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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
Staring out
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<blockquote data-quote="Georgiashooter" data-source="post: 1308643" data-attributes="member: 101080"><p>+1 on hired guns advice to take some machining classes. I was fortunate enough to be taught by someone who has built rifles for the last 55 years so that education was invaluable and free. You will keep learning as time goes on. </p><p></p><p>When I suggest to gather info from this forum, nothing wrong with getting tips on what has or hasn't worked for some of the pros on here. You need to gather as much good info as possible and figure out the best methods to get the end results you want. </p><p></p><p>Also a good way to get machine time before you ever cut a barrel is to build as much of the tooling you possibly can, thereby cutting some cost out and really learning how the required tooling works. </p><p></p><p>Good luck</p><p>Richard</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Georgiashooter, post: 1308643, member: 101080"] +1 on hired guns advice to take some machining classes. I was fortunate enough to be taught by someone who has built rifles for the last 55 years so that education was invaluable and free. You will keep learning as time goes on. When I suggest to gather info from this forum, nothing wrong with getting tips on what has or hasn't worked for some of the pros on here. You need to gather as much good info as possible and figure out the best methods to get the end results you want. Also a good way to get machine time before you ever cut a barrel is to build as much of the tooling you possibly can, thereby cutting some cost out and really learning how the required tooling works. Good luck Richard [/QUOTE]
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