Gunsmithing Gunsmithing school

Møønlight

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Sep 6, 2010
196
1
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Colorado
There are a couple school's i'm trying to find out about. The 1st school is the Colorado School Of Trades. The other is located in Prescott, AZ Yavapai Gunsmithing school. I have heard both are top notch. I have also heard that taking some welding classes prior to taking a smithing course is a huge plus.

Thanks,
ML
 
Re: Gunsmithing school

Yea I did actually. I was inquiring specificly to those two particular school's, hoping someone had a recommendation or two or perhaps went to one of them.

Thanks,
ML
 
Re: Gunsmithing school

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Møønlight</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Yea I did actually. I was inquiring specificly to those two particular school's, hoping someone had a recommendation or two or perhaps went to one of them.

Thanks,
ML </div></div>

Know of a couple of guys who went to CO School & frankly, they were the biggest hack artists I've ever seen as 'gunsmiths'. I also personally know one of the instructors that recently went to teach there & he is a rip off artist with barely passable gunsmith skills. Doesn't say a lot to me about them if the graduates I have personal experience with are hacks & they use instructors who are also hacks. I may be maligning the place but I can only speak from what I know personally.

I went on a NRA summer gunsmithing class to the Trinidad State Junior College in Trinidad CO & found the instructors that they have on staff to be first rate. The dorms are, well, rough/basic but I guess they would be inexpensive on room & board on a full time basis. The area is pretty damn nice too.

I have no knowledge of the AZ college you mentioned.

One of the premier FAL smiths & Small Arms Review Gunsmith of the year 2009, Mark Graham often recommends that a machine shop course would stand you in much better stead than a gunsmith school. Certainly taking a real in depth machine shop course (that is far more widely available pretty much everywhere in the US) would be an excellent first step to full time gunsmithing. Maybe you could then fill in with make up courses as required for specific firearms?

I am not in the same class as Mark or anywhere near 99% of the smiths on this board but I would think that it would depend on what kind of gunsmithing you intend to pursue on graduation. Are you looking to specialize on Remington 700's or 1911's or something else or just cover all the bases & repair guns period? Not really a lot of point you spending the time & money to learn to make stocks or learn checkering or hot bluing if you never intend to go that route.

Do you have the experience to run your own biz or will you work for others first? If working for others, it seems that a diploma from a gunsmithing school will help in that respect.

Good luck on whatever you decide but I would certainly take a trip to the colleges you mentioned BEFORE jumping in & would definitely take the machine shop classes first too.
 
Re: Gunsmithing school

I went through CST and graduated late 2001. From what I have heard about the school and seen of it since I can not recomend that anyone attend that program again. I have spent the last 9 years operating my own shop and have gone back to school in another trade. While I enoy gunsmithing and am good at it I can also say that the fluctuations in the market a such that I will no longer plan to make a living for myself and my family in this job. The school at that time was of decent quality and concentrated on training general gunsmiths. Some of the people who made it through the program couldn't find ther way out of a paper sack. Those who were complete losses wouldn't be dropped for one reason or another and I feel that was a disservice to those of us that were there to learn a good trade.