This is a well-made little mini-documentary. Wow the memories!
Dang you're Old, hahahaWatched it on You Tube a few days ago. Great stuff.
Dad used to take me to an Allied Radio store (before it became Radio Shack) in the 1960's. First new short wave radio and stereo receiver was from Allied Radio.
Did also built a couple of Knight Kits back then. Built a radio shack under my parent's front porch.
Transistors??? What is that, we replace Tubes, haha...explain tubes to our youth, our tv was very hot behind it and it proved a nice glow on the wall from the back of the set.I had a 65-in-One Electronics kit that I spent HOURS messing with. It had an integrated circuit that was probably 10 transistors, LOL. An i7-14th gen has over 25 BILLION within it.
Sit around the TV like a fire place, lol But not too close we were warned it will make you go cross-eyed our parents told us...hahaGlad to see EPO still open. It was my go to after Radio Shack, well one of mine. They had bins full of components...Used...they also sold new but it was great to get the used stuff...amazing all the things I found there...I'll agree that the video is good, but also think it's misleading about Radio Shack's fall. Maybe there was bad management, but even without that factor, the business model was doomed to fail because of the evolution of electronics. The electronic components were for either building something, or repairing something. Just about anything you can build out of components now will cost a lot more and do a lot less that what you can buy already assembled, even if it's cheap junk. Almost nothing is repairable without expensive equipment and the training to use it. The individual components are so small that you need magnification to work with them. There are so many different custom chips that it wouldn't be feasible for a retail outlet to carry them, even if there were people who were able to work with them. No more vacuum tubes to replace. Same thing happened to Heathkit, of which I built many. In the 1950s and for a few decades, they offered ham radio, testing, and audio equipment that was at the high end of consumer offerings, often at the lowest prices. With the manufacturing efficiencies of circuit boards and ICs, it suddenly became cheaper to buy assembled than to build, and a company like Heath or Radio Shack couldn't keep up with the lightning fast design capability of the giant electronics companies like Sony and others. It was a fun time for electronics enthusiasts. Now, there's no customer base to support a Radio Shack type of enterprise, even with great management.
epohouston.com

I actually did think of a metal casting mold but thought it looked too heavy duty with the big bolt and thick metal....just shows that the saying about trusting your first instincts is pretty accurate!