
BTW, my wife is Japanese but her specialties are probably her pasta and sandwiches. You can get some really excellent food from all over the world here, but it's no match for the diversity back in New York/New Jersey. It's hard to find good falafel or Jamaican food in Japan, and there are zero Mom-and-Pop pizza shops that sell by the slice.
There are lots of shops that sell resistors, capacitors, potentiometers and ICs ala carte though, in a central Tokyo district called Akihabara (or Akiba for short.) Akiba was once famous as a place for engineers, researchers and repairmen to source parts, and later as a destination for tourists to get state-of-the-art Japan only MD players (remember those) and cameras. However by the end of the 90s the electronics industry shifted towards software, which brought a cultural shift from working men to geeky boys. The most popular girls group in the country, AKB48, is even takes its name and is based there.
So now Akihabara is more famous for "maid-cafes" and cosplay than it is for hardware, but it's still the only place I can go when I need parts for my amp, pedal kits or my guitar. On my last trip, I got a switch for a cheap Aria Wah/Volume pedal, caps for my Ibanez Valbee amp, and a five-ways switch for experimenting with guitar wiring. So for today's topics, I want to ask has anyone replaced the electronics (caps, pots, switch) in their G&L?
And in what costume would you like to see the smiling girl standing out front of the electronics shop dressed?