Specmaster wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2024 5:56 pm
tggzzz wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2024 5:40 pm
Specmaster wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2024 5:18 pm
This store has something for everyone, which it was here in the UK.
There used to be a general store like that in my village; not electronics, just hardware and anything else that caught the brothers' eyes.
Simple example: I wanted a chuck key for a not-very-old Black and Decker drill, so I went to the local Big Shed. They had one, which didn't fit. Go to the local shop, one of the brothers says he thinks they have some, clambers over the floor, then uses a step ladder to reach a shoe box. Has 6 different types.
Unfortunately they died, the shop and their house behind was torn down because it was unsafe.
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I remember back when I was in my late teens we used to have an old car showroom that was being used as a Army and Navy surplus store and they had all kinds of odd ball stuff in there ranging from spanners etc right the way through ex military radios etc. That place was always heaving with buyers and rapidly became a regular haunt for me, you would never know just what they get in from one day to the next. Sadly those places don't seem to exist anymore.
In Perth, right in the city, we had "Anderson's Salvage", with a very large shop, full of weird stuff like throttle levers for various multi engine aircraft, Avro Anson engines, 800 Hz power transformers, Hupmobile headlights, Edison Splitdorf aircraft sparkplugs, & multiple other less identifiable objects.
They also had a smaller shop,crammed full of surplus electronics, where I used to go to drool at No. 19 & 22 transceivers, but couldn't afford them, so ended up with a No. 11.
That was a mistake, as they were designed for battery use & had directly heated filament tubes.
Easy enough these days to provide clean low voltage DC, but a nightmare back then.
There was another largish place, "O W Strang Surplus" in Victoria Park, just outside the CBD, which had an eclectic mix of surplus stuff, including a Rolls- Royce Merlin engine occupying pride of place in the window.
There were several smaller shops, with mainly surplus electronics.
Over time, the big places disappeared, & the small ones morphed into hangouts for those who liked to wear army surplus clothes & collect, (often fake) militaria, with a sideline of camping gear.
That was back in the day when people did real things in the central city-----now it's just "big glass boxes" full of "suits".
They appear in the morning, disappear into the glass boxes, come out for a while midday, then back inside again till home time.
A flurry of activity, then all is quiet.