out!

  • @robertheckman9813
    @robertheckman9813 3 года назад +2

    Thank you Antenna Man for this bit of nostalgia. Thanks to the owners of the store for letting you film there. I made many a trip to Radio Shack years ago and I miss the convenience. Keep the good videos coming.

  • @bjs2022
    @bjs2022 3 года назад +51

    What is the story about the “graveyard” of the big, old, good roof antennas outside next to the building? You should have told the manager or the owner to replace the junk one with one of those. Radio Shack was a popular source of Antennacraft roof antennas like the big, good, HBU55 UHF and high band VHF combination antenna.

    • @butterbean4195
      @butterbean4195 3 года назад +4

      really!! i would love to go dumpster diving back yonder.

    • @aaronhiggs
      @aaronhiggs 3 года назад +1

      I remember in high school grabbing one outta the dumpster when I worked at a Sam Goody next to the Radio Shack. That antenna is STILL in use and my sister gets signals in tampa from all over the state!!

    • @polyrhythmia
      @polyrhythmia 2 года назад

      I used to work at a place where they made parts for Antennacraft.

  • @salty6pence672
    @salty6pence672 3 года назад +5

    Ha I worked at RS, If they hadn't abandoned the core of the customer base they would have survived. Nobody thinks cell phones when they think RadioShack.

    • @RickPaquin
      @RickPaquin 3 года назад +2

      So our local Radio Shack became a combination Radio Shack/Sprint store. All of he Radio Shack stuff got shoved to the back of the store with cell phone cases and earbuds in the front. It was so sad.

    • @reecenewton3097
      @reecenewton3097 3 года назад

      @@RickPaquin I would avoid going there towards the end, just to be attacked by desperate cell phone salesmen.

  • @luisreyes1963
    @luisreyes1963 3 года назад +1

    Nice to see some people hold a torch for Radio Shack. Not everything has to be bought from Amazon, you know. ☎️

  • @bikegames0
    @bikegames0 Год назад +1

    You do great work and are a man (albeit much younger than I) after my own heart. Because of you, I now have a Chromecast device attached to my TV so I can reliably get MeTV. I loved the Radio Shacks in my area (Manassas, VA) and do miss them. Next time I'm near Strasburg, PA, I'll definitely have to swing by this Radio Shack. Wish I had seen this sooner. Thanks again for your work.

  • @eosjoe565
    @eosjoe565 3 года назад +30

    Did you get your free battery? I used to love putting together their P-Kits.

    • @MarionStevensJr
      @MarionStevensJr 3 года назад +5

      I definitely had my battery club card back in the '80s. I'd also get the flashlights whenever they'd come around. They were pretty cheaply made, but they were free, so I didn't complain.

    • @lexbeltran1354
      @lexbeltran1354 3 года назад +3

      Yes. I fondly remember having a free battery club card and receiving a free flashlight

    • @Abitibidoug
      @Abitibidoug 3 года назад

      I made use of that free battery club card also. In the 1990s I used it to get NiCad rechargeables, even better.

  • @Mrdsmith500
    @Mrdsmith500 3 года назад +3

    I had no idea any still around. Thanks. I still have a few never-used parts in the original package with Radio Shack labeling. Sadly no more Fry's electronics either.

  • @dfpguitar
    @dfpguitar 3 года назад

    I have a special place in my heart for RadioShack RC cars. They had so many cool designs , if I had the space I'd collect them all.

  • @rickharms1
    @rickharms1 3 года назад +1

    I remember when Radio Shack was really a shack. They simply sold components and were basically supporting Ham radio people. I am 72.

  • @inny74
    @inny74 2 года назад +4

    Congrats! You got shouted out by SomeOrdinaryGamers! 😁

  • @keithjones197
    @keithjones197 3 года назад +3

    Lord I wish someone would bring them back.

  • @markquintonii
    @markquintonii 3 года назад +1

    My town still has its radio shack and it's still going good.

  • @STB-jh7od
    @STB-jh7od 3 года назад +1

    My maternal grandpa got big into CB radio in late 70s, he then got my Dad into it, so I spent large part of my childhood in Radio Shack.

  • @leemaxey6240
    @leemaxey6240 3 года назад +12

    Tyler your acting skills are legendary! "Go away, No one lives here!"

  • @TonyP9279
    @TonyP9279 3 года назад +8

    Do they still have the Battery Of The Month Club?
    Radio Shack was always my go-to store for electronic components, plugs, testers, and other miscellaneous parts.

    • @sr71ablackbird
      @sr71ablackbird 3 года назад

      did ya ever get one of their ads that had the `free flashlight' ? (not sure, however, i think it was around christmas or new year's. )

    • @jeromewysocki8809
      @jeromewysocki8809 3 года назад +2

      I still have a few of their "ancient" flashlights. I keep them as a fond memory of Radio Shack. I don't use them anymore, because it now takes more effort to get them now to work, than is worthwhile. The old plastic on these flashlights is aged too much now, for the darned thing to reliably work anymore.

    • @sr71ablackbird
      @sr71ablackbird 3 года назад

      @@jeromewysocki8809 i would wait all year just to go and get a free one. not sure how many i have around. i just guess i used it as an excuse to go there.

  • @mattalki
    @mattalki Год назад

    I worked for Radio Shack for 5 years while I was in college. I still have a lot of nostalgia for it. I really miss the company.

  • @Chris-tf7gi
    @Chris-tf7gi 3 года назад

    Privately owned Radio Shacks used to be the oddball stores years ago. Some regular Radio Shack stock they'd often carry. And often many items the corporate stores stocked would be missing from the private stores while still looking kinda-sorta like a Radio Shack. So if you were say, a ham radio operator and needed the specific thing, 'Do you need any batteries?' wasn't much help. Enter 2021 and its now WONDERFUL that some of these privately owned stores are still around today. That's some dedication. Sometimes it is the only local place you might ever see the "specific thing" (until its sold out for good) with the corporate local stores gone. Thank you for showing a Radio Shack in PA, where I happen to live. Oh no, that one is not close to me. But I think I'll be one of the people who makes the run just to see it. I may buy some batteries!!! (even if I can get them for less).

  • @Lightsngear
    @Lightsngear 3 года назад +4

    Fascinating! I always liked the huge selection at Radio Shack, and was certainly a regular customer back in their heyday... even though their prices (in my opinion) were a bit high. I wonder if they have to dust the blank cassettes every now and again!
    And by the way...your doorbell bit reminded me of how Svengoolie closes out his weekly MeTV movie!! :-)

  • @m3rdpwr
    @m3rdpwr 3 года назад +7

    I worked at Radio Shack for 5 years in the 80s. I was the youngest employee in history at the time, regional managers weren't happy about it. They couldn't ask my age, due to discrimination. I was a big customer as a kid too. They didn't treat employees too nicely at the end. I miss "The Shack". The only thing we have around here now that's close enough to RadioShack, is You Do it Electronics in Needham, Massachusetts. They used to have two huge floors of electronics and now is reduced to one floor with very little. Such a shame.

    • @johnpoldo8817
      @johnpoldo8817 3 года назад +1

      I started going to Radio Shack in the late 50’s as a kid building transistor radios. It quickly evolved into ham radio and Radio Shack provided many of the component to build a CW and AM transmitter. My call sign was K1UON. In Boston, there was a competitor called Lafayette Electronics and Radio Shack may have acquired them. Much of my paper route money was spent at Radio Shack. As an adult, I also purchased many items at both floors of U Do It Electronics in Needham, MA.

    • @m3rdpwr
      @m3rdpwr 3 года назад

      @@johnpoldo8817 That's funny, that's where my paper route money went. lol Yeah, I bought much at You Do It as well, when I bought a car and could drive there. Otherwise, I lived in Waltham at the time and would bike to the one on Main Street in Waltham. I still talk to my boss from there and my best friends who I met working at "The Shack".

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +2

      @@johnpoldo8817 Ah, Lafayette, the complete electronics shopping center. We had them in Chicago.
      In the last few years, RadShack was nothing but a cell phone store.

    • @johnpoldo8817
      @johnpoldo8817 3 года назад

      @@dalethelander3781 I’m not sure if it was the same company, but I also owned a Lafayette ham radio receiver for a while, then replaced it with the much nicer Drake 2B

    • @johnpoldo8817
      @johnpoldo8817 3 года назад +1

      @@m3rdpwr Mario, I lived in Warrendale area of Waltham, rode my bike to Radio Shack, and Gagnon Newspapers was my paper route boss, then Warrendale Appliance, but never worked at Radio Shack.

  • @pcfxr4u
    @pcfxr4u 3 года назад

    Dude! i GO BY HERE A MILLION TIMES A YEAR AND THOUGHT IT WAS AN EMPTY STORE. Thank You...I am also a licensed ham.

  • @partylee007
    @partylee007 3 года назад

    Wow, that brings back some memories. I grew up in the 60s & 70s. RadioShack was awesome. I miss it. You could find just about anything you needed (and some things you didn’t even know you needed) in there as far as electronics, radios, TV accessories. And then even computers for a while in the 80s.

  • @armron94
    @armron94 3 года назад +5

    There is a Radio Shack in Niles MI 49093

  • @brodiegamboa8092
    @brodiegamboa8092 3 года назад +4

    BTW, love the DREADED FCC jokes! LOL!

  • @The2010SnowDay
    @The2010SnowDay 3 года назад +1

    I was in the Fayetteville Arkansas one the other week! We were working in the area and needed a potentiometer and knob and just happened to find it, it was amazing, we spent a good 5 minutes going through all the drawers of components. It was also the first time I've been able to get the good Hakko wire cutters and Kester leaded solder in a store!

  • @kenteagle2918
    @kenteagle2918 3 года назад +1

    RS was a geeky kids favorite store! Pbox kits, the comic books with coupons in the back for free or discounted batteries, pbox kits, flashlights, etc. Realistic, Tandy, Optimus, Archer, etc. Were all brands/models we had all but memorized. After graduating fro. Pbox kits, RS was practically the only place you could get individual components and parts. Especially on a Saturday or Sunday! Man, I miss that store in it's old school iteration.

  • @sheilasimmons9997
    @sheilasimmons9997 3 года назад +4

    I really hope they come back to DC!

  • @gerardcarriera7052
    @gerardcarriera7052 3 года назад +5

    I’ll bet that a lot of the stuff specifically parts can’t be restocked once sold out. The “new” Online RS sells a bunch of crap like color changing floor lamps.

  • @bluestar777YUL
    @bluestar777YUL 3 года назад

    The Radio Shack store that's within walking distance from my place closed shop more than 5 years ago. I am glad into knowing from here that the company is still alive

  • @davidcohen12345
    @davidcohen12345 3 года назад +1

    Super! Memories. There’s a Family-Owned store on US 522 in Mt. Union, Huntingdon County, PA. Highly recommend! They are good people and the store is filled with the usual RS+toys and Arduino

  • @kc7sik
    @kc7sik 3 года назад +3

    We have one here in Idaho Falls Idaho

  • @lesgobrandon
    @lesgobrandon 3 года назад +3

    I miss the shack.
    Pre cell phone I used to buy all my cb stuff at the shack. Visit a Kmart….Good luck with that.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад

      I had two Realistic Navaho base stations, one 23 channel, one 40 channel. Then I got a Browning Golden Eagle, a Tram D-201, and finally, a reliable Cobra.

    • @lesgobrandon
      @lesgobrandon 3 года назад

      @@dalethelander3781 if you can find a president hr2510. It’s the bees knees.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад

      @@lesgobrandon With my Golden Eagle and D 201, if something fried internally, all I had to do was lift the lid and replace the vacuum tubes. The "PIIIIIIIIIIIIINNNNNNNNNG" of the Golden Eagle drove people nuts all over town.

  • @W4ABN
    @W4ABN 3 года назад +1

    My first Ham transceiver was a Radio Shack 2 meter hand-held and when I joined the military 23yrs ago, I got a 2 meter mobile that I still have sitting in a box in the garage.

    • @watershed44
      @watershed44 Год назад +1

      @Daniel - S/V Rhapsody
      Those units were solid !

  • @bob4analog
    @bob4analog 3 года назад +2

    Interesting looking at all the comments of those who miss radio shack, myself included. You'd think there'd be enough interest to keep more stores in buisiness. Your RS is owned by 2 hams, that's like the RS I remember! Wished we still had a RS here in the SW. Thanks for the vid and glad to know you support them.

  • @DP-hy4vh
    @DP-hy4vh 3 года назад +7

    Did they still have the infrared door chime when you walked inside? I miss those after the Radio Shacks in my area closed down.

    • @joesmith4222
      @joesmith4222 3 года назад +2

      I got one of those at Walmart for $10. It take a 9v bat or 9v transformer plug in. You can set for alarm or chime. It gives you a half minute to walk away after setting. I take mine backpacking in case a bear comes near my tent at night. Has a wide view.