> On Apr 30, 2026, at 4:35 PM, Dave Typinski <
dav...@typnet.net> wrote:
>
> I remember PolyPaks, they always had neat stuff.
Same here.
> Jameco is still with us, still selling pretty much the same components they always did. And there are plenty of new kids on the block, like Adafruit, Sparkfun, and a whole slew of robotics -oriented places. And don't forget about Newegg and Amazon.
In recent years I've gotten a pile of stuff from Adafruit, an occasional item from Sparkfun, and assorted electronic bits from Amazon (like a box of 6 inch-sized bitmap displays for under $1 each). And my Linux firewall machine came from Newegg, an industrial class machine (no moving parts of any kind).
> Heathkit's demise didn't have one main cause. The video covered the important factors. The new owners could have pivoted and turned it into another Jameco or Adafruit, but they didn't have a crystal ball.
A classic problem for older companies is having an installed base, which makes it easy to think that serving that base, or doing things like it, is the answer. Disruptive change is harder than for new companies.
I like to quote Bill Hewlett, or was it Dave Packard, who supposedly said "we must always cannibalize our own product lines, because if we don't, our competitors will surely do it for us."
> I sure miss them. Their manuals remain the best ever published. But, somehow, I just don't see enough people today buying and building such kits to make a solely kit-oriented company viable.
Probably true. Then again, Adafruit and others like it are essentially that to a significant extent, and there are other companies that offer kits for hams or others. I think one difference is that they tend to be much smaller, and much less novice-friendly. I have a nice single-band ham radio (Morse code) transceiver that fits in a box about 1.5 by 2.5 by 4 inches; it puts out a few hundred mW if I remember right. That came in a kit, with all the parts and basic instructions. But it sure as heck wasn't Heathkit, and it didn't aim to be. The idea was that if you had a basic level of electronics building skill you could build this and make it work. The instructions were clear enough for that audience. But it was only 2 or 3 pages what Heath would have done in two dozen.
One of my best discoveries was that, for things I design myself, I can get everything I need from Digikey. And even though they clearly like to sell things in volume, that's what their primary customer base would do, they are quite happy to sell basically anything they carry in quantity 1. And their prices are quite civilized. Just the other day I ordered some surface mount parts for a new project. I needed a couple of resistors and capacitors, of commonly used values; ended up getting 100 because at that quantity they cost only about a penny each, so why not. 0603 capacitors don't take up much room. :-)
paul