Fair Radio Sales in Lima, Ohio
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- čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
- Thanks Tim Sloan for the heads-up on the electronics surplus store "Fair Radio Sales" in Lima,OH. Leah and I had fun poking around in there. They are closing the business in June and will auction all off in August. Founded in 1947! Do you remember the ads? I Do. WG7D.
- Věda a technologie
Thank you for documenting this place. If only those walls could talk, the tales they'd tell would be epic. 73 OM
Thank you . Rather a historic business I would say.
Its like wandering thru Property Disposal on a military base.... Lots of neat older test equipment from back in my calibration lab days... I remember the Fair Radio Sales ads in the back of magazine in my youth. Great video thanks...
Thanks for watching!
I think Mr. Carlsons Lab should buy it out.
Good idea!
I have ben dealing with Fair Radio since 1961 and even drove down with a friend while we were both still in High School. Many treasured memories.
One of the great Video for who loves radios 🎉 Thank you and 73
Glad you enjoyed it. 73 WG7D
My first scope came from Fair Radio Sales, as did the huge stepper motors driving my Bridgeport. Two more great places are Glenn's Surplus in Shelby OH, and JDM surplus in Crestline OH. JDM used to be called CTR.
i bought some fly back transformers from these guys like 30 years ago.great people lots of neat stuff.thanks for the video.sad its closing but thank you for many years of service
Thanks for watching...It is sad on the closing. WG7D
I remember going to Fair Radio in my High School days, back in the 70s.
I am the generation that just missed that 'surplus' experience. I was just old enough to remember driving by shops like this but never went into one. ;)
They were so fun...like a museum that every thing is for sale. Thanks for watching WG7D
It's a real shame Phil is closing down. He has been an incredible resource for radios, parts and equipment for my entire life. His operation will be missed. I am hoping he is able to start a new operation which is much more manageable in size. There's nothing else like this place anywhere.
I didn't realize that this was on the way too and from Dayton and I could have stopped in. I will have to try and check it out before it closes, if I can.
More boat anchors than the US Navy !
Seriously though, the prop department at a Hollywood movie studio should buy this place.
Good idea!
I remember the old catalogs. The descriptions were made on a typewriter and the heading for each of the items were made with Dymo vinyl tape. Looks as if each item was then laid out on a page and then photographed.
Great Video. Thanks for producing it and sharing it. But three things.
[1] Unfortunately such wonderful places like this have to close down and fall by the wayside.
[2] But alas, the newer and younger hams would rather buy factory made ham equipment rather than do like the old hams did back in the old days of yesteryear of early ham radio and take surplus and/or used equipment then repair experiment with, and/or modify it to operational and usable ham radio equipment.
[3] Also as you so stated they will auction off all that stuff and it will only end up at ham fests across the nation to be resold with jacked up high prices intended to gouge both the public as well as the Amateur Radio Hams who still want to find older and/or surplus radio equipment and parts in order to do like the old hams did back in the old days of yesteryear in early ham radio and take surplus and/or used equipment then repair, experiment with, and/or modify it to operational mode and usable ham radio equipment.
I grew up in those earlier days of ham radio (back during the 1950’sand 1960’s but was never a licensed ham myself as bad as I have always wanted to be), and I still love those old ham radios and still envy all those old Licensed Ham Radio operators like yourself and others of which lived in the old days of yesteryear and in the early days of ham radio. Even though most of them are "Silent Keys" now.
Back then, ham radio equipment could be bought for both reasonable and affordable small prices. Now-A-Days, the prices for both new and used Ham Radio equipment has sky-rocketed into out of this world of basically non-affordable prices which most newer and younger hams can no longer afford, especially the new beginning hams just trying to get started into ham Radio. Yes even now at the age of 74, I'm still trying once again to get my Beginning Technicians license in Ham Radio.
Well, Why not. I've already (years ago), had a CB license back when they were still required (KAPD9331). Now as of this year, I've got a GMRS license (WSBP616), and yet there is nobody with GMRS radio's (or even a GMRS repeater), to be able to talk to in my rural farm area of Southern Idaho. But however, there are Ham Radio operators as well as Ham Repeaters and a Ham Radio Club in my area.
Once again, Thank You for a great video pertaining to old surpus radio equipment. May God Bless both you and your "XYL". 73's to both of you.
Thank you. Very good points..thanks for watching...WG7D
I had ordered a few items from them in my high school days back in the 70s. It’s a shame to see it go. I never knew how large that facility is! IMHO, I think that they should make some arrangement with museums or the Smithsonian to preserve at least some of it for posterity.
Their are several surplus places in Portland area. The on he is talking about is wacky Willie's surplus. Then we had R5D3, Cascade electronics, surplus gizmo's.
Gracias por el video, CE1GWX, 73.
Gracias, 73,WG7D
They had a good run. Unfortunately the generation of the surplus radios is thinning out and not much market for the stuff any more. Hate to see it go .. I hated to lose Heath and Radio Shack and Lafayette and Allied ..
Thanks for the tour .. hope the owners enjoy a long and healthy retirement once everything is sold off.
I have been to Lima a half dozen times and didn’t know that was there
Check it out before it closes! thanks for watching! 73,WG7D
I was always fascinated by their printed catalogs back in the 70/80:s...But the oldtime ham equipment, DIY & very few, very big (surplus) parts, which did a lot, i can imagine not many is into that anymore... But certainly you can still find projects in old ARRL handbooks & such...
(I remember you could even order surplus Tommy guns... But not from Sweden... DEFENITELY not from Sweden...)
I never thought this store would on CZcams. I have been to this place in the 90s. Nothing is forever.
Very true. Thanks for watching,WG7D
I used to order a lot when I was a kid back in them late 70’s and 80’s. Still have a lot of old military equipment I bought from them.
That's cool....part of history now....sad to see. Thanks for watching! WG7D
Wow a last look at Fair Radio! Of course many of us are interested in the few really collectable and useful pieces that were not shown like the R390 parts (we saw a glimpse), the T368 and BC-610 larger transmitters likely parts cars under the saw mill shed outside not shown etc... A lot of the valuable stuff is gone, no doubt. This is a great record of the end times.
Glad you enjoyed it. WG7D.
Lima Ohio pronounced here locally as "lime-uh"; not "lee-muh" as in Lima Peru. 😁😁😁😁😁
I was here a little over 20 years ago with a friend after the Lima Hamfest. I do believe they hosted the Hamfest if my memory serves me right. Lots of interesting stuff, picked up on a couple of old items from there. Never forget that trip up there, that good friend of mine who was with me that day became a SK the very next day.
I wonder who had built that building and what was their business, all of those overhead roll up doors in that warehouse.
Sorry for the loss of your friend. I thought the buildings looked a little like lumberyards I have seen ,...Thanks for watching! WG7D
what a cool amazing place, I wish I had one like this close by. I would spend so much money there and so many hours.
YEP...Me too. 2200 mile drive for me. thanks for watching! WG7D
Yes, I have purchased plenty of ham radio stuff from these folks, 171 Texas, here
It used to live on east Elisabeth at lima...on my break from usar meetings and as a child I would hunt in the halls for parts. Remember God is just a prayer away as the clerk was religious. Tubes you won't find... antenna's ect at the lumber shop on 4th Street Lima. Get it while you can. We will never see another like It. Retired army sargent Williams. Former of the 983rd battalion Lima ohio
That use to be a lumber store back in the early 2000 I believe they have been in lima for ever I knew the lumber store like the back of my hand up until they closed there doors then it sat empty for a few years until fair raido bought it
Thanks ! I thought it looked like a lumber yard. Thanks for watching,WG7D
Very nice shop
Sure is
Wow. Too far from me😊 That’s a lot of radio history there, HROs Heathkits
Sad to see this go the good old days.
Sad indeed...take care ,WG7D
I thought it went out of business a long time ago.
Very much in business. 😊
Long after all the humans have left the planet Earth, Fair Radio will be carefully tended by a quiet team of robots. “Oil my back joints, that’s a good lad”.
😂...good one!
It all be a sad day when Fair Radio sales closes it doors!
Yes, it will be. Such an institution! Thanks for Watching. WG7D
That was a lumberyard back in the day.
PS . Rail mfg...tank mfg...Lima flock. And Ford engine plant. And a host of factory's no doubt Lima's on its way back.
anything you want... if you can find it.
Yep,it would take some digging 😊
Would be like a kid in the candy shop But the people that used this stuff are far and few left
OLD HAMS never die They just smell that way ZL 3--
😂 Funny...kind of true....😊
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The problem is that the yought only interested in games computers and social internet. Result youngsters who dont untherstand as much as the older generation. And they are also less intersted in technical things. What a change overtime. Greetings from the Netherlands
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It is sad to see the surplus market going away, but with cheap chinese crap getting so inexpensive... I wont buy that crap I only buy quality surplus and for the time I have left I expect there will be items. The next generation though...