Chad makes very valid points. However, he may be an outlier in this industry. I recently watched a video of a very expensive machine of his blueprinting rem700 actions. I can only assume the CAM time and fixturing/setup time...….let alone the cost of the machine and tooling. I am sure he had it all figured out before diving in...….but damn........he must be running three shifts of rem700 blueprinting ops.
I think LRI's current experience, although valid and honest, might be too large scale to answer the original poster's question from a "garage shop" perspective.
But I don't know shit and never claim to.
To each his own, I wish you luck in your endeavor. Stay motivated.
Ern
I admire your optimism, I rarely have anything figured out. That'd require planning. I just do stuff.
lol.
I started using VMCs to "fix" receivers in 2003 when I went to work for Nesika. Those actions were notorious for thread galling when pulling up a barrel. I was tasked with sorting out a repair strategy when they'd come in for repair. It was Pandora's box...
The group buy we've run on this site since 2013 was the litmus test. Back then, it was a 3x machine with a +2 capability because I added a manual trunion table. It wasn't long before I craved a true 5x machine, but I wasn't certain about the software side of things, so I waited. My patience ended in 2019, and I can promise anyone here that I had no idea if it'd work or not. It was a gamble. I spent over $7,000 to have a tech come out and write the setup routine. That didn't go well, so I went about solving it on my own. It was basically 3 months of living here at work. I stuck my neck out with a major OEM. Everything was contingent upon this working.
Summary: I spent the better part of $300,000.00 on equipment, another $20,000.00 on software, and around $50,000 on a tool/workholding package to attempt something that had never been done before in a manner that I wasn't sure was going to work the way I hoped. The biggest challenge I've faced in my efforts to modernize gunsmithing has been sorting out how to write CNC programs so they can elegantly embrace products manufactured since the early 1900s. Automated equipment isn't really meant for this, but it can be done. It's relatively simple to machine a part from a lump of stock material. Any machinist will tell you that having to rework a part to correct or add features is a bit more challenging. That is all we're doing here; "reworking" Remingtons, Winchesters, and the other half-dozen types that we fiddle with.
Lately, the biggest surge has been solving the muzzle threading challenge on stuff like the Thompson Centers, where the receiver is welded to the barrel. These typically don't play well in most lathes, as you need a sewer pipe-sized spindle for it all to fit. I made a fixture and figured out how to probe the barrel so we can do it in the 5x. It's awesome as we can load a part, smash "go," and walk away.
Last: There is nothing stopping anyone from building a business into a little empire.