Who remembers TVs and radios with tubes?
I have fond memories of taking the back off of a TV or radio and taking all the tubes out and putting them into a box and driving to the drug store.
I don't remember my father teaching me how, I was that young. I remember in elementary school taking that box on my bicycle down to the store, climbing on a chair and matching the tubes up to the analyzer sockets, pushing the test button and seeing the tube glow, the meter move to green (good) or red (replace)...
I'd then buy the tubes that needed replacing never cost us more than a few dollars...and peddling back home to fix the radio or TV...put the tubes back in, the cover back on...plug it in (the plug had a safety feature and was removed with the cover) and it worked....it always worked!
Does anyone else have those memories?
Or other memories of a time gone by (like back when we used to have to parallel park our cars)?
I have fond memories of taking the back off of a TV or radio and taking all the tubes out and putting them into a box and driving to the drug store.
I don't remember my father teaching me how, I was that young. I remember in elementary school taking that box on my bicycle down to the store, climbing on a chair and matching the tubes up to the analyzer sockets, pushing the test button and seeing the tube glow, the meter move to green (good) or red (replace)...
I'd then buy the tubes that needed replacing never cost us more than a few dollars...and peddling back home to fix the radio or TV...put the tubes back in, the cover back on...plug it in (the plug had a safety feature and was removed with the cover) and it worked....it always worked!
Does anyone else have those memories?
Or other memories of a time gone by (like back when we used to have to parallel park our cars)?