floobydust wrote:
Not a surprise. I was in one up in Urbana with my daughter last year. We needed a simple phone jack. The parts selection was abysmal and the quality was worse. The staff didn't even know what a phone jack was. It is a sign of the times unfortunately, and yes, RS tried to morph into something they're not good at and don't seem to have a staff capable of supporting anything they do sell.
It's unhappy news, and I suppose there are a lot of reasons for it, but some are their own fault, like charging five times what they should for small parts, and going after more consumer-type stuff which people are more likely to go elsewhere for, whether it's a cell-phone center, a Target, Fry's, or similar. When we came back to the States in '74, I was delighted to discover Radio Shack, Lafayette, and similar stores. Radio Shack was buzzing with activity. (Today it's dead.) I got their paper catalogs every year as soon as they came out, took care of them, and referred to the regularly. I specifically remember many of the ones seen at
http://www.radioshackcatalogs.com/ . And of course they took the address of everyone who bought there and mailed you lots of sale flyers. I was delighted when one of them announced that a particular VOM (the one shown on my math look-up tables page at
http://wilsonminesco.com/16bitMathTables/index.html) which I had been drooling over as a poor mid-teenager was reduced to half price, and I bought it. Their staff's neat dress code and neck ties did not add any intelligence though. Besides the fact that they didn't know anything technical, when they asked for my address for the receipt, I'd tell them 11012 as "eleven thousand twelve" and they could never get the right number of zeroes in it. Now when I go in there and know exactly where what I want is, they try to be friendly and intercept me and ask if they can help. I want to tell them, "I've been shopping at Radio Shack since your parents were riding their Lemon Peeler" (or maybe that should be "burro"). What I really tell them though is the RS stock number and point to where it is. (BDD could go back further that I in the timeline than I.) People today have no idea what a radio shack (ham shack) is.
Quote:
It's not just RS... Lafayette went out decades ago, Heathkit is long gone
They've been saying they're in the process of designing a line of kits and they're coming back; but we don't hear much. They say they'd rather spend their time doing that than further delaying it by spending their time answering the questions of those who will/would like to see it back. See
https://www.facebook.com/heathcompany?f ... le_browserQuote:
and all of the small local private electronic parts suppliers have gone out of business as well over the past couple decades. The electronic hobbyist is all but gone and the majority of consumer electronic products are designed and built to be disposable, so they're not worth fixing when they break, nor can you reasonably get the parts if you could fix them.
One privately owned electronics store that was near us for decades had the walk-in business all dry up as the local community college and high schools quit teaching electronics and the TV and stereo repair business dried up as people just throw out the old and buy a new one a the big-box electronics stores. The owner was doing plenty of distributor business by drop-shipping, which he could do from home, so he closed the shop.
Quote:
I stock a ton of parts... and still buy stuff regularly from Mouser and a couple others. My parts include lots of stuff for vacuum tube gear, so tons of NOS parts and of course the newer solid state stuff for my 65xx and other related hobbies.
Same here. I have somewhere between a quarter million and a half million parts, many of them being from the company I work for just disposing of them when they quit doing thru-hole for most products, and also every time I order parts, I get extras.
Quote:
It's becoming a lost art with younger kids who prefer to bury their heads in a smartphone, computer or video game and become socially inept.
Agreed. It's a shame. Where will tomorrow's engineers come from? SMT is not helping the situation, as it makes it harder for hobbyists to get interested.