All Activity
- Past hour
-
WSHH887 started following Now I'm a believer
-
Last trip to RS I needed some buss fuses. The girl didn't even know what a fuse was. She only sold phones. The electronic parts area was a mere shadow of what it once was and in disarray.
-
SteveShannon reacted to a post in a topic: GMRS security risk.
-
marcspaz reacted to a post in a topic: Now I'm a believer
-
SteveShannon reacted to a post in a topic: Now I'm a believer
-
And if you had a Siltronix you really had bragging rights.
-
SWR was all we cared about and bragged about
-
WRUE951 reacted to a post in a topic: Now I'm a believer
-
WRUE951 reacted to a post in a topic: Now I'm a believer
-
Yep, who cared about coax quality for CB just as long as the SWR was good.
-
Back in the Radio Shack Days, i don't think there was to many people concerned with Coax quality.. Most of us use it for 10-11 meter stuff and it worked great.. RG58 was the norm for auto installs. The good ole' days
-
It was definitely a great place to hang out and get to play with all the goodies. Those were the good old days.
-
i started out with a Commodore 64, then a TRS 80, then an Apple and been with Apple since 1986. Although i do have a Windows 11 machine but seldom go to it.
-
tcp2525 reacted to a post in a topic: Now I'm a believer
-
Gsouth joined the community
-
Thanks for the compliment! And all this time I thought I was old and decrapitated. I agree, I think Tandy ruined Radio Shack. It was a downward spiral for decades. I always liked the catalogs back then. There's a site that has PDFs of every year they printed. From what I remember during my CB days back in the 70s, Radio Shack's RG8 was only offered with foam core and the braided shield was horrible. For CB we didn't care. I don't think any of us today would buy their cable since we have so many great options.
-
WSHH887 reacted to a post in a topic: Now I'm a believer
-
Someone mentioned intentionally using a former address.
- Today
-
I dont recall anyone talking about giving a false address? Dont exactly feel like reading back thru the entire thread to look either.... are you referring to those of us who choose to use (or are forced to use by landlords like myself, whose landlord refused to allow mail delivery to my apartment complex, because the local post office will "give you a free box") My legal mailing address is my po box, and it wouldnt matter what address is listed for my "station" since 99.9% of the time i am transmitting either mobile from my vehicle, or at work on a handheld, as i live right on the edge of the reach for the local repeater....
-
WillieTWSIF715 joined the community
-
SteveGibbs reacted to a post in a topic: Club Activity Suggestions
-
PACNWComms reacted to a post in a topic: GMRS security risk.
-
PACNWComms reacted to an answer to a question: CRFS RFeye Nodes
-
I had the TRS 80 along with the huge 40 MB hard drive. I had to format it by hand by swapping out two 5 1/4" floppies. Took forever and I didn't think it would ever end. Also played with a computer in school that we programmed with punch cards. And after that played with the 8080 computer chip.
-
Dancing Demon changed the computer world forever...
-
WSIF574 joined the community
-
I used RS as a place to by electronic components for the most part. Hung out there for a few years as the manager like the company. We were practically employees at one point. Don't actually remember where I got my 1st base station antenna and coax.
-
WSIF676 joined the community
-
Kamoze357 joined the community
-
Man... I remember when I first bought the TRASH80. So many people talk crap about it, but man did I have fun with that thing. I learned how to write shells and programs using that thing. Backup and restore to a cassette tape was too funny, too. Radio Shack was a great store for two-way radios all the way up to when computers, cell phones and satellite TV became mainstream. I literally bought components to do repairs if I had a customer waiting on a job and I ran out of resistors, capacitors and standard 3-leg transistors... occasionally ordering bulk ICs, and PAs for radios I was commonly repairing or upgrading. The good old days of peaking, opening up modulation, adding channels. Good times.
-
Alec changed their profile photo
-
You’re just a young guy! Before Tandy Radio Shack there was Allied Radio Shack and before Allied Radio Shack there was Allied Radio and Radio Shack, two separate companies. Allied Radio was a well respected competitor of Lafayette. Not everything sold by Radio Shack has been poor quality. They even sold some reasonable quality coax but they also sold some crappy coax as well. Personally I prefer to stay away from inexpensive coax. I would rather use quad shielded RG6 for UHF, even at 75 ohms, than some of the lossy 50 ohm cable.
-
WRXJ933 joined the community
-
As kids we hung around the local RS before the TRS80 computer was even thought of. Their parent company, Tandy, used to sell leather and leather crafting tools back then. Their coax sucked and I didn't even know what good coax was. We used it for CB because we didn't know any better. Actually Lafayette was a much better and highly respected company.
-
I give up, what's the LEARN system?
-
WSIF856 joined the community
-
Should have said thanks Steve for posting info from Gil.
-
well there sonny,,, There was a time when Radio Shack was the deal... Unless your an old timer, you have no clue...
-
Hi Gil, Thanks for the information. I will take another look using your information. Dave
-
One of the main differences between cheap coax and more expensive quality coax is the amount of shield braid used and also the materialist is made from. You will only see about 50-60 percent of the dielectric being covered by the shield braid on cheap coax where you will see 70 to 100 percent coverage in the more expensive coax. The amount of shield braid makes a difference in how it protects against RFI and will also act as a better counterpoise when the coax is used as such. It is common to use the coax as a counterpoise when using end fed half wave antennas for HF versus running a separate counterpoise wire.
-
Yeah, definitely best to not draw attention to yourself.
-
mobilelawyer joined the community
-
The words "Radio Shack" totally disqualifies this as a viable choice. At least you got a free battery if you joined the battery of the month club. But seriously,that cable was acceptable for CB use, that's it.
-
WRUT369 joined the community
-
Not all RG8 is stiff.. Radio Shack used to sell a flex RG8.. I've used it many times and yes it is flexible. It was a pain to make connectors though, the dielectric would stick to the center conductor which had to be scraped with a plastic wedge and the shielding would mold into the outer sheath making that a pain to remove. But over all after spending an hour putting connectors on, it was decent cable
-
WRZV755 joined the community
-
It did occur to me after reading some comments that because this is a NGP antenna in a NGP installation, perhaps the real difference is that the cable I changed to acts as a better counterpoise than the one I replaced. That could simply be a fluke, because I doubt either US or Chinese manufacturers give any significant thought to its characteristics as a counterpoise. Maybe they do, but I'd be a little surprised.