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Max the Magnificent
Thanks Ken -- I only wish I'd had the time to look at these stores .. but I was ...
Kenneth Wyatt
Mock Electronics: An Eclectic Emporium of Electronic Elements
Clive Maxfield
2/18/2013 12:08 PM EST
I feel like writing out a "Kick Me" sign and sticking it on my own back. Why? Well, I've been complaining for ages that there's nowhere local where I can go to purchase electronic components, but I've just been introduced to the most amazing electronics shop right here in town.
But, before we go there, first let me set the scene... When I was a young lad of about 12-ish (living in Sheffield, England), I would eagerly await the monthly arrival of the latest and greatest issue of Practical Electronics, which was the UK's premier electronic hobbyist magazine at that time.
Starting at the beginning of each month, every day after school you would find me in the Newsagent's shop at the bottom of our road saying "Is it here yet?" And, when my copy of the magazine did eventually arrive, I'd sit on the wall outside the newsagent's skimming through it to see what delights were in store. Being young and without much in the way of funds, one of my favorite articles was called "Take 20" because each of these projects required 20 or fewer components and cost 20 shillings or less (see also my blog on Pounds, Shillings, and Pence).
My next step was to hop on a No. 17 or No. 24 bus and head about five miles down Abbeydale Road to the nearest electronics supply shop. This was called Bardwells and it was located in a backstreet behind the old Abbeydale cinema.
Although it was only a tiny store, Bardwells was a magical place for me. In addition to the new components (transistors, resistors, capacitors, and jelly-bean integrated circuits) they kept behind the counter, there were always piles of cardboard boxes lying around on the floor jam-packed with interesting "stuff" like rotary selector relays from antique telephone exchanges. I used to love that shop.
I remember that there were lots of Bardwell-type stores in those days, along with radio television repair shops and electronic appliance (toasters, washing machines, etc.) repair shops. I also recall that, like doctors, television repair men would be happy to come round to your house and sort things out on the spot. The thing was that, in those days of yore, it was a lot cheaper to fix things than it was to buy new ones. By comparison, if something breaks these days, we just throw it out and purchase something that's bigger, better, and – typically – costs less than the original.
But we digress... In 1990 I moved to Huntsville, Alabama, USA. Since then I've continued to be involved in numerous electronic hobby projects, but it's grown harder and harder to find the parts locally. These days, of course, I can always order things over the Internet, but that really isn’t "quite the same thing" if you know what I mean.
There used to be an electronic parts store in downtown Huntsville on Clinton Avenue (sadly I forget its name), but that closed down ages ago. Then, just a few weeks ago as I pen these words, my chum Rick Curl dropped by my office. Rick lives in Birmingham, Alabama, but he occasionally comes up to Huntsville to pick up circuit boards or something, and if he's passing by he drops in for a cup of coffee and to say "Hi." Anyway, I mentioned to Rick that I was looking for a certain electronic part, and he told me I should visit a place called Mock Electronics located downtown on Memorial Parkway.
Unfortunately, there's always a plethora of things to do and too little time to do them all in. Thus, it wasn't until a few days ago that I finally managed to visit Mock Electronics. OMG!!! I could not believe my eyes. For an electronics hobbyist, this is like a dream come true. Now, admittedly Mock Electronics takes a little finding, because it doesn’t face the main road. Also, it's located in a rather nondescript building as shown below:

Some people might not like the outside appearance of this store, but for me it was great. I'm not looking for a modern facade like a Fry's Electronics store, because all they typically have is new things. What I want is somewhere that has stuff you simply cannot find anywhere else, and Mock Electronics more than fits the bill.
Inside, Mock Electronics is huge (well, it's huge for an electronic part store, and it's absolutely humongous compared to Bardwells, which was so small you had to walk out backwards in order to turn around). As you enter the store, you are presented with row after row of shelves and racks containing all sorts of interesting things.

But that's just the half of it, because when you approach the massive L-shaped service counter at the far end of the store, you realize that there's a magical world of mystery behind the counter in the form of narrow walkways between numerous shelves jam-packed with myriad little drawers and boxes containing a treasure trove of antique and modern components.

Goodness only knows what delights are hidden back there. I do know that I showed them the Radiation Suitcase prop I'm building featuring three antique faceted light covers, and the lady who owns the store disappeared into the gloom and returned with the compatible base sockets. These would have made my life so much easier had I known that such a thing existed, but unfortunately I'd already glued my light covers into the case (bummer).
There's also a corner of the store that's devoted to old pieces of equipment, some of which are labeled, while others are left to the observer to guess as to their original functions.

While I was in the store, I remembered to ask if they had any vacuum tubes. Of course, they immediately responded that they had shelves of the little rascals, but then I explained that I didn’t actually want working tubes – instead, I was looking for failed tubes that I can use to give interesting effects to hobby pieces (vacuum tubes can look AMAZING if you light them from underneath using tri-colored LEDs and you dynamically vary the colors using a microcontroller).
In some respects, finding broken vacuum tubes can be harder than finding their working counterparts, because it typically doesn’t take long for failed tubes to find their way into the trash. Also, I would hate to use working tubes for something frivolous like my hobby projects. But the folks Mock Electronics did not let me down – they sold be an entire bag of failed vacuum tubes for just a few dollars.

But wait, there's more, because I then saw the most amazing vacuum tube spring-mounted in a metal transportation rack. I don’t know what this tube was originally intended for, but I'm guessing something like a very high-power amplifier. Just to provide you with a sense of scale, I stood a 12" wooden ruler leaning against the front-left part of the transportation rack as shown below:

The four-way spring assemblies holding the bottom and top of the tube to the metal frame allowed it to be transported without being jerked or vibrated to pieces. I simply couldn’t help myself. I had to have this for my collection, and it now has pride of place in my office.
Last but not least, I discovered a rack of antique magazines and manuals from yesteryear. For $5 I purchased the November 1953 issue of Radio & Television News as shown below. Magazines were very different in those days; this one is about 3/8" thick and is bursting with interesting articles that provide an incredible "window" through which the reader can peer back and see what the people of the time thought was so amazing and cool.

I also discovered that Mock Electronics used to have a "sister store" in nearby Decatur, but that establishment recently closed down and they are currently in the process of moving all sorts of "goodies" to the main store. All I can say is that you can expect to see a lot more of me visiting Mock Electronics in the weeks, months, and years to come!
If you found this article to be interest, visit Microcontroller / MCU Designline where – in addition to my Max's Cool Beans blogs on all sorts of "stuff" – you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of designing and using microcontrollers.
Also, you can obtain a highlights update delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for my weekly newsletter – just Click Here to request this newsletter using the Manage Newsletters tab (if you aren't already a member you'll be asked to register, but it's free and painless so don't let that stop you [grin]).
Last but certainly not least, make sure you check out all of the discussions and other information resources at All Programmable Planet. For example, in addition to blogs by yours truly, microcontroller expert Duane Benson is learning how to use FPGAs to augment (sometimes replace) the MCUs in his robot (and other) projects.
But, before we go there, first let me set the scene... When I was a young lad of about 12-ish (living in Sheffield, England), I would eagerly await the monthly arrival of the latest and greatest issue of Practical Electronics, which was the UK's premier electronic hobbyist magazine at that time.
Starting at the beginning of each month, every day after school you would find me in the Newsagent's shop at the bottom of our road saying "Is it here yet?" And, when my copy of the magazine did eventually arrive, I'd sit on the wall outside the newsagent's skimming through it to see what delights were in store. Being young and without much in the way of funds, one of my favorite articles was called "Take 20" because each of these projects required 20 or fewer components and cost 20 shillings or less (see also my blog on Pounds, Shillings, and Pence).
My next step was to hop on a No. 17 or No. 24 bus and head about five miles down Abbeydale Road to the nearest electronics supply shop. This was called Bardwells and it was located in a backstreet behind the old Abbeydale cinema.
Although it was only a tiny store, Bardwells was a magical place for me. In addition to the new components (transistors, resistors, capacitors, and jelly-bean integrated circuits) they kept behind the counter, there were always piles of cardboard boxes lying around on the floor jam-packed with interesting "stuff" like rotary selector relays from antique telephone exchanges. I used to love that shop.
I remember that there were lots of Bardwell-type stores in those days, along with radio television repair shops and electronic appliance (toasters, washing machines, etc.) repair shops. I also recall that, like doctors, television repair men would be happy to come round to your house and sort things out on the spot. The thing was that, in those days of yore, it was a lot cheaper to fix things than it was to buy new ones. By comparison, if something breaks these days, we just throw it out and purchase something that's bigger, better, and – typically – costs less than the original.
But we digress... In 1990 I moved to Huntsville, Alabama, USA. Since then I've continued to be involved in numerous electronic hobby projects, but it's grown harder and harder to find the parts locally. These days, of course, I can always order things over the Internet, but that really isn’t "quite the same thing" if you know what I mean.
There used to be an electronic parts store in downtown Huntsville on Clinton Avenue (sadly I forget its name), but that closed down ages ago. Then, just a few weeks ago as I pen these words, my chum Rick Curl dropped by my office. Rick lives in Birmingham, Alabama, but he occasionally comes up to Huntsville to pick up circuit boards or something, and if he's passing by he drops in for a cup of coffee and to say "Hi." Anyway, I mentioned to Rick that I was looking for a certain electronic part, and he told me I should visit a place called Mock Electronics located downtown on Memorial Parkway.
Unfortunately, there's always a plethora of things to do and too little time to do them all in. Thus, it wasn't until a few days ago that I finally managed to visit Mock Electronics. OMG!!! I could not believe my eyes. For an electronics hobbyist, this is like a dream come true. Now, admittedly Mock Electronics takes a little finding, because it doesn’t face the main road. Also, it's located in a rather nondescript building as shown below:

Some people might not like the outside appearance of this store, but for me it was great. I'm not looking for a modern facade like a Fry's Electronics store, because all they typically have is new things. What I want is somewhere that has stuff you simply cannot find anywhere else, and Mock Electronics more than fits the bill.
Inside, Mock Electronics is huge (well, it's huge for an electronic part store, and it's absolutely humongous compared to Bardwells, which was so small you had to walk out backwards in order to turn around). As you enter the store, you are presented with row after row of shelves and racks containing all sorts of interesting things.

But that's just the half of it, because when you approach the massive L-shaped service counter at the far end of the store, you realize that there's a magical world of mystery behind the counter in the form of narrow walkways between numerous shelves jam-packed with myriad little drawers and boxes containing a treasure trove of antique and modern components.

Goodness only knows what delights are hidden back there. I do know that I showed them the Radiation Suitcase prop I'm building featuring three antique faceted light covers, and the lady who owns the store disappeared into the gloom and returned with the compatible base sockets. These would have made my life so much easier had I known that such a thing existed, but unfortunately I'd already glued my light covers into the case (bummer).
There's also a corner of the store that's devoted to old pieces of equipment, some of which are labeled, while others are left to the observer to guess as to their original functions.

While I was in the store, I remembered to ask if they had any vacuum tubes. Of course, they immediately responded that they had shelves of the little rascals, but then I explained that I didn’t actually want working tubes – instead, I was looking for failed tubes that I can use to give interesting effects to hobby pieces (vacuum tubes can look AMAZING if you light them from underneath using tri-colored LEDs and you dynamically vary the colors using a microcontroller).
In some respects, finding broken vacuum tubes can be harder than finding their working counterparts, because it typically doesn’t take long for failed tubes to find their way into the trash. Also, I would hate to use working tubes for something frivolous like my hobby projects. But the folks Mock Electronics did not let me down – they sold be an entire bag of failed vacuum tubes for just a few dollars.

But wait, there's more, because I then saw the most amazing vacuum tube spring-mounted in a metal transportation rack. I don’t know what this tube was originally intended for, but I'm guessing something like a very high-power amplifier. Just to provide you with a sense of scale, I stood a 12" wooden ruler leaning against the front-left part of the transportation rack as shown below:

The four-way spring assemblies holding the bottom and top of the tube to the metal frame allowed it to be transported without being jerked or vibrated to pieces. I simply couldn’t help myself. I had to have this for my collection, and it now has pride of place in my office.
Last but not least, I discovered a rack of antique magazines and manuals from yesteryear. For $5 I purchased the November 1953 issue of Radio & Television News as shown below. Magazines were very different in those days; this one is about 3/8" thick and is bursting with interesting articles that provide an incredible "window" through which the reader can peer back and see what the people of the time thought was so amazing and cool.

I also discovered that Mock Electronics used to have a "sister store" in nearby Decatur, but that establishment recently closed down and they are currently in the process of moving all sorts of "goodies" to the main store. All I can say is that you can expect to see a lot more of me visiting Mock Electronics in the weeks, months, and years to come!
If you found this article to be interest, visit Microcontroller / MCU Designline where – in addition to my Max's Cool Beans blogs on all sorts of "stuff" – you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of designing and using microcontrollers.
Also, you can obtain a highlights update delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for my weekly newsletter – just Click Here to request this newsletter using the Manage Newsletters tab (if you aren't already a member you'll be asked to register, but it's free and painless so don't let that stop you [grin]).
Last but certainly not least, make sure you check out all of the discussions and other information resources at All Programmable Planet. For example, in addition to blogs by yours truly, microcontroller expert Duane Benson is learning how to use FPGAs to augment (sometimes replace) the MCUs in his robot (and other) projects.
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David Ashton
2/18/2013 4:57 PM EST
I must come visit you sometime Max. Not to see you, you understand, btu to go and have a look at Mock Electronics...
When I was about 12 or 13 I also used to get Practical Electronics. One of my biggest regrets is losing my old ones in a move. I used to get through a lot of 2N3055's (remember them?) and the cheapest ones were from Standard Telephones and Cables, whose office was in an industrial area 10km outside town. So we used to hitchike out there to get them because it saved us a few dollars of our hard earned pocket money. The fact that it took the whole afternoon to get them was beside the point...
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Max the Magnificent
2/19/2013 11:42 AM EST
Hi David -- you would LOVE this store
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David Ashton
2/19/2013 10:13 PM EST
Possibly as a result of those days I began assembling a store (read: glorified junk box, though it is pretty well organised) of electronic bits, so I don't have to order or visit a store to get components. It works 90% of the time, but boy do I have a lot of stuff. When I left Zimbabwe I got rid of a fair bit, but here in Aussie they throw away anything and everything, so I grab it and strip it and have all sorts of stuff that I can see a use for. Drives my wife nuts, but most of the time I can get down and build things whenever I feel like it. Does anyone else do this? I think I should start selling on E-bay....
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Rick_Hille
2/19/2013 2:42 PM EST
I love visiting "junk" shops like that. It's amazing the jems one can find, especially when you're in there searching for something else. I really miss them here in Ottawa, the last one having closed down years ago. There are several shops in Toronto that fall into that category; the main ones I visit whenever I make the trip are A-1 Electronics, Active Surplus, and Electronic Surplus Industries. A-1 is closest in size and material mix (new/old) to Mock.
I know what you mean about on-line purchasing; It's great if you're on a deadline but it's a very sterile and uninspiring way to buy hobby materials. There is just something about walking along racks of junked equipment; it speaks of the history of technology over the last 50 years, and occasionally provides a glimps of how certain technical challenges were solved with big, "visible-with-naked-eye" electronics. I'm still in awe when I see an old tube TV chassis, understanding all the functions it had to perform with little more than a dozen tubes.
David's story reminded me of an experience in my early teens when I started building guitar amps. I endured a 5-hour round trip bus ride across Toronto on the hottest day that summer. My quest was for a matched pair of specific power transistors, carried only by a distributor on the other side of the city. This is one of the very few times I would have preferred to purchase by mail order, but I didn't want to wait 4 weeks.
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IDontUseTheForumSoWhyAmIForcedToMakeANickname
2/20/2013 2:35 PM EST
Spend only 4 hours and end up on the east side of Toronto ... sayal[dot]com is one of the few remaining stores with electronic components in the region that supports the hobbyist and professional.
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WO1N
2/19/2013 4:01 PM EST
This is why many of us love the local hamfests. It's like a travelling surplus store!
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bwadebaker
2/19/2013 4:22 PM EST
We are fortunate to have Tanner Electronics here in the DFW Metroplex. It reminds me of your "Mock Electronics" store very much. If you're every in town, check it out.
http://www.google.com/#hl=en&tbo=d&output=search&sclient=psy-ab&q=tanners+electronics&oq=tanner%27s+&gs_l=hp.1.0.0i10j0l3.725.2777.0.4997.9.9.0.0.0.0.102.635.8j1.9.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1.3.psy-ab.zGAvuIhkOnQ&pbx=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.&bvm=bv.42553238,d.b2U&fp=17efb8a1cdd7c58b&biw=1617&bih=848
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Max the Magnificent
2/21/2013 4:58 PM EST
Cool Beans -- I will do so
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E-Unit
2/20/2013 3:53 AM EST
In reply to David, I too have a mountain of junk to strip for parts, here in England. Trouble is the space it takes up and the time to strip the good stuff out of the rubbish.
All I can say is lucky "Mock's" is on another continent as I'd be sure to end up with even more of a space problem.
On the subject of low component count's, I'm still impressed by "Lionel" train's "super sound of steam" gadget from the early 70's. Produces a lovely "chuff chuff" sound with only 20 or so components. Very clever.
Nice article.
Gary
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Max the Magnificent
2/21/2013 5:29 PM EST
Wait until you see my follow-up article, which I'll be posting tomorrow ... you will drool with desire when you hear what I am about to tell you...
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cshore
2/20/2013 4:50 AM EST
The UK used to be covered in shops like this which fascinated boys like me and their fathers! Sadly, most are gone. Cambridge only has one left (apologies for the stupidly long link):
https://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=gees+mill+road+cambridge&hl=en&ll=52.199743,0.138273&spn=0.011061,0.027874&sll=52.198842,0.119987&sspn=0.182022,0.445976&hq=gees&hnear=Mill+Rd,+Cambridge,+United+Kingdom&t=m&z=16&layer=c&cbll=52.19949,0.138515&panoid=4Pt7j6_zSaVEUNOCUTXAbg&cbp=12,215.35,,0,26.61
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Max the Magnificent
2/21/2013 5:28 PM EST
I really regret the disappearance of these shops.
Re the long link -- in the future you should go to https://bitly.com/ and use them to shrink the large URL to a smaller, more manageable version -- for example, I just used it to shrink your monster URL to the following http://bit.ly/138rhDo
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Radionut
2/20/2013 10:05 AM EST
Hi Max,
great article but "Take 20" was a constructional feature of Practical Wireless, usually authored by Julian Anderson and, in later issues, David Andrews.
I'm sending you a couple of issues from the 1970s so you can indulge in our favourite passtime - electronics nostalgia :o)
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Max the Magnificent
2/21/2013 5:01 PM EST
Really? Did they not have this in Practical Electronics also? I'm "gob-smacked" as they say. In fact, I'm just about to send an email to the original publisher of Practical Electronics asking him about this.
I'm not saying you aren't right, you understand -- and I did read Practical Wireless also .. .but I would have sworn this was in Practical Electronics -- watch this space...
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David Ashton
2/21/2013 5:22 PM EST
At one stage there was another magazine called Everyday Electronics - mostly beginners type projects. I think "Take 20" was in there (but could be wrong). EE eventually merged with PE to a new mag called Everyday Practical Electronics (mouthful!) which I think carried over the Take 20 column. Anyway, Max, your contacts there will give us the real story I am sure.
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Max the Magnificent
2/22/2013 9:33 AM EST
Well, I am mortified -- I just got an email back from the publisher of Practical Electronics -- he confirms that there was no "Take 20" series there, so you are correct -- I must have been reading it in Practical Wireless (take me outside and spank me now! :-)
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Radionut
2/22/2013 11:03 AM EST
That's all right, Max, I'm just happy that we can have conversations like this. I didn't get to see too many editions of Practical Electronics as a young lad,or Practical Wireless for that matter, as my favourite was the Radio Constructor and that's what soaked up my pocket money...
I note that my earlier comment has a 9:38 time tag but it was sent before your 9:33 statement appeared on my screen. Hence the sequence of this thread may appear a bit strange.
Cheers for now.
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David Ashton
2/23/2013 10:22 PM EST
Wasn't the Radio Constructor the one that used to have the Dick and Smithy stories about the apprentice Radio/TV tech (Dick) being taught by his boss (Smithy)? Used to enjoy those.
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Radionut
2/24/2013 12:36 PM EST
Hi David,
I can't see a "Reply" tab on your recent posting but you're spot on with Dick and Smithy being in the Radio Constructor: their exploits were related in the "In Your Workshop" column and I learned a lot from them.
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David Ashton
2/24/2013 4:11 PM EST
@radionut - I think the reply only workd for a few levels else the columns get very thin (this used to happen...!)
I also learned a lot from the "In your workshop" columns, they were very instructive. I had quite a few copies of the Radio Constructor - it was another good mag from the old days....
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Radionut
2/22/2013 9:38 AM EST
Well my money is on the first "Take 20" column appearing in the May 1969 edition of Practical Wireless, the series remaining with this publication. The beer's on me if I'm wrong...
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Max the Magnificent
2/25/2013 10:40 AM EST
Nope -- I'm sure you are right -- I'm still reeling from the shock (I would have sworn it was PW not PW)
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Buck-on-Bass
2/20/2013 2:34 PM EST
That look's like a good place to get parts. I wish I have know about them when my son was at UAH.
Maybe one day should be a "Meet Max and Buy Parts" event.
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Max the Magnificent
2/21/2013 5:01 PM EST
So long as there's a "and quaff a few beers" component you can count me in! :-)
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David Ashton
2/21/2013 5:24 PM EST
If we can organise for Meet Max, buy parts, beers and Mock Electronics all together I might make it over there :-)
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mgburr
4/3/2013 11:18 AM EDT
Gives me an even better reason to travel through Huntsville on the way from Jacksonville to Texarkana :-)
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Max the Magnificent
4/6/2013 11:27 AM EDT
If you are ever passing through Huntsville, make sure to drop by my office and say "Hi" (email me at max.maxfield@ubm.com)
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Steve_B
2/22/2013 2:45 PM EST
In the 1960's, I used to go with ham friends from my home in northern Oklahoma to surplus stores in Wichita, Oklahoma City, Kansas City, and once, the epitome, the Collins Radio surplus store in Cedar Rapids, IA. It was sad to see them disappear, one by one. I still fondly remember picking through a huge pile of scrap electronics at a place in Oklahoma City and coming up with a couple of dozen ceramic-metal transmitting tubes. The guy hefted one in his hand to guess how much copper was in it, and sold me the whole lot for scrap copper price (a buck or two - total).
There's a place that sounds much like your Mock Electronics in Orlando, FL , called Skycraft Parts and Surplus (they have a website, google for it). I have been rejoicing finding this place since I moved here -- you can't "just go pick up something", it's just too hard to get out!
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Steve_B
2/22/2013 2:57 PM EST
By the way, your transmitting tube looks a lot like a 304TL/TH, or something similar but a bit bigger. Those are transmitting tubes capable of plate dissipation of a few hundred watts. Friends of mine used to make decorative mantelpiece displays out of tubes of this class, actually lighting the filaments. Some are fairly bright, but all have a nice warm glow. The power requirements are generally too high to leave them on as night-lights, though ;-) . The 304TL filament is, IIRC, somewherein the 30W range.
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Steve_B
2/22/2013 3:00 PM EST
No, poor memory. 304TL filament is 125W. I was thinking of something else (35T, maybe?). http://www.alumrocktech.com/304tl.shtml
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BigTech
2/22/2013 3:06 PM EST
Ax-man surplus (http://ax-man.com/) in the Twin Cities is always a lot of fun. I put together a TV remote control (read: wired solenoid-based channel button pusher) for my dad from Ax-man parts back in high school. It even sort of worked.... ;)
They have scads of stuff, not just electronics. I just about bought a pair of airline seats as college dorm furniture, but unfortunately didn't have any friends with a pickup truck to haul them to Chicago. Ah well.
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Hughston
2/25/2013 12:16 PM EST
Max, what took you so long to find that place? You are trying to think of either Webb or W&W Electronics on Clinton Street. It's too late to buy the 1920s radio on display but you can still look at it.
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BeeKeeper
2/27/2013 2:49 PM EST
If your in the Dayton, Ohio, USA area look up Mendelsons. They have a web store too!
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sbirkill
3/8/2013 5:52 AM EST
Bardwell's is still there, only 300ft from the old premises but now on the main Abbeydale Road. Alas, the junk's a bit more modern and trashy, but I'm sure the old guy in there's the same young guy I knew in the '60s!
SJB, Sheffield
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Max the Magnificent
3/8/2013 5:01 PM EST
Re: "I'm sure the old guy in there's the same young guy I knew in the '60s!"
I'm sure he is -- I'll have to drop in on my next visit for old time's sake
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tom-ii
4/3/2013 3:59 PM EDT
I have yet to make it there, as it's a goodly hour's drive North through the city, but I present Baynesville Electronics: http://www.baynesvilleelectronics.com/
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Max the Magnificent
4/6/2013 11:25 AM EDT
If you do go, please take pictures and share them with the rest of us
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nannasin28
4/7/2013 4:43 AM EDT
The guy hefted one in his hand to guess how much copper was in it. http://www.hqew.net
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Kenneth Wyatt
5/3/2013 10:58 AM EDT
Hi Max,
Great article! If you ever get out to the Bay Area (I know you were there last week..Ha!), I recently published a review of the South Bay electronic surplus stores:
http://www.tmworld.com/electronics-blogs/the-emc-blog/4412972/Review--Bay-Area-surplus-stores
Cheers, Ken
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Max the Magnificent
5/8/2013 10:53 AM EDT
Thanks Ken -- I only wish I'd had the time to look at these stores .. but I was 100% tied up at Design West.
Next time I'm out there I will be sure to use your review as a guide and have a happy day checking out all of the stores.
Regards -- Max
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