Sandhills,
I noticed NO disrespect of any kind in your posting.One reason our two sons never took any interest in my shop work was
due to the fact I never encouraged it.I did a lot of other jobs when they were both at home such as imported car repair**
and other machine shops as well as my own.When coal was King here in WVa there were a lot of shops that subcontracted
to bigger shops and I worked several times at one close to me.I enjoyed close tolerance work and usually got tagged for whatever
was on the "menu"that day.In my own shop I made a lot of replacement bushings for long dead automatic transmissions and made myself into a nuisance to suppliers of captive market parts.
.One of a kind bits and pieces for antique cars were another thing I did.There is a market for anyone who will make only one part instead of insisting on large orders.At 84 I want no more of these jobs and these little
triggers keep us in "house money"for small purchases at the local Family Dollar store.One more thing I really liked was being hired as
the lead machinist for an optics maker that had got some contracts from the government for prisms and other odd lenses.I made a lot
of the specialized tooling required for that and looked forward to every day for as long as it lasted.The old gent that hired me for that
shop was a survivor of Dunkirk in 1940.
Bob Roller
**These imported cars are the reasons we have never owned one.
One question I forgot.No.I never sold any locks to Dixie Gun Works when Turner Kirkland was alive.
His son Hunter did buy 4 English style locks from me with the fancy internal 4 screw mechanism for
$1000.I told him that Turner would rise from the dead if he knew about such a purchase.Turner always
thought ANYthing for a muzzleloader had to be dirt cheap and that contributed to a mind set that is
still lurking until this day in some areas.