Dphariss, parts changers? I wish you could follow a mech. around for a day while he is at work, see what he does, the equipment he has to use, and the money he has invested in tools. As for gun building, I reallly don't see how one can make a living building guns, takes real talent. chuck
Parts changers.
Do they make or rebuild tie rod ends? How about brake master cylinders?
I do some maintenance of my own to the point of changing internal parts in manual trannies, assembling engines etc etc.
My kid was a diesel mechanic, about 50 grand worth of education. You want me to ask him? He worked on the North Slope and also for the company you see in "Iceroad Truckers" at times and before that while on breaks from school for a local shop here. Parts changing. He mostly hated it as a result. He joined the Marines last year. I have his roll around tool box in my shop right now and yeah its big and full of tools.
So you were telling me about auto mechanics?
There are exceptions but mostly parts changers.
What about my spending over 40 years off and on learning gun making? My 24x32 purpose built shop? The various tools and equipment I have acquired or made over the years?
I have a pistol in the works right now. There is not one part I have not made or heavily modified on the gun. BECAUSE I CAN'T BUY WHAT I NEEDED or what is available is marginal or unsuitable. I had to weld and redrill/ream the tumbler hole in the lockplate since it was FAR out of line, recut the stop on the cock it was over 1/8" from allowing the cock to come to the proper point. Have rearched and retempered the mainspring, so far. The steel ramrod or piano wire which I only had to polish, upset on one end and finish the small knob, drill and tap, then turn and silver solder a shop made "button" on the other. Made all the rod swivel parts from scratch, machined 3 of 4 sides of the under rib. Made the set trigger from scratch, the TG from scratch, the breech plug from scratch and machined the barrel from 1 1/8" to 1" octagonal. I will make the sights, escutcheons, thumb piece and the vent liner as well. Because the stuff I buy is often junk, or the part is not available and because I am building it for someone who is not interested in store bought anymore than I am and is a very good friend.
If I charged $50 per hour it would be worth a bunch of money. The steel entry pipe I just made from sheet would total, installed, would likely be about 200 alone.
Dan