I was wondering what people's memories of renting TVs, back in the day when sets were expensive & often went wrong.
It seemed that until the early 1980s the companies were helped by new TV innovations, then when sets became cheaper & more reliable they started to rent video recorders or home computers.
After VCRs became cheaper & reliable some companies switched to installing satellite dishes, which kept them going for another decade or so.
In the last 20 years most innovations haven't had such a high price & with many retailers offering credit deals the need to rent has more or less gone.
Over the years the likes of Redeffusion, Granada, Radio Rentals, British Relay, Visionshire, DER etc. seemed to all merge into Box Clever, which only exists online.
Most of the electrical suppliers also rented sets, as did many retailers like the Co-op & Rumbelows when it was cost effective.
My family rented a basic colour largish TV until 1984 from Granada. I only once remember an engineer coming round to have a look inside, who looked like a younger Jim Royle.
It went back when my parents bought a Philips TV with remote from Comet, which seemed a lot more advanced then the one we rented, with it's grey plastic case & electronic tuning.
It seemed that until the early 1980s the companies were helped by new TV innovations, then when sets became cheaper & more reliable they started to rent video recorders or home computers.
After VCRs became cheaper & reliable some companies switched to installing satellite dishes, which kept them going for another decade or so.
In the last 20 years most innovations haven't had such a high price & with many retailers offering credit deals the need to rent has more or less gone.
Over the years the likes of Redeffusion, Granada, Radio Rentals, British Relay, Visionshire, DER etc. seemed to all merge into Box Clever, which only exists online.
Most of the electrical suppliers also rented sets, as did many retailers like the Co-op & Rumbelows when it was cost effective.
My family rented a basic colour largish TV until 1984 from Granada. I only once remember an engineer coming round to have a look inside, who looked like a younger Jim Royle.
It went back when my parents bought a Philips TV with remote from Comet, which seemed a lot more advanced then the one we rented, with it's grey plastic case & electronic tuning.
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