have you been taught by a master builder like yourself, or did you pick it up from books?
Oh, boy, you had to start that conversation again. I wish you hadn't said that.
Here's a short list of my teachers:
Taylor Sapergia
Eric Kettenburg
Bill Shipman
Rich Pierce
Ken Gahagan
Eric vonAschwege
Chris Laubach
Hugh Toenjes
Jerry Huddleston
Mike Brooks
Mark Thomas
Cody Tetachuk
Mark Wheland
John Getz
Jim Kibler
Don Getz
Allen Martin
Bill Slusser
Jacob Kuntz
Lorentz Kafka
Joe Flemish
Chuck Dixon
Dave Kanger
Walter Fleming
Ken Guy
Ian Pratt
John Bivins
Roger Vincent
Dave Crisalli
John Cholin
Randy Sherman
Bill Kennedy
Jim Chambers
Dan Phariss
Jim Filipski
Fred Miller
Don Johnson
Kevin Hagen
....and always, the humble Dave Rase.
Each and every person you meet and come across has something to tell you, you can learn something from, if you are able to listen.
Books, yes, all kinds of books. Museums, go to them all. Organizations such as the KRA, CLA, ALR, all contribute vastly to one's personal database.
You need to be a sponge for this stuff.
But the biggest thing is to build. The next biggest is to screw up. Make all kinds of mistakes so you learn not to do them anymore. All the book learning and jibber-jabber doesn't make a rifle. Hands-on work, hard work, countless hours of work, frustration and joy, all mixed together is what makes rifles. Work builds the skill sets you need to complete a rifle. It doesn't happen in just one rifle, it takes many. Sorry guys, the sad truth is, unless you're a Jim Kibler, who was able to make perfect guns from birth, you're going to have to make lots of guns. I think I've made 25 or 30 so far. It's not enough yet.
Once I've 'arrived' I'll post my masterpiece.