Smylee,
Thanks for the comments.My wife and I taught our 2 boys that learning can be a pleasure and in my case it was and if you QUIT learning
you are dead from the neck up.Neither boy wanted anything to do with muzzle loaders and still don't but they both have a good work ethic and Rob,the oldest is a retired USAF Cop with 20 years and now works for the USPS in Texas and is married with 3 adult children.
Eric,our youngest son has managed a car parts business and now does quality control and destructive tests on screws and bolts that are being used in a new fleet on nuclear subs for our navy and has been employed with this big shop for 27 years and has 2 adult children and 3 grand children.He is here in Huntington and checks on us daily.In the 1970's I dropped all gun related work and used my shop to make bearings and other small parts for older,out of production cars and helped another shop that had contracts for making items used in the coal mines.After that I was lead machinist for a reactivated optics maker that had contracts to make prisms for tank gun sights that lasted for 13 months.After that a Babbit bearing shop that went sour because of theft by the managers.The owner in Utah sold it and had the managers prosecuted.
.I also helped another long time friend with his European car repair business.NO Asian cars,only European cars.
Regressing again to guns,E.M.Farris and Bill Large encouraged me and Wes Kindig bought the locks and triggers I made then which were FAR and away not what I made later.My shop was kept working by orders from Germany and most of what I made until 2019 went there.
I don't go to my shop except to get a tool for a job in the house such as a recent toilet seat
.My wife has heath issues so travel is not on the list and working in the shop would leave her alone with the Dachshund.She has an inoperable knee,inoperable because she's on blood thinners and over 80.
Bob Roller
Bob Roller