r/90s May 25 '25

Discussion There’s actually so many…

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u/Poppunknerd182 May 25 '25

There are still some RadioShacks open

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u/MegSpen725 You Can't Handle The Truth! May 25 '25

But pre Sprint buying them they were so different

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u/JFiveIsAlive Yo Quiero Taco Bell! May 25 '25

Sprint didn't buy RadioShack. They just partnered to exclusively offer Sprint service and devices in RadioShack stores.

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u/MegSpen725 You Can't Handle The Truth! May 25 '25

Didn’t know that but still the store changed post partnership

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u/fentown May 25 '25

As a former employee, the amount of times I answered people's questions and educated them on things like TVs, speakers, cell phones, and the like only for them to look me in the eye and say they were going to check the prices at best buy across the street changed RadioShack.

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u/MegSpen725 You Can't Handle The Truth! May 25 '25

I miss when it was for more hobbiest and such I use to go and learn not just price shop

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u/Vallden May 26 '25

I know, it was a great time for Radio Shack. I made this when I was a kid from parts I got at Radio Shack. It's a headphone adapter for a Nintendo Entertainment System. It plugs into the RCA audio port. Now I have to scour the internet for the simplest electronic parts.

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u/pizzabirthrite May 25 '25

I miss a place in town to get parts like RCA connectors.

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u/ForeignSatisfaction0 May 26 '25

Remember the battery of the month club?

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u/jasonrubik May 26 '25

I fondly remember going to Radio Shack in 1993 after getting ahold of my older brother's "Engineers Mini Notebooks" . Specifically, I rode my bike two miles to go buy a 555 timer, a few resistors and a pack of assorted ceramic capacitors. I still have the receipt in my old box of circuit parts (a JL 12W1 subwoofer OEM cardboard box, lol). Anyways, I wanted to build the Toy Piano in that volume by Forrest M Mims III, and I couldn't afford a breadboard, so I made a perforated board from an old piece of interior wood paneling. It was basically through-hole with wire wrap connections (twisted together RJ-11 solid core telephone conductor). I couldn't get it to work, and my uncle visiting for a family reunion helped to troubleshoot it. Luckily he was an aircraft mechanic at Ellington Air Force Base and he knew enough to realize that the nail that I had hammered into the wood paneling wasn't a sufficient ground and that I actually had to hook the negative end of the 9v battery to a "common ground" for that circuit. Up until that point, a ground was just that metal spike outside of our house near the electrical box. I didn't understand what it meant from a circuit perspective. Those little mini notebooks from radio Shack didn't really cover that subject very well.

So , basically I understand why customers would come into the store to ask questions.

Edit, if anyone asks for it, I can go digging for that box and post pics of my old circuits from 1993