Jim B Posted Monday at 09:43 PM Posted Monday at 09:43 PM We're losing a major LHS here in the Syracuse, NY, area at the end of the Summer: Family-owned Syracuse area hobby store is saying goodbye after a 50-year run It's sad to see, but I guess it was inevitable. Merchandise wasn't moving well, inventory wasn't all that great as of late (now I know why), increased competition, and kids generally more interested in videogames. 7
meechum68 Posted Monday at 11:08 PM Posted Monday at 11:08 PM Dang, hate to see it, and I am worried that my local shop won't find another owner. But I am gonna try and slip in this weekend and get the scuttle butt.
Mark Posted Monday at 11:34 PM Posted Monday at 11:34 PM Radio control is a tough row to hoe for a local shop. There is one in my area that is still strong, but another one closed about twenty years ago. Guys go to the store to buy magazines, order the big stuff online, only going to the local store for supplies needed right now. And the bigger stuff always carries a risk of becoming outdated "dead" stock.
Jim B Posted Monday at 11:42 PM Author Posted Monday at 11:42 PM Walt's even had an indoor track. Generally a good thing in Central New York. The photo of Walt in the beginning of the article is of him at his track. The used to have meets & all sorts of stuff there. They got rid of the railroad stuff about 15 years ago, and automotive model inventory was shrinking for Gundam. Armor & aircraft was small, and ships were basically nonexistent. 1
bobss396 Posted Tuesday at 12:12 PM Posted Tuesday at 12:12 PM We are down to just a handful of shops. They used to be all over, even up through 2010. Sone of us would do a hobby store crawl on a Saturday, hit 4 to 6 shops in an afternoon. We have a close by shop that has been completely done over, no more clutter like the old store. They got kits and paint, zero aftermarket stuff.
Volzfan59 Posted Tuesday at 02:21 PM Posted Tuesday at 02:21 PM That’s terrible news. I hate it for you. My closest true hobby shop is three hours away in Little Rock.
iamsuperdan Posted Tuesday at 02:35 PM Posted Tuesday at 02:35 PM We had a hobby store here called Hobby Alley. Their main focus was RC. But they had an awesome selection of kits and supplies. I shopped there a lot. I went in during their closing out sale and was speaking with the owner. His problem was that people would go in and ask all kinds of questions about RC. What's good, what's bad, what should I modify, etc. Then they would go and purchase online. Then those same people would come in with their online purchases and ask for tech support. He started charging diagnostic and repair fees for those people. They complained of course. Ugh. We still have a couple of stores that don't appear to be going anywhere. Literally two stores. In a city of around 1.3 million. And I'll keep doing my part to support them. 3
bobss396 Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 20 hours ago, iamsuperdan said: We had a hobby store here called Hobby Alley. Their main focus was RC. But they had an awesome selection of kits and supplies. I shopped there a lot. I went in during their closing out sale and was speaking with the owner. His problem was that people would go in and ask all kinds of questions about RC. What's good, what's bad, what should I modify, etc. Then they would go and purchase online. Then those same people would come in with their online purchases and ask for tech support. He started charging diagnostic and repair fees for those people. They complained of course. Ugh. We still have a couple of stores that don't appear to be going anywhere. Literally two stores. In a city of around 1.3 million. And I'll keep doing my part to support them. There's the answer. They use the local shop to pick the owner's brain and buy on Amazon. I like to buy local so I CAN pick the owner's brain. Kit prices, outside of Hobby Lobby with the 40% off, are $30 to $40. Online you may save a couple of bucks if there is free shipping. Just about any shop has ditched aftermarket parts completely. I guess they sit around too long. Most local builders don't get that deep into builds. Just my theory.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now