Back in the late 1970s, I purchased the following the top-of-the-line from Radio Shack (which admittedly did not produce top-of-the-line hi-fi equipment):
A FM tuner
An amp
A cassette deck
Two 30” tall floor speakers
On Long Island, the tuner picked up more stations than I could imagine.
I moved up state, and only two stations came in clear.
Cassette tapes are history.
I have not used any of these items in the last 28 years.
They apparently have no intrinsic value. (A turntable might, though).
There is no charity that will accept these.
So why am I having such a hard time throwing them out (beyond the size and weight of the speakers)? They are all housed in a cheap cabinet with dark tinted glass doors. So at least I don’t have to visually confront them every day.
My film camera were worthless, but I see they are now gaining value. The same does not seem true of the audio equipment though.
A FM tuner
An amp
A cassette deck
Two 30” tall floor speakers
On Long Island, the tuner picked up more stations than I could imagine.
I moved up state, and only two stations came in clear.
Cassette tapes are history.
I have not used any of these items in the last 28 years.
They apparently have no intrinsic value. (A turntable might, though).
There is no charity that will accept these.
So why am I having such a hard time throwing them out (beyond the size and weight of the speakers)? They are all housed in a cheap cabinet with dark tinted glass doors. So at least I don’t have to visually confront them every day.
My film camera were worthless, but I see they are now gaining value. The same does not seem true of the audio equipment though.