The last electronics store in the United States
✅ WATCH NEXT - PART 2 ON VINTAGE VIDEO GEAR • Discovering vintage video gear with an exp... ✅ YOU PASSED THESE COLD WAR AT&T TOWERS AND NEVER KNEW WHAT THEY WERE - • Exploring the cold-war phone system design... Apex Surplus, located in Los Angeles County, is a legendary electronics store visited by hobbyists, engineers, and Hollywood prop makers for decades. With the transition to online shopping, we won't see anything like this again, so I think it's a treasure. Its iconic Hollywood creations include the DeLorean time machine from the Back to the Future movie, built entirely from Apex parts. Stepping into Apex IS like going back in time. It’s filled floor-to-ceiling with vintage electronics, military surplus, and hard-to-find parts. The owners helped me find a longtime customer who comes here to restore vintage electronics. So lets meet Rick. He is going to share his projects and give us a tour of what Apex has to offer including some surprising finds.

Discovering vintage video gear with an expert (Apex Part 2)

The surprising need for mint condition tube TVs

Exploring the cold-war phone system designed to survive a nuclear attack

Why Nobody Wants To Buy a Cybertruck (Anymore)

How Hammarlund Lost Everything After Building the World’s Best Radios

Skycraft Electronic Surplus In Orlando Florida: Amazing! #electronics #maker #surplus

Hidden Vintage Electronics Shop: Chester Electronics, Kenosha Wisconsin

Dangerous Grindstone Installation in 1971

Inside Maglite: How a $5 LED Bulb Ended America's Most Trusted Flashlight Empire

Elliot Electronic Surplus in Tucson: Amazing! #electronics #maker #surplus

What Happened to RadioShack? | The Store That Taught America How to Build Things

HAND SOLDERING 1944 SOLDERING IRON TRAINING FILM 54014

1949 Pilot TV37 3 Inch Television Resurrection Watch A Vintage TV Come Alive

Where Did All the Ham Radio Operators Go? The Truth Is Sad

The Weird History of Archival Film Formats

The Broken Radio - HMV 's model 1422

25 The STUPIDEST Car Features Of The 1950s You NEVER SEEN Before!

The Death of America's Airplane Model Empire: The Abandoned Cox Models Factory

The Rise and Fall of Briggs & Stratton, the Engine That Powered Every American Backyard

